118 So. 290 | Miss. | 1928
"Comes Malachi Warren and claims of the town of Booneville, a municipal corporation, and a subdivision of the state of Mississippi, the sum of ten thousand dollars for injuries done to and wrongs suffered by him, proximately caused by the defendant corporation, its agents, officers, or employees, for that heretofore, on, to-wit, the 15th day of June, 1927, said plaintiff was engaged in serving a sentence for a violation of an ordinance of the town of Booneville, by labor upon defendant's streets and alleys; that on said date the defendant was engaged, by its agents, officers, and employees, in maintaining and improving its streets and alleys, and that in so doing it then and there had, as its employee in charge of said work as superintendent or foreman, one R.B. Moreland, who was then and there in charge of the plaintiff and others engaged in such work for the city as aforesaid. And while engaged in such work, and at such time and place, the said R.B. Moreland, while acting in the line of his duty as an employee of the defendant, and while acting within the scope and authority of his employment, did willfully, wantonly, and in a negligent manner chain and shackle the legs of plaintiff, and forced him to work on the streets thus chained and shackled, for three full days. By reason of which wrongs and injuries, and as a proximate consequence thereof, plaintiff *461 has suffered great bodily pain and mental anguish and has been permanently injured in his health; he has suffered great loss of time and incurred great expense; he has permanently and totally lost the use of one of his legs, and constantly suffers great bodily pain and mental anguish; and he has also been deprived of the means of continuing his usual occupation and is utterly unable to earn a livelihood. And he charges and avers that the injuries and damages herein complained of were proximately caused by the wrongful and wanton negligence of the defendant, its agents, officers, and employees engaged and acting as aforesaid. Hence this suit."
The substance of the appellee's demurrer is that the town of Booneville is not liable, because at the time the injury took place the municipality was acting in its governmental capacity, and the injury was not the result of its action while acting in its corporate capacity. Appellant assigns as error the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to his declaration.
It will be observed that the gravamen of appellant's cause of action is that he was required to work on appellee's street, guarded as a prisoner, and that appellee's foreman or superintendent required him to so work shackled and chained, and his legs were injured by the fact that he was forced to wear shackles and chain.
Our state is quite fully committed to the doctrine that a municipality, in exercising its statutory duty and prerogative of maintenance and repair of its streets, is exercising a corporate function. Whitfield v. City of Meridian,
Counsel for appellant cite 43 C.J. 967, the text of which is as follows:
"Injury to Convict. — Where a prisoner sentenced to work on the street, or upon any enterprise corporate in character, is injured by the wrongful act of the municipal agent superintending such work, the municipality is liable although such agent was a police officer having custody of the prisoner."
This is authority for appellant's position, but we find that only one case is cited in the note, to-wit, Hillman v.Anniston,
"Looking to the authorities in other states, they are practically of one accord in holding nonliability for negligent injury to prisoners due to defective or insanitary prisons, confinement with drunken, vicious, or infected fellow prisoners, or exposure to cold or fire therein. The same rule applies to workhouses and injuries to prisoners put to work as a penalty for offenses; such work being incidental to the execution of thesentence. [Italics ours.] The rule is based upon the general doctrine of immunity for the wrongful acts of officers engaged in public governmental duty. In such case the doctrine ofrespondeat superior is not recognized. 19 R.C.L., p. 1126, section 404, and notes 4, 5, and 6; 6 McQuillin on Corp., section 2642, and notes, pp. 5453 to 5456; 4 Dillon on Mun. Corp., *463
section 1656, note, p. 2886; Nisbet v. Atlanta,
We copy literally the court's reasoning:
"The doctrine of immunity in favor of municipal corporations is grounded in public policy. Mr. McQuillin (section 2642) speaks of the injustice of the rule announced as to prisoners in jails and workhouses. We are not inclined to extend it. We can see no basis of justice for holding the municipality liable for the acts of its agents engaged in the construction or operation of public works, or other corporate function, at the suit of a third person free to avoid danger, or an employee who voluntarily engages in the service, and deny the same protection to one put to involuntary labor under like conditions."
The dissenting opinion, written by GARDNER, J., an concurred in by Judges ANDERSON and SOMERVILLE quotes the general rule as announced in the text (19 R.C.L., section 5404), and then says:
"The foregoing section is cited in the majority opinion with the statement: That the `rule applies to workhouses and injuries to prisoners put to work as a penalty for offenses; such workbeing incidental to the execution of the sentence.' (Italics supplied.)
"The words `such work being incidental to the execution of the sentence' constitute the turning point of the question here considered, and leads logically to a contrary conclusion. Had plaintiff's intestate met his death by the wrongful act of the guard while in prison or being guarded at a workhouse, confessedly, under all the decisions, the rule of nonliability of the city would apply. The mere fact, therefore, that he was being worked on the streets, rather than at a workhouse or elsewhere, as a penalty for the offense, was a mere incident, and cannot be of controlling influence here. The mere incident of *464 the place of work should not be made to operate a destruction of the well-recognized rule of nonliability in cases of this character.
"The only authority cited in the majority opinion which is concededly directly in point (Nisbet v. Atlanta,
There are some other Alabama cases, which are not directly in point, and the above cited case is appellant's sole reliance for reversal.
The case of Nisbet v. Atlanta,
"Nisbet was consigned to the city stockade for the violation of some city ordinance, and placed in the custody of D.G. Wylie, duly elected, acting, and commissioned by the city as its commissioner of public works. Nisbet was placed under the direct personal orders of Thomas Shivers, a duly authorized agent and street foreman of the city, and while on Loyd street was commanded by Shivers to lift said rock, the only helpers provided being one Greer Strickland and two small boys whose names are unknown, when there should have been four or five more helpers then and there easily obtainable by Shivers. The usual tools and appliances for moving such rocks were in the city's possession and control and easily obtainable, and if furnished to Nisbet and his helper, no injury would have resulted; but Shivers neglected this proper and usual method of using skids or large pieces of wood or plank or crowbars, and forced Nisbet to attempt to lift the rock from the ground to the wagon. The city's agents, Thomas Shivers and David Vining (who guarded Nisbet on the streets and at night), refused to send for a surgeon, and without any medical treatment or surgical attention he was compelled by said agents to work for nine days after his hand was so lacerated by the *465 rock, by which negligence blood poison was caused in the hand, from which Nisbet died on January 15, 1894."
In this case Judge LUMPKIN said:
"The question involved in this case has been too often passed upon by this court to require further elaboration. Neither the law of master and servant nor the doctrine of respondeatsuperior applies in a case where a prisoner undergoing punishment for a violation of a municipal ordinance is injured or killed in consequence of the negligence or misconduct of the officer having the custody or control of such prisoner. This is true because, in such matters, the municipal corporation is exercising governmental powers and discharging governmental duties, in the course of which it, of necessity, employs the services of the officer in question."
This rule is sustained by the case of Wilson v. City ofMacon,
We might multiply authorities maintaining the general rule set forth in 16 C.J., cited supra, but here it is too evident that the city exercises a governmental function in working its prisoners upon the streets; the injury here inflicted was not resultant from any defect in the street, but was from the adjustment of the manacles intended to hold the prisoner safely and prevent his escape while he was engaged in work on the public street.
By section 6781, Hemingway's 1927 Code (section 3345, Code of 1906), the mayor and board of aldermen are authorized to erect and maintain a municipal prison, and regulate the keeping of the same and the prisoners therein, for the separation of the races and sexes, or to make a contract with the county that the county jail be used, or that the streets be worked by municipal prisoners, or to contract with the county for the work on county roads by municipal prisoners, or to contract with the county to work the prisoners on county farm. So it is clear that working a prisoner on a street is in lieu of or in addition to the municipal imprisonment.
We are of opinion that the working of the streets is a mere incident to the carrying out of the imposition of a sentence for crime on one who has violated the law or ordinance of the municipality, and that, if a prisoner is *467 injured because of the manner of his being held, there would be no difference whether he were at work on the street, or at work in a municipal prison, making shoes or manufacturing cloth, or in the municipal blacksmith shop, engaged in hammering or welding, which latter are clearly and undeniably the exercise of governmental functions as to the prisoner so engaged. There can be no real distinction.
The demurrer was properly sustained.
Affirmed.