Harmon v. State Road Commission

2 Ct. Cl. 329
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 17, 1944
DocketNo. 316
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Ct. Cl. 329 (Harmon v. State Road Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harmon v. State Road Commission, 2 Ct. Cl. 329 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinions

ROBERT L. BLAND, Judge.

The claim involved in this case arises out of an accident which occurred on the berm of state route no. 119, at Barnabus, in Logan county, West Virginia, on the night of June 22, 1943. Sometime prior to that date employees of the state road commission found it necessary to clean out a culvert on the berm of the highway just above the schoolhouse between the highway and the Chesapeake and Ohio railway at Barnabus which had become clogged or filled up. It had rained and the water from the culvert was over on the improved black top road. The highway at this point is of the standard width of eighteen feet. The head wall was removed and the culvert opened sufficiently to drain the accumulated water. Pending the replacement of the head wall of the culvert the rocks taken therefrom were used in building a protecting wall around it. This wall was intended to serve as a warning of danger to persons using the highway. The rocks were laid on three sides in triangular form, the embankment on the railroad, or left side of the berm, obviating the necessity of placing any part of the wall on that side. The weight of the evidence shows that between this pile or wall of rock around the culvert and [330]*330the edge of the black top highway there was a space of approximately two feet.

Before dark on that evening claimant, Dora Harmon, a midwife seventy years of age, went to the Soloman restaurant, where beer is sold, and where, she testified, she expected a man whom she identified as “Estepp” to call for her and accompany her to his home at Cinderella. While there, she further testified, one Tommy Williams, who resided at Hatfield Bottom, came to the restaurant and arranged with her to visit his wife, who was pregnant. She was also joined at the restaurant by P. B. Browning who, she said, was her first cousin. “Estepp” having failed to arrive at the restaurant by ten o’clock, claimant requested Browning to accompany her to the Williams home. They left the restaurant together when it closed for the day at ten o’clock p. m. and right above the storehouse crossed from one side to the other of the eighteen foot improved highway. Claimant walked on the left berm, while Browning remained on the black top surface. They engaged in conversation as they proceeded. Presently Browning perceived an automobile coming in the direction of Barnabu; and left the highway, stepping upon the berm behind claimant. Explaining this action of Browning, she testified: “The car was way up the road. There is a long stretch of road, you can see way up the road, and Mr. Browning said he saw a car coming, and he stepped, in behind me, off the hard road, stepped over to let the car pass.” After the automobile passed Browning returned to the improved highway. When they had then proceeded about twenty-five or thirty feet they reached the above mentioned pile of rocks or rock wall which had been placed around the culvert after the head wall had been removed and the culvert cleaned out, and claimant tripped and fell upon the rocks. She affirmed: “I didn’t see that pile of rocks and I just caught my foot under them and fell on top of the rocks and the rocks started sliding, I reckon. I went on right over in the culvert.”

An ambulance was called and claimant was taken to the Mercy hospital at Logan, where it was found that she had [331]*331sustained a fracture of the surgical neck of the femur and suffered bruises about the body. She was admitted to the hospital June 23, 1943 and remained there until July 12, 1943. Upon her admission to the hospital she was placed in a body cast — what is called a hip spica — of the left hip, and experienced a great deal of suffering. After returning to her home she was confined to her bed for about six weeks. Although there has been improvement in her condition it is made clear that she has some permanent disability and some limitation of motion in her left knee and left hip. She uses crutches when walking.

Claimant now seeks an award against the state for $15,000.00. Her claim is based upon the alleged liability of the state to pay her damages in that amount on the ground of the negligence of the state road commission, its agents or employees. She contends that in removing the rocks from the culvert employes of the road commission negligently placed such rocks upon and along the berm of the road and close to the paved portion thereof, and negligently failed to place any lights or other warnings near said rocks, and negligently failed to place any barriers or other safeguards around said rocks, and that by reason of such alleged negligence she sustained her said accident.

We do not think that the facts established by the evidence and relied upon by the claimant entitle her to an award in any amount.

A state of the union is not liable to suit in its own courts or the courts of another state, without its consent. 23 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law, page 83. A state is not liable for the torts of its officers or agents in the discharge of their official duties, unless it has voluntarily assumed such liability and consented to be so liable: 36 Cyc. 881. It is well settled that in the absence of a statute voluntarily assuming such liability the state is not hable in damages for the negligent acts of its officers while engaged in discharging ordinary official duties, pertaining to the administration of the government of the [332]*332state. Story on Agency, section 31. In the case of The City of Richmond v. Long’s Administrators, 17 Grattan 375, the Supreme Court of Virginia held:

“Public officers of the government, in the performance of their public functions, are not liable for the misconduct, negligence or omissions of their official subordinates.”

The state road commission is a department of the state government. It is held in Stewart v. State Road Commission, 117 W. Va. 352, 185 S. E. 567, that the constitutional immunity of the state from suit extends to its governmental agencies. And it may be said that under general law the state is not <o persons injured upon its public highways by reason of defects therein. No Statute has been enacted by the Legislature making the state so liable. However, in 26 Ruling Case Law 66, it is said:

“The power of the Legislature to make the state or one of its sub-divisions liable for injuries inflicted by it upon an individual is unquestioned even if there was no liability at common law.”

The court of claims act does not impose liability upon the state where no liability existed prior to its enactment. And since our state has not by general law assumed liability for the negligence of its officers and agents, the recommendations of the court of claims to the Legislature must of necessity depend upon the facts of each case presented for detrmination. An individual does not, in the absence of a statute assuming liability on the part of the state for such negligence, have a right or be entitled to an award for injuries sustained through the negligence of the state where such negligence actually exists. If the Legislature shall intend to make the state liable for the negligence of its officers and agents in all cases it will be necessary for it to so provide by future enactments. The present court of claims act is not susceptible of such interpretation.

[333]*333To make an award in this case, upon the facts disclosed by the record, would be equivalent to the bestowal of a charity, which we have no power to do. It would be a mere gratuity.

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Related

Stewart v. State Road Commission of West Virginia
185 S.E. 567 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)
Woodall v. Darst
77 S.E. 264 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ct. Cl. 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harmon-v-state-road-commission-wvctcl-1944.