Eastern Union Co. of Delaware, Inc. v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District

178 A. 864, 36 Del. 488, 6 W.W. Harr. 488, 1934 Del. LEXIS 41
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedMarch 19, 1934
DocketNo. 56
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 178 A. 864 (Eastern Union Co. of Delaware, Inc. v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eastern Union Co. of Delaware, Inc. v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District, 178 A. 864, 36 Del. 488, 6 W.W. Harr. 488, 1934 Del. LEXIS 41 (Del. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

Rodney, J.,

delivering the opinion of the Court:

We are of the opinion that the motions of the defendant should be granted and the attachment dissolved. In view of the announced appellate disposition of the case, our reasons will not be unduly extended, but need only be sufficient to show the basis of our conclusion form the foundation for appellate action.

The sole question to be briefly discussed is the liability to suit of a public corporation—a municipal, or quasi-municipal corporation—in a State other than that of its creation.

The defendant, we think, is a public corporation. It is a geographical subdivision of the State itself; it has no stock or stockholders; and it exercises important attributes of sovereignty such as the levying of assessments and taxes; and its expressed purposes are public.

The identical act creating the present defendant has been considered by the Supreme Court of the United States in Milheim v. Moffat Tunnel Improvement District, 262 V. S. 710, 43 S. Ct. 694, 698, 67 L. Ed. 1194. There the Court said:

“We conclude that the purpose for which the tunnel is to be constructed is not private, but public, and such as warrants the exercise by the State of the power of taxation.”

The purposes of the defendant being public, we do not propose to consider whether its proper designation is a pub-[492]*492lie corporation—a municipal or a quasi-municipal corporation—for the legal principles applicable in this' case would be appropriate regardless of the name by which the defendant corporation should be called.

The law seems to be quite well settled that a municipal corporation is liable to suit only in the State of its creation. Many of the authorities are collected in Parks v. City of Decatur (C. C. A.), 138 F. 550; Marshall v. Kansas City, 95 Kan. 548, 148 P. 637, L. R. A. 1915F, 1025 and note. We do not understand that this principle is denied by the plaintiff—on the other hand, it was tacitly admitted—but the plaintiff contends that in the making of the leases and the collection of the rentals for the use of the tunnel, the defendant was not acting in a public or governmental capacity, but exercising a proprietary interest, and as to such matters is liable to suit and can be sued outside of the State of its incorporation. As evidence of the proprie^ tary action of the defendant, the plaintiff relies upon the language of Moffat Tunnel Improvement District v. Denver and S. L. Rwy. (C. C. A.), 45 F. (2d) 715, 725. There the Court said:

“We conclude further that in the making of such leases, the District was acting in a proprietary capacity and is subject to the same restrictions as a private individual.”

A public or municipal corporation may have governmental functions and at the same time it may have proprietary functions; and at times the line of demarcation between the two may be, and often is, quite shadowy. Functions which are by one Court deemed governmental are by other Courts held to be proprietary. One difference between two functions is that governmental or public functions apply to the State at large and the proprietary or private functions exist for the private benefit of a compact community. A proprietary interest or function has been held to exist where corporate action is to cover and [493]*493be binding over a long period of time and so be binding on the successors to those in charge of the public corporation which is ordinarily not true of the exercise of governmental functions. It is possible that this is the basis of the decision in Moffat Tunnel Improvement District v. Denver S. L. Rwy., supra, for such seems to be the holding of some of the authorities cited by that Court.

When the supreme authority in a state (the General Assembly) carves out a geographical area, makes it a public corporation, commands and requires that certain things be done in a certain definite way by a designated authority set up in the act, and also requires that leases be made for a stipulated time fixed by the General Assembly and not by the public corporation, there would then seem to be on the part of the public corporation no element of desire or volition to exercise a proprietary function. Whether this element is essential to the existence of the proprietary function need not be determined.

At all events, even though a public or municipal corporation does exercise both governmental and proprietary functions, yet it is still a governmental agency of the State of its incorporation, even though it may be subject within that State to the distinction between the two types of funcions. It may be sued for causes arising out of the exercise of its proprietary functions, but it still, we think, must be sued in that State of which it forms a part of the government unless the State itself has provided for its suit elsewhere, or unless the public or municipal corporation has itself moved the exercise of its proprietary functions outside of the geographical limits theretofore effective. This was the precise holding in Board of Directors of St. Francis Levee District v. Bodkin, 108 Tenn. 700, 69 S. W. 270. To the same effect is Marshall v. Kansas City, 95 Kan. 548, 148 P. 637, L. R. A. 1915F, 1025.

In the Bodkin Case, supra, the appellant was a public [494]*494corporation of the State of Arkansas; the claim of the appellee arose in Arkansas; the appellant maintained a fiscal office and had a bank deposit in Tennessee. The Court held that the public corporation was only liable to be sued in the state of its creation.

In the Marshall Case, supra, it was held that although the City of Kansas City, Mo., a municipal corporation of Missouri, had a water plant across the river in the State of Kansas, yet the municipal corporation was not liable to be sued in Kansas for a cause of action arising in Missouri. The Kansas Court again considered this matter in Baker v. City of Kansas City, 118 Kan. 27, 233 P. 1012, 1013, 1015. There the plaintiff was a resident of Kansas and performed his services in Kansas for the municipal corporation of Missouri exercising its proprietary functions in Kansas and the Court distinguished the Marshall Case “without detracting from the judgment of the court in the case last cited.” The Court said the municipal corporation

“did not bring its sovereignty into this state, but did bring its proprietary business here, and thus placed itself in the same class with other foreign business corporations doing business in this state, and with respect to such business, and especially liabilities arising in this State from the operation of its business here, it may be sued in the courts of this state.”

We do not think the mere fact that a corporation of the State of Delaware may be indebted to the defendant could be construed to be the bringing by the defendant of its proprietary business in the State of Delaware.

The only two legal authorities upon which the present attachment could be sustained are Harman v. City of Ft. Lauderdale, 134 Misc. 133, 234 N. Y. S. 196, and Doyle v. City of Astoria, Or., 147 Misc. 127, 262 N. Y. S. 572, 573.

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Bluebook (online)
178 A. 864, 36 Del. 488, 6 W.W. Harr. 488, 1934 Del. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eastern-union-co-of-delaware-inc-v-moffat-tunnel-improvement-district-delsuperct-1934.