56 Vt. 228 | Vt. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
By its charter the village of Rutland is empowered: “ To provide for the preservation of buildings from fires by precautionary measures and inspections, and to establish and regulate a fire department and fire companies;” also “ to provide a supply of water for the protection of the village against fire and for other purposes, and to regulate the use of the same.” Charter, s. 11. It is also provided by section 4 of the charter, which in pamphlet form is made a part of the case, that
“ Said village, at every annual meeting thereof, shall elect one chief engineer, one first assistant engineer, and one second assistant engineer, who shall hold their respective offices one year, and who shall be, ex officio, fire wardens of said village, and have like power and authority, as such fire wardens; and the duties of said engineers shall be such as are or may be prescribed by the by-laws and ordinances of said village;. and they shall, also, at all fires in said village, superintend all labor to extinguish*231 the same, subject to the by-laws and ordinances of said village. There shall be seven fire' wardens of said village, who shall be appointed, and may at any time- be removed, by a majority of the board of trustees in their discretion.”
In pursuance of this authority the village, by ordinance, established a fire department consisting of séven fire wardens and the fire and hoolc-and-ladder companies organized or to be organized by the village, to be under the direction of the chief engineer and his assistants, elected from the fire wardens, and made it the duty of the engineers and fire wardens, under the direction of the chief engineer,
“ To examine into the condition of all reservoirs, hydrants and wells, and of the engines and all other fire apparatus, and the engine houses owned or rented by the village, and other property belonging to the fire department, and to take a general supervision and care of the same, and report the condition of the same through their chief to the trustees, as often as circumstances shall render it necessary, for the safe keeping and proper repair of all such property.” Act op Incorporation and Ordinances, pp. 29 and 30.
Under the authority of its charter, as amended, and by vote of the village, the village provided for a supply of water, for public and private use, laid water pipes through the streets and supplied them with hydrants for use in case of fire.
The declaration in this case sets • forth the authority of the village to “construct, maintain, increase, improve, repair and keep in repair reservoirs, aqueducts, water courses, and water pipes for public and private uses in said village;” and counts upon an injury to the female plaintiff by reason that the defendant did “ carelessly and negligently maintain, amend, and repair said aqueduct, water pipe and water course, and carelessly and negligently leave the same out of repair.”
The facts, so far* as material, appear to be that a certain hydrant, connected with the aqueduct pipe, having become 'frozen, one Davis, who was first assistant engineer of the fire department, acting under the direction of the chief engineer, reported its condition to the village trustees and was by them directed to thaw out the same at the expense of the village.
The evidence having been closed, the defendant moved for a verdict on the grounds; (1) that the plaintiffs upon their declaration could not recover; (2) that there was a fatal variance between the proof and the declaration; and (3) that whatever act was done was done by the fire department of said village, for the acts of which the village was not liable. The court overruled this motion so far as to submit the question of negligence to the jury, and if negligence was found, the amount of damages. The jury failing to agree, the court thereupon directed a verdict for the defendant, to which the plaintiffs excepted, as also to the overruling of their motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial. Upon these exceptions the case comes to this court.
The second question raised by the defendant’s motion is one of variance; and it is contended that the declaration counts upon a negligence in repairing the aqueduct., water pipe or water course, while the uncontradicted evidencie showed that the aqueduct, water pipe or water course was not in need of repair, and no repairing or meddling with the same was attempted; but that whatever was done in the way of repair was solely to tlie hydrant, which is no part of the aqueduct, water pipe or water course, but entirely distinct from, though annexed to it. We do not think this proposition can stand. The declaration sets forth
We therefore come to the question raised by the first and third grounds of the motion, namely, whether or not the defendant is liable in this action. In considering this, the state of the case, of course, requires that we treat as established the plaintiff’s allegation that the repairing or thawing out of the hydrant was done in a careless and negligent manner.
The question of the liability of quasi corporations for the negligence, non-feasance or mis-feasance of the officers and agents through whose instrumentality their various functions are performed, is one of some difficulty and delicacy, and is obscured by a great number of decisions, particularly in this country, which are at least apparently conflicting and irreconcilable. This conflict, however, will he found due, upon closer examination, not so much to any ambiguity in the legal principles which it is our duty under the system of jurisprudence which obtains in this State to apply, as to the fact that while some courts have followed the doctrines of the common law, others have leaned more to the civil law; or else their decisions have been based on
At common law it has been a settled principle ever since the leading case of Russell v. Men of Devon, 2 Term, 667, decided by Lord Kenyon in 1788, that an individual cannot sustain an action against a political subdivision of the State based upon the misconduct or non-feasance of public officers. The reasons assigned in the earlier cases were that the maxim which declares, it better for the individual to suffer than for the public to be inconvenienced, is stronger than the other principle, that fo.r every injury the law gives a remedy, and that the plaintiff might levy his execution upon the property of any individual inhabitant —the organization having no fund legally applicable to its payment — thus giving rise to multiplicity of actions to enforce contribution and great public annoyance. But the more modern and broader ground is said to be, that these quasi corporations are mere instrumentalities for the administration of public government and the collection and disbursement of public moneys, raised by taxation for public rises, and which cannot lawfully be applied to the liquidation of damages caused by wrongful acts of their officers. Riddle v. Proprietors, 7 Mass. 187; Mower v. Leicester, 9 Id. 247; Coolidge v. Brookline, 114 Id. 596; Com’rs v. Mighels, 7 Ohio St. 109; Findlater v. Duncan, McL. & R. 911.
This rule of exemption extends, necessarily, to municipal corporations so far as the reason of it applies, and that is so far as the acts done are governmental and political in their character and solely for the public benefit and protection; or the negligence or non-feasance are in respect of the same matters. Instances of this non-liability may be found in 2 Thompson on Negligence 731, and in numerous cases. The immunity goes a step farther and protects such corporations in a total neglect to perform certain functions which are concededly for the public benefit and convenience. No action can be maintained against a municipal corporation by an individual, no matter how great an injury he might be able to show, for the neglect to build
When, however,- municipal corporations are not in the exercise. of their purely governmental functions, for the sole and immediate benefit of the public, but are exercising, as corporations, private franchise powers and privileges, which belong to them for their immediate corporate benefit, or dealing with property held by them for their corporate advantage, gain or emolument, though enuring ultimately to the benefit of the general public, then they become liable for negligent exercise of such powers precisely as are individuals. Hill v. Boston, 122 Mass. 344; 102 Id. 499; Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H. 284; Providences. Clapp, 1Y How. 161. So, of the construction and maintenance of water-works: Murphy v. Lowell, 124 Mass. 564; 122 Id. 344; 102 Id. 489; City of Dayton v. Pease, 1 Ohio St. 80; Gibson v. Preston, L. R. 5 Q. B. 219; Southcoat v. Stanley, 1 Hurlst. & N. 247; 2 Id. 204; 1 Id. 67; of ditches or drains: Chicago v. Langlass, 66 Ill. 361; 44 Id. 295; of bridges or culverts, and in respect of structures which may obstruct the flow of natural water courses and of the pollution
The case at bar is grounded solely upon the application of the doctrine of respondeat superior, and can be maintained only by establishing the relation of master and servant, and the further proposition that the acts done were of such a character that for a negligent doing of them the village can be made liable. The acts done were done by and under the direction of the officers of the fire department and in pursuance of the duty imposed upon them by s. 4 of the ordinance establishing a fire department “ to examine into the condition of all reservoirs, hydrants and wells, and of the engines and all other fire apparatus, * *' * and to take a general supervision and care of the same.” They performed a further duty prescribed by that section in reporting the condition of these hydrants to the trustees, and were by said trustees directed to go on and thaw them out, and informed that the village would pay the expense of so doing. The question of payment seems to be about all that the trustees have to do with
The fire department and its service are of no benefit or profit to the village in its corporate capacity. They are not a source of income or profit to the village, but of expense, which is paid —not out of any special receipts or fund, nor defrayed, even in part, by assessment upon particular persons or classes benefitted, as in case of sewers or water works — but from the general fund raised by taxation of all the inhabitants. The benefit accrues, not in any sense to the corporation; as such, but directly to the public; and the members or employes of the department, whether acting as an independent, though subordinate organization, or under the direct authority of the general officers of tho corporation, are, while acting in the line of duty prescribed for them, not agents of the corporation in the sense which renders it liable for their acts, but are in the discharge of an official duty as public officers. To such it is held in many cases that the doctrine of respondeat superior does not apply, and for their acts no liability can be imposed upon the corporation except by statute. Dill. Mun. Corp., (1st ed.) s. 774; Hafford v. New Bedford, 16 Gray, 297; Fisher v. Boston, 104 Mass. 87; Maxmilian v. Mayor, 62 N. Y. 160; Smith v. Rochester, 76 Id. 513; Jewett v. New Haven, 38 Conn. 368; Ogg v. Lansing, 35 Iowa, 495; Field v. Des Moines, 39 Id. 575; Heller v. Sedalia, 53 Mo. 159; Howard v. San Francisco, 51 Cal. 52.
If the defendant were held liable in this case, it would be impossible to avoid a similar conclusion in case of a negligent or careless act in putting the hydrants in order for efficiency, or in the use or repair of any of the fire apparatus, or indeed any negligence or carelessness of firemen while in active service at a fire:
‘We find no error, and the judgment of the County Court is affirmed.
Note by Royce, Ch. J. — Since tlie above opinion, was written my attention has been called to the case of Edgerly v. Concord, to appear in the 39th N. H. The action was brought to recover damages occasioned by a defective highway. It appeared that the mayor and city council were engaged in testing the force and capacity of a hydrant at the intersection of two streets, and that the hose and hydrant were in the hands of members of the fire department, and water was being thrown under direction of the mayor upon buildings in the vicinity. It was so thrown that it frightened the plaintiff’s horse, and in consequence of the fright the plaintiff was thrown from his carriage and injured. The defendant moved for a non-suit, which was denied. The Supreme Court held thatthe motion should have been granted. Chief Justice Doe, in the opinion, says that the experiment was the proper work of the fire department, like the trial of a steam fire engine, hose cart or other fire-extinguishing apparatus. Such an experiment might not be judiciously postponed until the neighborhood was on fire.