Harris v. City of Des Moines

209 N.W. 454, 202 Iowa 53
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 21, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 209 N.W. 454 (Harris v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. City of Des Moines, 209 N.W. 454, 202 Iowa 53 (iowa 1926).

Opinion

De Graff, C. J.

The defendant-city challenged, by demurrer, the plaintiff’s cause of action, on the primary ground that the patrolling or guarding of a public street, temporarily set aside by the superintendent of public safety for coasting purposes, is a matter involving the exercise of a governmental, or police, power, and for any injury arising therefrom the city is not liable. The trial court sustained the demurrer. It is to this ruling that the appeal is directed.

This is a suit by the administratrix, to recover damages for the death of Harold Harris, a boy about eight years of age, who was killed February 17, 1923, by colliding with an automobile while he was coasting on Twenty-fifth Street in the defendant-city.

It is alleged by plaintiff in her petition that, prior to the accident in question, John MacYicar, a duly elected and qualified councilman of the city of Des Moines, acting in the official capacity of superintendent of public safety of said city, temporarily set aside and appropriated Twenty-fifth Street, between Chester and Pleasant Streets, for use by the children in that neighborhood for coasting, and at said time issued orders to the officers in his department to set aside and appropriate said street between said intersections for coasting purposes; and that, pursuant to said orders, placards were caused to be placed at the intersecting streets along Twenty-fifth Street, between Chester and Pleasant Streets, announcing that said street was reserved for coasting; that he also caused notices to be published in cer *55 tain papers of general circulation in Des Moines, apprising tbe public tbat said street bad been reserved for sucb purpose; and tbat, pursuant to tbe said orders of tbe superintendent of public safety, guards were stationed at tbe intersecting streets on said Twenty-fiftb Street, presumably to divert traffic, and more especially automobiles, from tbe use of said street during tbe time it was used for coasting.

It is further alleged tbat tbe authority of tbe superintendent of public safety is found in Section 1200 of tbe ordinances of said city, to wit:

“Tbe department of public safety shall have and exercise all powers and duties in relation to tbe management of street traffic in tbe city of Des Moines.”

Tbe negligence, as pleaded, is to tbe effect tbat tbe defendant-city permitted a dangerous condition to arise on said street, and failed to guard and to barricade or rope off said street at tbe time of tbe accident, so as to prevent automobiles or other vehicles from entering upon said street while it was being used for coasting purposes.

On tbe threshold of this case, it is well to observe tbat we are not dealing with a liability resulting from a defect in the condition of a street. Tbe condition of a street is one thing, and tbe manner of its use by tbe public is quite another thing. A municipality does not guarantee its citizens against all casualties incident to humanity, and cannot be called upon to compensate, by way of damages, its inability to protect against all accidents and misfortunes. See Jones v. City of Williamsburg, 97 Va. 722 (34 S. E. 883, 47 L. R. A. 294); 6 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, Section 2771.

It may be further observed tbat tbe doctrine of nuisance is not involved in tbe instant case, and tbe decisions bottomed on this theory are not applicable. See Wheeler v. City of Fort Dodge, 131 Iowa 566; Stokes v. City of Sac City, 162 Iowa 514. We recognize tbat tbe creation and maintenance of a nuisance do not constitute a governmental function. Fitzgerald v. Town of Sharon, 143 Iowa 730. Tbe pleaded damage is predicated on tbe defendant’s negligence, for which tbe plaintiff is entitled to recover, if at all.

It is said in City of Lafayette v. Timberlake, 88 Ind. 330:

“Tbe manner in which a highway of a city is used is a *56 different thing from its quality and condition as a street. The construction and maintenance of a street in a safe condition for travel is a corporate duty, and for a breach of such duty an action will lie; but making and enforcing ordinances regulating the use of streets brings into exercise governmental, and not corporate, powers, and the authorities are well agreed that for a failure to exercise legislative, judicial, or executive powers of government, there is no liability.”

This is "the declared rule in this state. Ball v. Town of Woodbine, 61 Iowa 83; Heller v. Town of Portsmouth, 196 Iowa 104.

The democracy of a public highway or a street is judicially set forth in Roennau v. Whitson, 188 Iowa 138, and it is exr pressly recognized that coasting on a public street is not such an act as to constitute a public nuisance. This thought is expressed in the courts of last resort in many of our sister states.

“It could not be seriously contended that for the municipal authorities to permit coasting upon such a street would be to license a public nuisance.” Burford v. City of Grand Rapids, 53 Mich. 98 (18 N. W. 571).

See, also, Jackson v. Castle, 80 Me. 119 (13 Atl. 49); Hutchinson v. Town of Concord, 41 Vt. 271 (98 Am. Dec. 584); Pierce v. City of New Bedford, 129 Mass. 534 (37 Am. Rep. 387) ; Ray v. City of Manchester, 46 N. H. 59 (88 Am. Dec. 192); Dudley v. City of Flemingsburg, 115 Ky. 5 (72 S. W. 327, 60 L. R. A. 575) ; Mayor of Wilmington v. Vandegrift, 1 Marv. (Del.) 5 (29 Atl. 1047, 25 L. R. A. 538); Barber v. City of Roxbury, 11 Allen (Mass.) 318; Fauihner v. City of Aurora, 85 Ind. 130 (44 Am. Rep. 1).

The doctrine of respondeat superior, as applied to the acts of agents of a municipal corporation, is subject to well defined limitations. Field v. City of Des Moines, 39 Iowa 575; Bradley v. City of Oskaloosa, 193 Iowa 1072; Hilgers v. Woodbury County, 200 Iowa 1318; Norman v. City of Chariton, 201 Iowa 279. In Pettengill v. City of Yonkers, 116 N. Y. 558 (quoting from an earlier decision), it is said

“To determine whether,there is municipal responsibility, the inquiry must be whether the department whose misfeasance or nonfeasance is complained of, is a part of the machinery for carrying on the municipal government, and whether it was at the *57 time engaged in the discharge of a duty, or charged with a duty primarily resting upon the municipality.”

We deem it unnecessary to differentiate further between governmental and corporate powers of a municipality. Both species of power are exercised by a municipal corporation, and as a general rule there is no liability for negligence in the exercise of governmental functions. If the act in question classifies as purely governmental, the rule of respondeat superior has no application. City of Anderson v. East, 117 Ind. 126.

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209 N.W. 454, 202 Iowa 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-city-of-des-moines-iowa-1926.