148 N.Y. 46 | NY | 1895
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *48 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *51 The learned justice who spoke for the General Term, in a very elaborate and interesting opinion, proceeded, very correctly, as I think, upon the assumption that the negligence charged against the defendant in the complaint related entirely to its water works system. In the view which we take of the matter, it is of comparatively little consequence whether the plaintiff bases its right of action upon negligence with respect to the fire department as such, or to the water department as such. But the fair reading of the complaint undoubtedly warrants the assumption of the learned justice at General Term.
If I correctly apprehend the reasoning, which led the General Term to the conclusion that there was a municipal liability upon an admission of the facts set forth in the complaint, it rests, in the main, upon two theories. In the first place it is held that by the voluntary assumption on the part of the defendant of the power conferred by statute to construct and maintain water works, it became responsible for the proper exercise of such power and that such responsibility is necessarily demanded in the interest of an efficient public service, and the inhabitants, who have contributed to the maintenance of such a public work, have a right to hold the defendant to the exercise of reasonable care and diligence and to a liability for a failure to do so. In the next place, it is held, while not deeming that the defendant had engaged in a private corporate business, conducted for its own benefit and not for the general public, nevertheless, that the defendant having agreed to erect and take charge of the public work and enterprise for the public within its boundaries, if there is a failure to exercise reasonable care and diligence in maintaining it, there has been a breach of an implied contract, for which, if injury results, an action will lie. Holding these *52 views, the learned General Term felt compelled, because of the admission by the defendant, through its demurrer, of the allegations of wrongful and neglectful conduct in relation to the maintenance of its water works, to hold that the plaintiff made out a good cause of action.
The proposition that such a liability rests upon a municipal corporation, as is asserted here, is somewhat startling and I think the learned General Term justices have misapprehended the nature of the responsibility, which devolved upon the defendant in connection with its maintenance of a water works system, as well as the character of the power which it was authorized to exercise in relation thereto. I might remark, in the same spirit of criticism which was assumed by the learned justice at General Term, that while the efficiency of the public service would be promoted by holding municipal corporations to the exercise of reasonable care and diligence in the performance of municipal duties and to a liability for injury resulting from a failure in such exercise, the application of that doctrine to such a case as this might, and probably would, be highly disastrous to municipal governments. A little reflection will show that a multitude of actions would be encouraged, by fire insurance companies, as by individuals, and that cases have arisen, and may still arise, where an extensive conflagration might bankrupt the municipality, if it could be rendered liable for the damages or losses sustained.
The distinction between the public and private powers conferred upon municipal corporations, although the line of demarkation at times may be difficult to ascertain, is generally clear enough. It has been frequently the subject of judicial discussion and, among the numerous cases, it is sufficient to refer to Bailey
v. The Mayor (3 Hill, 531); Lloyd v. The Mayor (
The acts, under which the defendant was authorized to construct and maintain a system of water works, constitute a general law, applicable to all incorporated villages in the state. They impose no duty and, when availed of, the task undertaken is discretionary in its character. The grant of power must be regarded as exclusively for public purposes and as belonging to the municipal corporation, when assumed, in its public, political or municipal character. In Bailey v. The Mayor (3 Hill, 531), to which reference is made in the opinion below, the city of New York, at a very early day, was authorized by special legislation to engage in the work of supplying its citizens with water and to acquire lands and water rights for the purpose and, as it is clear from the reading of the opinion of Chief Justice NELSON, the city was regarded in the light of any other private company, because of the special franchises conferred. Assuming that we could regard *55
the doctrine of that case as authoritative at the present day, as to which there has been, and might be, some question, (seeDarlington v. The Mayor, etc., of New York, supra), the decision is inapplicable to the present case. In Hunt v. TheMayor (
Nor can we assent to the view that the defendant sustains such an implied contractual relation to the public within its boundaries, with respect to the construction of this public work, as to be responsible for a failure to exercise reasonable care and diligence in respect to its maintenance. If the views which I have, somewhat briefly, expressed are correct, the defendant exercised a function which, like all governmental functions, was purely discretionary. What it undertook to do, when availing itself of the privilege of the general act, was to provide for the local convenience of its inhabitants.
The industry of the defendant's counsel has collated a great number of decisions by the courts of other states, which indicate a very general view that the powers conferred by the law of the state upon its municipal corporations to establish water works and fire departments, are, in their nature, legislative and governmental. From them I may select one or two. In Edgerly v.Concord (
In Tainter v. Worcester (
In Maxmilian v. The Mayor, (
This defendant, precisely, is entrusted with the power to maintain its water works, because it is one of the political *57 subdivisions of the state to which the general act has reference in its general grant of power or privilege.
Nor does the fact that water rents are paid by the inhabitants of the defendant affect the question. This fact is made use of to show the private corporate character of the water works system; and the suggestion is that profit or benefits accrue to the defendant whereby the corporate undertaking is affected with a private interest. But that is an incorrect notion. The imposition of water rents is but a mode of taxation and a part of the general scheme for the purpose of raising revenue with which to carry on the work of government. If profits accrue over the expense of the maintenance of the system, they go to benefit the public by lessening the general burden of taxation.
The fallacy, as it seems to me, which affects the argument that the municipal corporation can be made liable for the non-user or misuser of its power, consists in that it fails to appreciate the true nature of the function which the corporation performs. It adds to its political machinery for the purpose of benefiting and of protecting its inhabitants. There is nothing connected with the work, which is not of a governmental and public nature. It is in no sense a private business, and the authority to construct the works was given to it by the legislature, not at its own particular instance or application, but because it was one of the political subdivisions of the state and, as such, was entitled to exercise it. How could it justly be said that the maintenance of the water works system, any more than of a fire department, was a matter of private corporate interest? Is it not for all the inhabitants and for their good and protection? No interest was designed to be subserved, other than that of adding to the powers of a community carrying on a local government. If that is true, the alternative is that being for public purposes and for the general welfare and protection, the defendant assumed a governmental function and comes under the sanction of the rule which exempts government from suits by citizens. *58
Further elaboration of the subject is quite possible; but the views expressed seem sufficient to justify the conclusion that the determination reached by the General Term was erroneous.
The order and judgment appealed from should be reversed and the judgment entered at the Special Term should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur (BARTLETT, J., upon grounds stated in the opinion, and also upon the further ground that this court decided the principle here involved in Hughes v. The County of Monroe,
Ordered accordingly.