City of Greensboro v. McGibbony

20 S.E. 37, 93 Ga. 672
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedApril 9, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 20 S.E. 37 (City of Greensboro v. McGibbony) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Greensboro v. McGibbony, 20 S.E. 37, 93 Ga. 672 (Ga. 1894).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

1. The plaintiff below recovered damages from the City of Greensboro because of personal injuries sustained by reason of a defective bridge in one of its streets. The defendant contended that it was not liable, because there was nothing in its charter imposing any duty whatever upon the municipal corporation with reference to keeping its streets or highways in repair, and that in a case of this kind the city could not be held responsible, because it is not made so either expressly or impliedly by its charter or by any general law. Under the facts disclosed by the record, we’think the city was liable. We have carefully examined the act of March 5th, 1856, incorporating the City of Greensboro. (Acts of 1855-6, p. 342.) That act confers upon the mayor and aldermen the powerto remove all nuisances and obstructions in or upon the streets, and also “all the rights, powers and authorities that are now vested in the commissioners of the town-of Greensboro.” Accordingly, we took the pains to examine all the acts of the legislature relating to Greensboro, passed before the act last mentioned. The act of December 16, 1815, provided “that the commissioners of the town shall have the entire control over all the citizens and hands who actually reside within the limits of the corporation, that are liable to work on the roads, for the express purpose of keeping all the streets of said town in good repair.” With the exceptions above indicated, we find nothing in any of the several acts relating to Greensboro, including also those amendatory of the act of 1856, confering upon its municipal authorities any power, or imposing upon them any duty, with reference to the streets of the city. The mere power to remove nuisances and obstructions from the streets hardly imposes a plain and unequivocal general duty of keeping the streets in repair, and we do not think the provisions quoted from the act of 1815 con[674]*674ferred any power, or imposed any duty, upon the commissioners of Greensboro, in their corporate capacity, with reference to the streets. This provision amounted only t'o a modification of the State’s system of working the public roads, so far as this town was concerned, by making the town commissioners road commissioners in place of the road commissioners appointed in the usual manner. It cannot, therefore, be fairly said that the charter of Greensboro, in express terms, confers upon the municipal authorities the power, or imposes upon them any corresponding duty, of keeping the streets and bridges within the corporate limits in proper condition and repair. Inasmuch, however, as the charter does grant to the corporate authorities the power to “impose such taxes upon all the real and personal estate within the corporate limits of said city as they shall deem necessary for the support of the government of said ■city, or for other purposes, and . . [to] enforce the collection of the same,” we do not think, viewing this in connection with the other provisions of the charter, there was any undue assumption of authority by the mayor and aldermen in taking and exercising corporate functions over the streets and bridges of the city, as the evidence shows they undoubtedly did. Indeed, usually one of the main purposes of incorporating a city is to secure safe, convenient and well-kept streets and sidewalks ; and to this end, their charters generally in express terms invest the municipal authorities with some control over the streets, and impose upon these authorities the duty of keeping the same in repair. ¥e cannot well doubt that, in procuring a charter for the City of Greensboro, these things were in contemplation, though the language of the charter contains so little with reference to these matters. It is clear, however, that the mayor and aldermen, as evinced by their conduct, acted upon the idea .that they had the power to [675]*675exercise corporate functions over the streets, and the taxing power conferred upon them is broad enough to afford the means of carrying this power into effect. Dealing with them from their own standpoint, assuming that they usurped no authority in the premises, and bearing in mind that they actually did assume and exercise control over the streets, we are of the opinion that the municipal government should be treated as if the power above mentioned was/ expressly conferred upon it by its charter. At any rate, it does not lie in the mouth of these authorities to claim that the city is not liable because what they did was ultra vires. Upon the assumption that they were properly exercising corporate control over the streets and bridges, we will now endeavor to show that negligence on their part in constructing, or failing to keep in repair, a bridge upon one of the public streets, whereby a traveler sustained a personal injury, would render the corporation liable to make compensation in damages.

“In so far ... as they exercised powers . . . voluntarily assumed — powers intended for the private advantage of the locality and its inhabitants — there seems to be no sufficient reason why they shorfld be relieved from that liability to suit and measure of actual damage to which an individual or private corporation exercising the same powers for purposes essentially private would be liable.” 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, p. 1141. “Persons or corporations that voluntarily assume and undertake the performance' of a work, even though it be quasi public in its nature, ought to be held to impliedly contract that they will exercise due care in its performance, and for a neglect in this respect should be liable for the resulting damage.” City of Galveston v. Posnainsky, 62 Tex. 118, s. c. 13 Am. & Eng. Corp. Cas. 484. In Parker v. Mayor & Council of Macon, 39 Ga. 725, Brown, C. J., said: “As the [676]*676charter of the city of Macon confers upon the mayor and council full power and authority to keep the streets, lanes, alleys, sidewalks and public squares of the city in good order, and to remove any buildings, posts, steps, fences, or other obstructions or nuisance, which is a power conferred upon public officers for the public good, it is their duty to exercise it, and to keep the streets, lanes, alleys and sidewalks in such condition that persons passing over or along them may do so with safety and convenience. To this end it is the duty of the city authorities to remove any nuisance from the streets or sidewalks; and anything that endangers the life of any person passing along the sidewalk is a nuisance which they are bound to abate.” The principle deducible from this language is, that a power conferred upon the municipal authorities for the public good carries with it the corresponding duty of exercising that power for the public welfare. It has already been shown, we think, that a power voluntarily assumed and exercised carries the same consequences as a power expressly conferred.

“ Municipal corporations, such as cities, towns and incorporated villages, are generally held to be under a duty to construct bridges built by them so that they shall be reasonably safe for passage, and to so maintain such bridges, and those under their dominion no matter by whom they were originally constructed, as that they shall be reasonably safe for travel by one who uses ordinary prudence and care. By bridges under the dominion of municipal corporations, we mean such as they have full control over and for the maintenance of which they may rightly use the corporate funds. It results that if there is a legal duty, the negligent breach of it renders the wrong-doing corporation liable to an action by one who sustains a special injury.

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Bluebook (online)
20 S.E. 37, 93 Ga. 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-greensboro-v-mcgibbony-ga-1894.