Fry v. County of Albemarle

9 S.E. 1004, 86 Va. 195, 1890 Va. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 13, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 9 S.E. 1004 (Fry v. County of Albemarle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fry v. County of Albemarle, 9 S.E. 1004, 86 Va. 195, 1890 Va. LEXIS 1 (Va. 1890).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error here hied her petition before the board of supervisors of Albemarle county on the 25th day of July, 1887, representing that she came to Charlottesville in a buggy drawn by one horse, on the 21st day of April, 1887, from a point in the county of Albemarle, in company with another [196]*196lady, who was riding in the same buggy. In the afternoon, about 4:30 P. M., on their way home, they were driving along one of the public roads of Albemarle county, going cautiously and carefully down a hill, when they came to a point where the public road was being worked on by a chain gang, composed of convicts out of the state prison, or penitentiary house, at Richmond, organized by the county of Albemarle by authority of an act of assembly in that case made and provided. When seeing a cart with a mule hitched to it, moving up the hill, with one of these convicts walking by the side of the cart, they turned out of the way on their right hand side as far as they could, and stopped and called out to the convict to look to the mule; that he was very slow to do this, and so slow and negligent about it that the cart collided with the buggy and turned it, together with its occupants, into the ditch on the road-side, and hurt the petitioner very much, by which she had been caused suffering and loss in physician’s fees, and other expenses, and that she believed herself to be permanently injured. That this convict was an employee of the county of Albemarle, and that the county was therefore liable in damages for these personal injuries inflicted upon -her by the county’s servant, and she demanded $5,000 for the same.

This claim the board of supervisors rejected, and she ajtpealed to the county court, where her petition was again rejected; and thereupon she appealed to the circuit court of the said county, when the judgment of the county court was affirmed; whereupon she brought the case here by writ of error.

The petition was rejected in the county court upon demurrer, so all we have to consider here is the single question whether the petition presents a case for which the county of Albemarle is liable to answer in damages.

The decision of the lower courts in this case is founded upon the principle' that the sovereign cannot be sued except by its own consent, as may be provided by law; and that in the exercise of its sovereign power, it is liable neither for misuse [197]*197nor nonuser; and tliat a county in this state is a political subdivision of the state for governmental purposes as prescribed by public law, and is no more than the state liable to he sued for its public acts, and that it cannot he held chargeable for the acts of an officer whose duties are fixed and prescribed by law.

Suits against the state are allowed by law under certain regulations. And in certain specified and enumerated eases counties in this state are authorized to sue and are suable in the circuit court held for such county in their own names, but these are limited. The thirteenth section of chapter. 45 of the Code of 1873, provides that: “Counties may sue in their own names for forfeitures, fines, or penalties given by law to such counties, or upon contracts, made with them, and may be sued in their own names, in the circuit court of such county.”

The legislature has given a remedy in eases growing out of contracts with counties, but it has given no remedy against a county for the negligence of a public officer or servant appointed by law, and we may observe, as did Lord Kenyon long ago, that the question here is, “ Whether this body of men who are sued in the present action are a corporation, or a qua corporation against whom such an action can be maintained. If it he reasonable that they should b.e by law liable to such an action, recourse must be had to the legislature for that purpose.” 2d T. R. 671. “And even if we could exercise legislative discretion in this case there would be great reason for not giving this remedy.”

The rules established by the courts concerning municipal corporations have but slight application to counties organized as ours are. Our counties are parts of the state, political subdivisions of the state, created by the sovereign power for the exercise of the functions of local government.

As was said by a learned judge in a case not now modern: “ Counties are at most but local organizations, 'which for the purposes of civil administration are invested with a few functions characteristic of a corporate existence. They are local [198]*198sub-divisions of a state, created by tbe sovereign power of the state, of its own sovereign will, without the particular solicitation, consent, or concurrent action of the people who inhabit them.” Hamilton County v. Mighels, 7 Ohio St., 109.

A municipal corporation proper is created mainly for the interest, advantage, and convenience of its locality and its people.

A county organization is created almost exclusively with a view to the policy of the State at large, for purposes of political organization and civil' administration, in matters of finance, of education, of provision for the poor, of military organization, of the means of travel and of transport, and especially for the general administration of justice.

With scarcely an exception, all the powers and functions of the county organization have a direct and exclusive reference to the general policy of the State, and are in fact but a branch of the general administration of that policy. (Opinion of Bunkenhoff, J., in same case.)

In that case it was sought to make the county liable in damages to one who suffered a personal injury from the neglect of the commissioners of the county in the discharge of their official duties. And the court said: “But it is said the members of the board of county commissioners are chosen by the electors of the county, and hence the board is to be regarded as the agents of the county, for whose torts in the performance of official duties the county ought to be responsible.

“ True, the people of the county elect the board of county commissioners; but they also elect the sheriff and treasurer of the county. Are the people of the county, therefore, responsible for the malfeasance in office of the sheriff, or for the official defalcations of the county treasurer ?

“We cannot but think that county commissioners are not agents or representatives of the counties in any such sense or manner as to render the people of the county justly answerable for their neglect, even if the neglect be such as would create a [199]*199civil liability against a natural person, or a municipal or private corporation.” It is, lie adds, undoubtedly competent for tlie legislature to fnake tlie people of a county liable for tlie official delinquencies of the county commissioners; but tliis lias not been done, and we think such liability cannot be derived from the relations of the parties either on the principles or the precedents of t-lie common law.” See, also, Jacobs v. Hamilton Co., 4 Fisher Pat. Cas., 81; Soper v. Henry Co., 26 Iowa, 264; Treadwell v. Commissioners, 11 Ohio St., 190 ; Angell & Ames, sees. 14, 23, 24, 25; Dil. Mum Cor., sees. 9, 32, 39, 761, 762.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E. 1004, 86 Va. 195, 1890 Va. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fry-v-county-of-albemarle-va-1890.