VAUGHN v. CITY OF ALCOA
Supreme Court of Tennessee
June 7, 1952
Opinion on Petition to Rehear August 15, 1952
194 Tenn. 449
(Knoxville, September Term, 1951.)
J. C. GAMBLE, оf Maryville, and R. R. KRAMER, of Knoxville, for defendant in error.
This case is before us on an appeal from the action of the trial judge in sustaining a demurrer to a declaration filed by the plaintiff in error.
The suit was by the administrator for the death of his minor daughter who was killed while in swimming in a swimming pool belonging to the City of Alcoa.
The declaration is succinctly and fairly summed up by the appellees on thеir brief as follows:
“That City of Alcoa maintained a swimming pool in Alcoa for the use and enjoyment of persons living both within and without the City and for use of which it charged a fee and from which it made a profit; that by advertisements the defendant invited persons both within and without the City of Alcoa to use said pool; that both plaintiff and his minor daughter, Betty Ann Vaughn, resided outside said City on June 20, 1950 and that plaintiff at thе time of suit likewise lived outside said City; that plaintiff‘s said daughter who was 9 years old paid the required fee and entered the pool on June 26, 1950; that after playing in the shallow end of the pool for awhile she was placed by her cousin on a seat near the
deep end, from which she went to a ladder at the deep end where she was seen by one of the City‘s life guards who asked her if she could swim and whom she told she could not; that said life guard told her she had better go to the shallow end but failed and neglected to remove her from the perilous position she was in; that the City was guilty of gross negligence in that after it discovered, or by the exercise of ordinary care should have discovered, the peril of the child, the City having the last clear chance to еxtricate her from her position of peril, negligently and wantonly abandoned the child and allowed her to drown; that at the time and the place the City had an inadequate number of guards, having only one near the place where the child was; that most of the guards were inexperienced and untrained; that in maintaining said pool the City was negligently maintaining a dangerous nuisance attractive to children, including plaintiff‘s child; that on account of the tender age of the child she was without fault or negligence on her part; that the misconduct of the City was the proximate cause of the death of plaintiff‘s child.”
The second count of the declaration is to all intents and purposes identical with that above analyzed but specifically alleges that thе City in operating the swimming pool, as above set forth, was doing so in its proprietary function as opposed to a governmental function. The three grounds of the demurrer sustained by the trial judge aver, in effect, that the operation of this pool was done by the City in a governmental and not a proprietary function and that therefore the City was not liable for the death of his child; that the allegations were not sufficient to charge a nuisance in the construction and main-
In this State a municipality is liable in damages for tort to its citizens only if it was negligent in the operation of one оf its proprietary functions as distinguished from its governmental functions or if it created or maintained a nuisance in the performance of one of its governmental functions. When we thus consider the questions presented in the present case they would necessarily resolve themselves into the inquiry, first, whether the operaton of the swimming pool by the City of Alcoa was a governmental or a proprietary function, and second, if the operation of the pool was a governmental function, whether or not the City created or was maintaining a nuisance.
This Court has aligned itself with those jurisdictions in this Country which hold that a municipality, in maintaining a public park, is engaged in a governmental activity, discharging a public duty, and is therefore not liable for injuries caused through nеgligent conditions therein. Mayor and City Council of Nashville v. Burns, 131 Tenn. 281, 174 S. W. 1111, L. R. A. 1915D, 1108; Rector v. City of Nashville, 1939, 23 Tenn. App. 495, 134 S. W. (2d) 892.
“The tendency of authority in more recent years has been to allow municipalities a wider range in undertaking to promote the public welfare or enjoyment. Generally, anything calculated to promote the education, the recreation, and the pleasure of the рublic is to be included within the legitimate domain of public purposes.” 37 Am. Jur., Sec. 128, page 742.
Public parks, playgrounds, swimming pools, and public
The legislature in enacting the charter for the City of Alcoa granted that City this privilege. The City was granted the privilege to maintain recreative facilities in the same sentence that it was granted the privilege to maintain charitable, educational and other like duties all of which are governmental functions.
The problem that has given us the most concern is the fact that the City of Alcoa advertises this swimming pool extensively and charges an admission fee to the public for thе use of the pool. A collection of cases of various jurisdictions treating on this subject will be found in 142 A. L. R. beginning on page 1370. Some of these cases hold that by the charging of the fee the use of the pool or park or etc., is made proprietary as distinguished from governmental while others hold to the contrary. In the case of Baltimore, Mayor and City Council of v. State, 1937, 173 Md. 267, 195 A. 571, the Maryland court held that by charging a nominal fee to children for using a public swimming pool did not constitute the use of the pool a proprietary as distinguished from a governmental function of the municipality and that the municipality
The declaration alleges that the City is liable because of the “last clear chance” doctrine. This doctrine is an arbitrary exception to the law barring recovery for contributory negligence of the plaintiff based upon the theory that the defendant is negligent in not extricating the plaintiff from his place of danger after it is discovered or should have been discovered, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence in placing himself in danger. Probably the first reported case on the subject, and one thаt all of us studied in law school is the English case of Davies v. Mann, 10 M & W, 546, 549, 152 Reprint 588, 19 ERC 190. This doctrine has been enunciated under a proper state of facts at various times in this State. The doctrine though can have no application in the case now before us because liability of the City is denied on the ground that the City cannot be held for negligence of its officers in the operation of a governmentаl function.
The attractive nuisance doctrine is also raised by the allegations of the declaration. This doctrine is commonly referred to by the Courts of this Country as by the “Turntable Cases“. The doctrine is an arbitrary exception to general rule of law that the owner of premises is not liable for injuries received by trespassers except injuries which were actively inflicted uрon the trespasser by the owner of the premises. In England the courts of that Country have taken the view that a munic-
Lastly we consider whether or not the declaration allegеs facts which would bring the operation of this swimming pool by the City of Alcoa into the category of creating or maintaining a nuisance so as to make the City liable for the acts here complained of. It has long been settled law in this State that in order to constitute a nuisance a city must be charged with some affirmative act on its part. Burnett v. Rudd, 165 Tenn. 238, 54 S. W. (2d) 718. There is no affirmative act chargеd to the City in the instant case. The only complaint is of the negligence of the defendant‘s employees under the premises as alleged. This is not the charging of a nuisance. In Burnett v. Rudd, supra, many of our cases holding a city liable for creating a nuisance were cited and analyzed by the Court. In the case of Rector v. City of Nashville, supra, the Court of Appeals likewise analyzed these cases
“From all above stated, it must be necessarily concluded that these respondents were guilty under the undisputed evidеnce of affirmative action in bringing about and in maintaining this dangerous condition amounting in fact to a nuisance, and that the Trial Judge did not commit error in submitting the case to the jury on this theory in so far as it applied to these respondents.”
This Court in reaching the conclusion last above quoted concluded that the City of Nashville by its acts, under the facts of that case, had affirmatively crеated the nuisance making it liable for the injury there complained of.
We cannot see where the City of Alcoa has done anything under the allegations of this declaration affirmatively to create a nuisance. The City did build and establish a swimming pool as it had a right to under its charter powers but in doing so it did so for the public benefit, and, insofar as this declaration is concerned, the swimming pool is the ordinary swimming pool with no pitfalls or hidden or latent defects in it. This being true, and swimming pools being a recognized thing the country over, and being built where people are invited and can see them we can see nothing in building a swimming pool and so conducting it as would constitute an affirmative act making it a nuisance on the part of the City.
For the reasons heretofore stated thе conclusion of the trial court must be sustained.
NEIL, Chief Justice, does not concur.
ON PETITION TO REHEAR
BURNETT, Justice.
We have for consideration a very courteous and dignified petition to rehear in this case. For all intents and purposes it is merely a reargument of the matters so
We in reaching our original opinion in this cause decided two propositions and two propositions only. Anything else that we said in the opinion was purely by way of argument in reaching these two conclusions which are: (a) that the operation of a swimming pool by a municipality is a governmental function notwithstanding the fact that a charge is made for admission or a profit is made on operation of the pool, and notwithstanding the fact that advertisements are made inviting persons from without the city to patronize the pool. A city under our authorities is engaged in a governmental function and is not liable for the negligence of its servants and agents; (b) the declaration filed in this cause does not charge (in our judgment) thе creation or operation of a nuisance under the laws of this State rendering the city liable on the nuisance theory.
In reaching our conclusion we felt forced to follow the opinions of this Court as cited in the case of City of Nashville v. Burns, 131 Tenn. 281, 174 S. W. 1111, L. R. A. 1915D, 1108, and Rector v. City of Nashville, 23 Tenn. App. 495, 134 S. W. (2d) 892. In following these opinions we found and so stated that these opinions were based
The case of Johnson v. Tennessean Newspaper, Inc., 192 Tenn. 287, 241 S. W. (2d) 399, was cited originally and referred to in our opinion. This case does not extend the governmental immunity doctrine. The instant case is entirely different from the Johnson case. We cannot see anything, as set forth in this dеclaration, to place the instant case under the nuisance doctrine. The nuisance doctrine controlled the Johnson case entirely.
In the petition to rehear counsel cites Saulman v. Mayor of Nashville, 131 Tenn. 427, 175 S. W. 532, L. R. A. 1915E, 316; Conelly v. City of Nashville, 100 Tenn. 262, 46 S. W. 565, and Mayor etc., of City of Memphis v. Kimbrough, 59 Tenn. 133, 134, which were not cited in the original opinion. These cases are in no way in point.
The Saulman case held that in the operation of an electric plant by the city it was engaged in a proprietary function and therefore was liable for negligence. In the Conelly case the court held that in operating a street sprinkler the city was engaged in a governmental function and therefore not liable for negligence, and in the Kimbrough case it was held that the city in operating a wharf was engaged in a proprietary function and therefore liable for negligence. Obviously none of these three
The conclusion that we reached in the instant case does not in anywise overrule other decisions of the courts of this State but to the contrary is based entirely on the decisions of courts of this State as cited in the opinion.
The case of Beaman v. Grooms, 138 Tenn. 320, 197 S. W. 1090, L. R. A. 1918B, 305, cited for the first time in the petition to rehear is not a city case or a nuisance case but was a case against a private operator for the negligent operation of a private bathing beach and is not in point.
The case of Cooper v. Overton, 102 Tenn. 211, 52 S. W. 183, 45 L. R. A. 591, cited in the petition to rehear is not in point because that case involved а claimed attractive nuisance on the property of a private person.
We have very earnestly and carefully considered the petition to rehear and given it much thought. For the reasons stated in our original opinion we are forced to reach the same conclusion as we reached originally. The petition to rehear must therefore be overruled.
