136 Ga. 370 | Ga. | 1911
This was a suit against the City of Atlanta to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff in consequence of being run upon and knocked down by a Grady Hospital ambulance in charge of and under the control of agents and employees of the city, and it is alleged that plaintiffs injuries were caused by the negligence of the defendant, through its agents and employees, in the manner in which the horses pulling the ambulance were driven, to wit, at an unlawful rate of speed. It is also alleged that “said Grady Hospital was under .the control of the City of Atlanta, through its Board of Officers, and that in the maintenance of said Grady Hospital the City of Atlanta charged fees for patients entering therein.” The defendant filed a general demurrer to the petition, which was sustained by the court below, and the plaintiff excepted.
Section 33 of the charter of the City of Atlanta provides: “The said Mayor and General Council shall have full power and authority to pass all by-laws and ordinances respecting public buildings and grounds, workhouses, public houses, carriages, wagons, carts, drays, pumps, wells, springs, fire-engines, care of the poor, suppression of disorderly houses, houses of ill fame, for the prevention and punishment of disorderly conduct and conduct liable to disturb the peace and tranquillity of any citizen or citizens thereof, and every other by-law, regulation, and ordinance that may seem to them proper for the security of the peace, health, order, and
It is true that'it is alleged in this petition that “in the maintenance of said Grady Hospital the City of Atlanta charged fees for patients entering therein;” but we can not construe this allegation to be an affirmative allegation that the city requires of all its patients payment for expense of board and treatment at the Grady Hospital, as would be the case of a private hospital maintained and operated for profit and the pecuniary advantage of those who own and operate it. Had the distinct allegation been that the hospital was established and operated for private gain and profit by the city, quite another case would have been made from that presented in this petition. If the pleader had wished to charge that the City of Atlanta maintained and operated the Grady Hospital for private gain and profit, and that to this end it charged fees of all its patients, it would have been very easy to have made that distinct averment. For the Grady Hospital to charge fees from some of its patients is not at all inconsistent with its character as a public institution and one operated by the municipal corporation in the performance of its governmental duties. Under the authority of the case of Love v. City of Atlanta, supra, the court below ruled rightly in sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the case. See, in this connection, 2 Dillon on Municipal Corporations, § 977, and cases cited, especially that of Maxmilian v. New York, 62 N. Y. 160 (20 Am. R. 468); Elliott on Mun. Corp. 327.
Judgment affirmed.