Citation Numbers: 82 Me. 352, 9 L.R.A. 205, 19 A. 829, 1890 Me. LEXIS 46
Judges: Emery, Foster, Libeey, Peters, Virgin
Filed Date: 2/17/1890
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The facts stated in the plaintiff’s declaration present an action on the case against the defendant town for damages caused by the negligent construction of a public sewer in a public street. The alleged negligence consists in the great length of time during which the street was dug up, and in filling the excavation with farm dressing, thereby creating a nuisance by which the plaintiff suffered special damages in his business, comfort, property and the enjoyment of his estate, and for which he claims to be entitled to recover of the defendant town. If the town is liable upon the facts set out in the declaration, the action is to stand for trial; otherwise the plaintiff is to become non-suit.
It is not denied that whatever was done, and for which it is claimed that the town should be held liable, was done by the municipal officers. The allegation in the writ is that the “town
While admitting the general doctrine that no private action can be maintained against a town or quasi public corporation for a neglect of corporate duty unless such right of action be given by statute, the plaintiff’s contention is, that if a town, while acting within the scope of its municipal power, creates a nuisance to the injury of an individual, it is liable in damages therefor.
If we concede the correctness of the plaintiff’s proposition, then the difficulty of maintaining this action is by no means removed, inasmuch as the allegations contained in the declaration do not bring the acts complained of within scope of the corporate powers of the town; nor is there any allegation that such acts were performed by its officers in the discharge of any corporate duty imposed by law upon the town. Seele v. Deering, 79 Maine, 347: Anthony v. Adams, 1 Met. 284. The town has no duty whatever in relation to the construction of public drains or sewers which renders it liable in an action like the present. The municipal officers of towns are constituted a tribunal by the statutes of this state, whose duty it is, whenever they deem it necessary for public convenience or health, to construct public drains or sewers along or across any public way at the expense of the town, and to have control of the same. R. S., c. 16, § 2. Laws of 1844, e. 94. Laws of 1860, c. 153. Estes v. China, 56 Maine, 410.
The earlier enactments, of which the present statute is only a condensation, upon examination will be found to contain directions to the municipal officers as to the manner in which they shall construct such drains. There is no general statute authorizing towns in their corporate capacity to lay out or construct drains or sowers, as there is respecting ways. It is only when such drains have been constructed and persons have paid for connecting with them, as provided in § 9, that the town becomes responsible in regard to maintaining and keeping the same in repair, and assumes responsibilities in reference thereto.
Though chosen and paid by the town, and for many purposes its agents, (as in making contracts within the scope of their authority about the affairs of the town, or acting under the direction of the town in matters pertaining to its corporate duties, Deane v. Randolph, 132 Mass. 475,) yet these officers do not sus tain this relation in reference to these particular duties in question. In this respect they are a part of the municipal government, in the performance of their public duties, and are not servants or agents of the municipality by whom they are chosen and paid, rendering their principals liable for their acts, any more than are officers of a fire department, (Burrill v. Augusta, 78 Maine, 118; Hafford v. New Bedford, 16 Gray, 297) ; or surveyors of highways and street commissioners when making, repairing or otherwise performing their official duties upon highways or streets, (Small v. Danville, 51 Maine, 359; Woodcock v. Calais, 66 Maine, 235 ; Walcott v. Swampscott, 1 Allen, 101; Barney v. Lowell, 98 Mass. 570); or health officers, or municipal officers in the discharge of their duties in relation to contagious diseases,
The liabilities of municipal corporations for the torts or negligent acts of their officers are fixed by statute. They are to be held liable for the negligence or misconduct of their officers only when made so by express statute, or the act out of which the ’claim originates was within the scope of their corporate powers, and was directly and expressly ordered by the corporation. Burrill v. Augusta, supra; Woodcock v. Calais, supra; Anthony v. Adams, supra; Deane v. Randolph, 132 Mass. 475 ; Seele v. Deering, supra.
A case very analagous to this in principle is Cushing v. Bedford, 125 Mass. 526. There by statute the selectmen of towns were authorized to establish and maintain such public drinking troughs and fountains, within the public highways of their towns, “as in their judgment the public necessity and convenience may require;” and the towns were authorized to raise and appropriate money to pay the expense thereof. “These provisions,” say the court, “make the selectmen a board of public officers charged with this duty; they are not agents of the town, but they represent the general public.” And the court further held that the towns, in their corporate capacity, had not been given the right by statute to construct drinking troughs in the public highways, and that the “town cannot therefore be charged with having created a nuisance, from which the plaintiff suffered special injury.”
Of course, the rule we have been considering has no application and does not exempt municipal corporations from liability to which other corporations are subject, for negligence in managing or dealing with property held by them for their own advantage
Nor is this case governed by the principles, enunciated in another class of decisions, where cities and other municipalities have been held chargeable for negligence in the construction of sewers, or other particular works, on account of some provision in their charter or ordinances,- — or where authorized by some special statute to construct such works and from which to receive profits as a private corporation might, and when they have, therefore, assumed duties and liabilities by the acceptance of obligations not imposed by general law, as in the case of Murphy v. Lowell, 124 Mass. 564; Emery v. Lowell, 104 Mass. 15; Child v. Boston, 4 Allen, 41, 52; Merrifield v. Worcester, 110 Mass. 218; Oliver v. Worcester, 102 Mass. 500. And see also Hill v. Boston, 122 Mass. 358, 359 ; Tindley v. Salem, 137 Mass. 172; Bigelow v. Randolph, 14 Gray, 543. In such cases the work is not purely for the direct and immediate use of the public alone, but partly commercial in its character, in which some benefit accrues to the municipality by way of consideration for the conveniences afforded to those who are willing to pay for them.
Thus in Emery v. Lowell, supra, Gray, J., says : “A municipal corporation, voluntarily accepting a statute which authorizes it to make common sewers and to assess the expense thereof on lands benefited thereby, is not exempt from liability to private actions by persons injured by its negligence in exercising the power so granted and accepted, to the same extent as it is in the performance of duties imposed upon it by general law, exclusively for public purposes, and without its corporate assent.”
It is there held, as also in Child v. Boston, supra, that after a common sewer has been constructed, and become the property of the municipality under special authority conferred and accepted, it then becomes the duty of such municipality to maintain and keep the same in repair, and for any neglect of which it would be liable to any person injured.
And such have been the decisions of our own court in Blood v.
The allegations in the plaintiff’s declaration have reference only to the acts of the “town while in the course of constructing a public sewer, * * * * under and by virtue of the statutes of this state,” and not to any dereliction of duty, on the part of the town, in maintaining or keeping the same in repair after its construction by the tribunal authorized by general statute to construct it.
The town is not liable in tort for damages resulting to the plaintiff from the work done by its officers in the discharge of a public duty imposed upon them by a general law.
Plaintiff nonsuit.