Duren v. City of Binghamton

172 Misc. 580, 15 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2425
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 13, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 172 Misc. 580 (Duren v. City of Binghamton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duren v. City of Binghamton, 172 Misc. 580, 15 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2425 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

McNaught, J.

The motion for a nonsuit and dismissal of the complaint, so far as the same is based upon the contention that plaintiff failed to prove facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, is without merit. The evidence was ample to submit the question of negligence and contributory negligence to the jury.

The question involved on the reserved motion and now presented for determination is one of law, whether the defendant city is to be relieved from liability for its negligence through its employees because the acts in which they were engaged were incident to the exercise of a governmental function.

Although abolished in many particulars by statutory enactment, the ancient and medieval rule that the sovereign can do no wrong still persists where the exercise of governmental powers and functions by a municipal corporation is involved. The doctrine of non-[583]*583liability of municipal corporations, even in the exercise of governmental functions, has been seriously questioned and condemned. It has been criticized in unsparing terms by eminent jurists and distinguished legal authorities. The United States Supreme Court has said: We must not be understood as conceding the correctness of the doctrine by which a mimicipal corporation, as to the discharge of its administrative duties, is treated as having two distinct capacities, the one private or corporate, and the other governmental or sovereign, in which latter it may inflict a direct and positive wrong upon the person or property of a citizen without power in the courts to afford redress for such wrong.” (Workman v. City of New York, 179 U. S. 552, 574.)

The present tendency is against the rule of non-liability. (Augustine v. Town of Brant, 249 N. Y. 198, 204, 205.)

The activities of municipal corporations and the functions such corporations exercise embrace two general classes, one governmental and a branch of the general administration of government, the other quasi-private or corporate. In the exercise of the former it is well established by authority that cannot now be questioned that the municipal corporation is exempt from liability for the acts of its officers or agents, while in the latter, when exercising private or corporate functions, it is liable. (Maximilian v. Mayor, 62 N. Y. 160; Lefrois v. County of Monroe, 162 id. 563, 567; Wilcox v. City of Rochester, 190 id. 137, 141, 142; Augustine v. Town of Brant, supra.)

Where a municipality acts in a proprietary capacity liability attaches for negligence, and the standard of care is the same as that exacted from the proprietor of a private business. (Oakes Mfg. Co. v. City of New York, 206 N. Y. 221, 227, 228; Layer v. City of Buffalo, 274 id. 135.)

Where the municipality acts in a proprietary or private capacity it may not invoke the doctrine of sovereign immunity. (Willcox v. County of Erie, 252 App. Div. 20; affd., 277 N. Y. 604.)

The modern tendency to abolish the fiction that the sovereign can do no wrong is illustrated not only by the comments of eminent jurists and the discussions of learned expositors of the law, but is reflected in statutory enactments. The State has waived its immunity from liability for the torts of its officers and employees. (Court of Claims Act, § 12-a.) State and town liability for defective streets and highways has been extended. (Highway Law, §§ 58, 215, 216.) Counties have been made liable for injuries caused by defective highways and bridges. (County Law, § 6.) Municipalities have been made liable for negligence of an officer ov employee in the operation of a municipally-owned motor vehicle. (Gen. [584]*584Mun. Law, §§ 50-a, 50-b, 50-c.) Liability for malpractice by physicians and dentists in public institutions has been imposed on municipalities. (Gen. Mun. Law, § 50-d.)

The motion to dismiss upon the ground the defendant city was exercising a governmental function seems to be based upon the fact that in the operation of the post office building annex, leased and operated by the city and county, the city was engaged in the distribution of charitable relief. It is contended the city, being engaged in welfare work, was exercising a function of government, it being its duty to care for the distress of those unable to care for themselves. It is claimed the city was thus acting in a purely governmental capacity and, therefore, is exempt from liability for the negligent acts of its servants or agents, no matter how gross, in connection with the operation of such activities.

The question of liability or non-liability because of the exercise' of a governmental function due to the relationship of the various governmental entities entering into the distribution of relief .under the conditions existing in the building at the time of the accident, is not at all free from doubt. We do not, however, deem it essential in the determination of this motion to decide such question. It may even be conceded that in the distribution of relief in whatever form the city exercises a governmental function, but that fact, in view of the facts in this case, of itself will not relieve the defendant city of responsibility. If the defendant in its relation to the W. P. A. sewing project was acting in the exercise of private or proprietary functions, the doctrine the sovereign may with impunity so act or fail to act as to injure the individual and be without liability, would not avail to relieve it of responsibility in this case.

, It is necessary, therefore, that we turn to a determination as to the capacity in which the city was here acting in relation to the W. P. A. sewing project. The city had leased the post office building and the annex, jointly it is true, with the county, but that we do not consider of. importance here. It was a tenant in possession. It granted certain rights and privileges to the W. P. A. sewing project, an enterprise over which it had no control and whose employees were paid weekly wages by an entirely separate and distinct entity. It put up a partition so that the W. P. A. sewing project might have the use, for its purposes and for the activities of its employees, of one-half of the annex. It constructed a door in such partition and then granted the right to use toilet, lavatory and drinking-water facilities in the part it retained for its own use and purposes. To all intents and purposes it was a subleasing. In so doing the defendant was clearly acting in a proprietary capacity. It stood to all intents and purposes in the relation of landlord [585]*585to the sewing project and its employees. What was the duty of the defendant city, standing in such relation of landlord? It had granted a right of ingress and egress along a passageway between products and supplies which its employees stacked and stored. It retained under its control that part of the building where its enterprise was being conducted and to which it had granted common use of certain facilities with its tenant on the other side of the partition. It was the duty of the defendant to use reasonable diligence to see that the parts of the premises so retained, and which the employees of the sewing project were entitled to use, were kept in a reasonably safe condition.

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Bluebook (online)
172 Misc. 580, 15 N.Y.S.2d 518, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duren-v-city-of-binghamton-nysupct-1939.