111 S.W.2d 347 | Tex. App. | 1937
Donald Ray Brannan, age eleven, was drowned in Jefferson Davis State Park in Hill county in 1935. The parents of the deceased child, with the consent of the Legislature, brought this suit against the state to recover the pecuniary damages sustained by them as the result of the death of said child. A trial before the court without a jury resulted in judgment for plaintiffs for the sum of $3,274.15. The state appealed.
This appeal presents the sole question as to whether the state is liable in damages for the alleged negligence of the state park board and its agents and representatives having charge of the state parks of this state. The trial court found, in substance, that Jefferson Davis State Park is owned by the state of Texas and operated by it through the state park board as a part of its statewide system of parks so owned and operated for the benefit of the people; that said park board, in the improvement of the park in question, caused a large tank to be dug therein for the accumulation of water; that after said tank had become filled with water, said board and its local agents in immediate charge of said park negligently failed to fence the pool of water and to provide warning signs to show the depth of the water and life guards to supervise the use of the pool; that said child was attracted to the pool and, while attempting to wade therein, was drowned as a result of said negligence; that said park board derives some revenue from the granting of concessions in some of the public parks operated by it, but that no revenue was ever derived from the granting of concessions in the park in question and no charges were ever made for admissions thereto or for the use or enjoyment of any of its attractions or facilities. Based upon these findings, appellees contend that the state of Texas is liable in damages in tort for the negligence of its agents in charge of said parks. This exact question does not *348 appear to have been heretofore decided in Texas.
The state park board is not an independent corporation or institution operated for financial gain, but is an agency of the state authorized to and charged with the responsibility of acquiring and maintaining a system of public parks for the benefit of the people generally, for the benevolent purpose of promoting the health, happiness, and general welfare of its citizens. R.S. arts. 6067, 6068. It is an old and well-established rule in this state, as well as in all other states of the Union, that a state is not, in the absence of constitutional or statutory provision therefor, liable in tort for the negligence of its officers or agents. 59 C.J. 194; 25 R.C.L. 407; State v. Flowers, Tex. Civ. App.
Appellees recognize the principle announced in the foregoing rule, but contend that it has no application where the state engages in a proprietary activity as distinguished from a governmental function and that a state, by engaging in the operation of public parks and particularly where it earns money from the operation thereof, is engaged in a proprietary or business activity and not in the discharge of a purely governmental function and is therefore liable in tort for the negligence of its agents. In support of their contention in this respect, appellees cite the City of Waco v. Branch,
While the evidence does show that the park board, during the year 1935, collected a total of over $4,000 for the use of concessions granted by it in various parks under its control, it is not contended that the funds so received approximated the amount necessarily expended in maintaining the state system of public parks. But this does not appear to be material, for, in our opinion, liability or nonliability does not depend on the question of whether money was earned in the operation of the parks, but on the capacity in which the parks were operated.
A brief discussion of the principle of sovereign immunity as enjoyed by a state and the right of a municipal corporation to share therein will aid not only in a solution of the question here under consideration, but also in harmonizing those decisions which hold that a state is never liable in damages for a tort and those which hold that a municipal corporation is liable where the tort grows out of a proprietary or business activity. All authority possessed by a state is that conferred on it as a sovereignty by the people and consequently it can act in no other capacity than that of a sovereignty. It is inherently and exclusively sovereign and must necessarily act as such at all times and in all capacities. As a sovereignty, it is immune from liability for torts and since it can act in no other capacity than that of a sovereignty, it is necessarily immune from liability for torts at all times and in all its capacities. 59 C.J. 195; Riddoch v. State,
We have made a very thorough investigation of the authorities and have found none and counsel has cited none in which a state, in the absence of a statute or constitutional provision assuming liability, has been held liable in damages growing out of a tort. Appellees have cited the case of Arnold v. State,
The Legislature, by granting permission to be sued, did not thereby admit liability nor create any liability in favor of the plaintiff, but it merely granted permission to test the matter of liability through the courts. 38 Tex.Jur. 856; State v. Isbell,
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and judgment is here rendered for the defendant. *350