It is apparent from the record that the rule of duty which the court imposed upon the defendant in its care of the icy walk in question was one that required it to deal not only with conditions within the highway and with conditions without it by means to be employed within it, but also with conditions without it and upon private lands by means and measures to be there directly applied. The defendant claimed that it had no power to go upon the premises of private owners to change conditions there which were conducive to the formation of ice upon the walk in question, and that therefore no duty to do so was cast upon it, since where there was no power there could be no duty. The court held that the defendant had such power, and that its reasonable care of the street involved the reasonable exercise of that power. It needs no argument to disclose the harmfulness to the defendant of this ruling, if incorrect, nor to reveal the grave consequences to municipal corporations charged with the repair of highways, and to private property owners alike, which are involved in it.
Counsel for the plaintiff earnestly urge upon us the correctness of the ruling. The argument advanced in support of this contention consists of the assertion of the proposition that the defendant city possessed the power, both independently of its charter and under the grant of power therein, to abate the outside conditions recited in the finding, as public nuisances. It is clear that the leader and accumulated snow in question did not constitute nuisancesper se, and that therefore the power to abate them did not inhere in the defendant as a public corporation. Its charter contained a delegation to its common council of the power to adopt orders and resolutions and enact ordinances to prevent nuisances, and to summarily abate them at the expense of the person maintaining them. This granted power to declare nuisances and provide for their abatement, although unlimited in terms, is not unlimited in law. Yates
v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall. (U.S.) 497; State v. Clarke,
In the first place, the power conferred is a legislative one, and plainly discretionary, both as to what declarations of nuisances should be made, and as to the manner of dealing with the subject-matter of the declarations. The city, in the exercise of its discretionary legislative power thus conferred, has not seen fit to legislate as to situations like those under review. That which was necessary to be done before the conditions complained of could be abated upon the private lands where they existed, and at the hands of the city's agents in the exercise of administrative functions, has never been done. No officer or agent of the city was authorized to do what the court contemplated might have been done. The city's only shortcoming must therefore have been legislative, and result from the fact that its common council had not seen fit, in the exercise of its legislative functions, to take certain action deemed to be appropriate to situations like that here disclosed. But as respects the exercise of both discretionary powers generally, and legislative powers where the law has not either expressly or by clear implication imposed a duty as to their exercise, no liability attaches for either their non-exercise or the manner of their exercise. Anderson v. East,
But the aspect of the case thus far considered is only one *Page 296
of the results of the application of broader principles. It is accepted law that the grant of authority to a municipal corporation, or acceptance by it of authority conferred, for the performance of strictly governmental duties, does not of itself create a liability for an omission to perform such duties, or for a negligent performance of them, and that the only liability in such cases is that which is declared by statute either expressly or by clear implication. Hewison
v. New Haven,
So it is that it was of no significance in fixing the defendant's duty in the present case, what grant of special *Page 297
powers might or might not have been embraced in its charter. It owed precisely the statutory duty described, and precisely that which is imposed upon the smallest town in the State, and none other. It is quite clear, therefore, that the duty was not one which either called for or justified entrance upon private property there to deal directly with situations which might tend to produce unsafe conditions in the highway. In Hewison v. New Haven,
Not everything which endangers the safety of highway travel renders a highway defective and out of repair.Hewison v. New Haven,
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.