It appears from the evidence that the defendant, Thomas A. Burton, was Division Engineer of the State Highway & Public Works Commission, having in charge the administrative division of the State and county highway system established by the State Highway & Public Works Commission, including the State and county highways of Rockingham County; that on Sunday, 3 December, 1939, a tree near one of the graded soil covered highways in Rockingham County was struck by lightning and set on fire, that a large limb from the tree was caused to fall across the highway; that the limb was discovered across the highway in the forenoon and was soon thereafter reported to the defendant, who said he would “attend to it”; that the limb was not removed, and that between sundown and dark on the evening of 3 December, 1939, the car in which the plaintiffs were riding while being driven on the said soil covered highway ran into the said limb, resulting in the injuries and damage of which complaint is made.
Conceding but not deciding that the time elapsing between the notice given to the defendant of the position of the limb across the highway till the collision between the automobile in which plaintiffs were riding— from about 11:30 a.m. till about 5 :30 p.m. — with no action on the part of a person responsible for the condition of the highway might under certain circumstances constitute evidence of actionable negligence, we do *15 not concur in the contention that the evidence in this case was sufficient to have been submitted to the jury.
The defendant, according to admissions in the answers introduced in evidence, was a public officer, namely, “Division Engineer of the State Highway & Public "Works Commission for the Fifth Division, and that the County of Rockingham is embraced within said division.” It therefore clearly appears that the defendant was a public officer and any liability that attached to him was due to the public office which he held.
In
Hipp v. Ferrall,
Further in
Hipp v. Ferrall, supra,
it it said : “It is also the recognized principle here, and the position is sustained by the great weight of authority elsewhere, that in case of duties plainly ministerial in character the individual liability of such officers for negligent breach of duty should not attach where the duties are of a public nature, imposed entirely for the public benefit, unless the statute creating the office or imposing the duties makes provision for such liability, and this principle was approved and applied here in the case of
Hudson v. McArthur,
In the recent case of
Old Fort v. Harmon,
Holding, as we do, that the motion for judgment as in case of nonsuit was properly allowed, it becomes supererogatory to discuss the other interesting points presented in the brief of the appellants.
The judgment of the Superior Court is
Affirmed.
