127 A. 873 | N.H. | 1924
"The use of the water from the hydrants is a public use, enjoyed in common by the people, and from which the city in its corporate capacity receives no special advantage; and, in the absence of a statute giving the action, the defendants cannot be made liable for a neglect of duty in respect to such public use." Edgerly v. Concord,
Negligence, in law, is the breach of a duty to use care. If there is no duty there is no negligence. In the present case the city entered upon the work of voluntarily supplying water for the extinguishment of fires upon private property. It was under no obligation to undertake the work, or to continue it, or to do it in any particular way. The plaintiffs fail because they do not show the existence of a duty owed them by the defendant. *370
If it were assumed that in supplying water for fire service the commissioners were the agents of the city, for whose negligence the city would be responsible, the plaintiffs would stand no better. Lockwood v. Dover,
When in the course of the performance of work voluntarily undertaken by a municipality in its private capacity its agents are brought into relation with a third party, a duty arises to refrain from negligent injury to him. But this obligation relates to misfeasance only. If the municipality does nothing, no liability can be incurred. Such a liability cannot be predicated upon mere nonfeasance. Action or nonaction being within the defendant's right, no complaint can be made that it fails to act.
In order for these plaintiffs to recover they must establish that the defendant owed to them a duty to supply water for the extinguishment of fires. It has long been the declared law in this jurisdiction that no such duty exists. The numerous authorities elsewhere are substantially all to the same effect.
The plaintiffs place their chief reliance upon Lenzen v. New Braunfels,
It does not affect the law applicable to the present situation that the city also maintained its waterworks for the purpose of supplying water to individual users, and collected pay therefor. "Of the use of the water-works for which tolls were paid, or of anything done in the business of providing for it, the plaintiff does not complain. Mere division of the state government into general and local does not make either part suable, and neither part is made liable for its uncompensated transaction of the public business of a fire department, by the circumstance that it is engaged in some other public business, the expense of which is borne by those specially benefited by it instead of the tax-payers." Edgerly v. Concord,
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.