Bush v. State Highway Commission

46 S.W.2d 854, 329 Mo. 843, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 766
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 17, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 854 (Bush v. State Highway Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. State Highway Commission, 46 S.W.2d 854, 329 Mo. 843, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 766 (Mo. 1932).

Opinions

The question for decision in this case is whether respondent, the State Highway Commission of Missouri, may be sued for the tortious acts of its agents and employees. It is a question of first impression in this State. Appellant, Dr. W.B. Bush, brought suit in the Circuit Court of Cole County against respondent for $10,000 damages for personal injuries and the demolition of his automobile, alleged to have been caused by a collision with an auto truck of defendant on Highway No. 66 near Waynesville, in Pulaski County, Missouri. The petition charged that appellant's injuries and the destruction of his automobile were directly caused by the negligence of respondent's employee in operating the truck at a high and dangerous rate of speed, upon the wrong side of the road and without lights; in failing to exercise proper control over the truck or to give appellant warning, and in not observing the humanitarian rule. Respondent demurred to the petition upon the ground that the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action and that the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The trial court sustained the demurrer, and, appellant declining to plead further, rendered a final judgment from which appellant appealed to this court.

I. Appellant contends that he is entitled to maintain his action because, by Section 8102, Revised Statutes 1929 (Sec. 12, Act of August 4, 1921, Laws 1921, 1st. Ex. Sess., pp. 131 to 167) "the commission may sue and be sued in its officialWaiver: name, and for the purpose of suit and other legalRight to proceedings, service may be had on the secretary." HeSue and also urges his right to maintain the instant actionBe Sued. under the authority of the decision of this court in the case of State ex rel. State Highway Commission v. Bates, 296 S.W. 418. In that case two copartners doing business under the name of Highway Commission Company, sued the State Highway Commission of Missouri in Jasper County upon a contract for road construction in Howard County. *Page 847 The plaintiffs, in the first count of their petition, sued for $16,000, balance due upon the contract, and, in the second count, they sued for $10,000, damages caused, in the doing of the road work contracted for, by the alleged arbitrary delays and exactions of the Highway Commission. These details are taken from the original files in this court, for the opinion (296 S.W. 419) merely states that the suit was for damages on a contract. Plaintiffs in the action in Jasper County caused service of summons to be had in that county constructively upon an engineer of the commission, and also in Cole County upon the Secretary of the commission. The State Highway Commission brought an original action in prohibition in this court, and the preliminary writ was made absolute. The reason for the rule was, that, under the act creating the commission, it is clear that the domicile of the commission is in Jefferson City, Cole County, Missouri, since the secretary, upon whom service is to be had, must be a resident of Jefferson City, in charge of an office there, to be provided by the Commission of the Permanent Seat of Government. [Sec. 8102, R.S. 1929.] Upon this question of domicile of the commission the court, in its opinion in State ex rel. v. Bates, says:

"It is clear, from the Act of 1921, that the State desired this entity to be sued, and the differences between it and the citizens of the State adjusted by the courts; but it is likewise clear that the domicile of the commission is in Jefferson City, Cole County, Missouri. Throughout the act, the sundry provisions disclose a clear intent to make it plain that, while this entity was building a road system for the State, the habitat of the commission is and should be in Jefferson City, the seat of the State government, and, further, that while the State desired that the commission should be sued, it was to be sued in Cole County, where all the maps, books, papers, contracts, and such like are kept."

It can hardly be said that these words of the opinion would sustain a suit of the nature of the action here in question. Both before and after the decision in State ex rel. v. Bates, supra, this court in sundry suits has adjusted differences which arose while the Highway Commission was building a road system for the State.

Castilo v. State Highway Commission, 312 Mo. 244, 279 S.W. 673, was a suit by tax-paying citizens to enjoin the defendant from constructing a state highway along a certain route located by the defendant though Howard, Boone, Callaway, Montgomery, Warren and St. Charles counties, which route, plaintiff contended, was distant from one to ten miles from the route described in the State Highway System Act (Laws 1921, 1st. Ex. Sess., pp. 131 to 167). The trial court sustained a demurrer to the petition and, upon appeal, this court en banc in a majority opinion affirmed the judgment upon the ground that the bill did not state a cause of action. But the court *Page 848 en banc held that the first ground of the demurrer, namely, that the plaintiffs had no capacity to sue, was not well taken. [Castilo v. State Highway Commission, supra.] Although in that case there were two separate concurring opinions and two separate dissenting opinions, there was no dissent from the proposition that plaintiffs had capacity to sue. Judge GRAVES, who later wrote the opinion of the court in State ex rel. v. Bates, supra, said in his dissenting opinion, Castilo v. State Highway Commission, 279 S.W. l.c. 681: "That a commission has run wild, and violated the law, in the construction of hard surfaces upon roads, should have no influence upon a clean-cut exposition of the law."

State ex rel. Liberty Township, Stoddard County, v. State Highway Commission (Mo. Sup.), 287 S.W. 39 (decided by this court before State ex rel. v. Bates, supra), was an original proceeding in mandamus to compel respondent to refund to the township a certain sum of money which the township had placed to the credit of the commission to construct a highway between two towns in that township and which money the commission had so used. The writ was denied on the merits of the case and not on any question of capacity to sue.

In the mandamus case of State ex rel. McKinley Publishing Co. v. Hackmann, State Auditor, 282 S.W. 1007, which was also decided before State ex rel. v. Bates, supra, this court denied the asserted right of the State Highway Commission to buy printing and stationery supplies independently of the Commission of Printing and the statutes governing the letting of contracts for public printing. The court in its opinion said:

"It would be a unique situation if the highway commission could determine for itself without legislative sanction, how much it would spend for its own maintenance."

And quite recently and since the decision in State ex rel. v. Bates, supra, in the case of State ex rel. Reynolds County v. State Highway Commission, 328 Mo. 859, 42 S.W.2d 193, this court granted its writ of mandamus directing the commission to set up a refund account in the sum of $10,668.96 to the credit of Reynolds County out of the state road funds apportioned to that county.

Thus, we see that before, as well as after the decision of State ex rel. v.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 854, 329 Mo. 843, 1932 Mo. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-state-highway-commission-mo-1932.