Highway Trailer Co. v. Janesville Electric Co.

190 N.W. 110, 178 Wis. 340, 27 A.L.R. 1268, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 43
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 190 N.W. 110 (Highway Trailer Co. v. Janesville Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Highway Trailer Co. v. Janesville Electric Co., 190 N.W. 110, 178 Wis. 340, 27 A.L.R. 1268, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 43 (Wis. 1922).

Opinion

Eschweiler, J.

The defendant in supporting the order sustaining the demurrer urges as follows:

.First. That the complaint must be construed as disclosing a situation wherein the defendant has but breached its contract with the city of Edgerton for the furnishing of electrio current for the waterworks of said city.

Second. That in the maintaining and operating of such waterworks system, so far at least as to its use in extinguishing fires, the city of Edgerton was only performing a governmental function and for default therein such city incurs no liability whatsoever.

Third. That inasmuch as defendant's connection with such services is based upon its contract with the city, the defendant also cannot be held liable though engaged in furnishing but part of the necessary service for the purpose of extinguishing fires, just as water companies conducting the entire waterworks system under contract with the city have been held not liable for failure to keep up, according to contract, sufficient pressure in the water mains.

No question can well be raised but that under the established doctrine in this state as well as almost universally elsewhere, under no construction to be given to the facts alleged in the complaint could there be a liability established as against the city of Edgerton for the loss occurring to plaintiff by the interruption in the service being rendered by the city in extinguishing the fire in plaintiff’s building.

In Hayes v. Oshkosh, 33 Wis. 314, where sparks from the city’s fire engines, then being carelessly operated in the putting out of a fire in a neighboring barn, set plaintiff’s [345]*345store afire and damaged his goods, it was held that, the city being then in the performance of a public service in which/ it has no particular interest and from which it derives no special benefit, its firemen were acting, not as Servants or agents, but as public officers, and that there was no liability as against the municipality in the absence of a statute to that effect.

The same doctrine was upheld in Manske v. Milwaukee, 123 Wis. 172, 101 N. W. 377, where plaintiff was injured by the negligence of an employee of the fire department in carelessly moving'a pair of scales used in weighing coal' for the city fire department. Again in Higgins v. Superior, 134 Wis. 264, 114 N. W. 490, where the injury occurred through the negligence of a known incompetent driver for the city fire department. Again in Engel v. Milwaukee, 158 Wis. 480, 149 N. W. 141, where the city was held not liable for an injury caused by the negligence of the driver of the automobile used in the department of the fire and police alarm system.

That such view is in accord with the overwhelming weight of authority in this country is clearly indicated from the cases listed in 9 A. L. R. 143. But one state in recent years has held to the contrary, and by a decision in 1919 the Ohio supreme court expressly overruled its former decision in that regard and now holds that a municipal corporation can properly be held liable for injury to a pedestrian by the negligent driving of the city’s fire apparatus. Fowler v. Cleveland, 100 Ohio St. 158, 126 N. E. 72, 9 A. L. R. 131. The same ruling has been had as to the operation of a fire tug, but that by reason of maritime law. Workman v. New York City, 179 U. S. 552, 570, 21 Sup. Ct. 212, 45 Lawy. Ed. 314.

There is a manifest distinction between services rendered by a city in extinguishing fires for which, as is well known, no compensation is received by the city and a situation arising from negligence in the operation or maintenance of [346]*346a waterworks system by the city where water is furnished to private consumers upon contract and for compensation. When engaged in the performance of services in the conduct of a business from which it is receiving particular and specific financial return, the municipality is held accountable for the default or negligence of its employees as though it were a private corporation. State Journal P. Co. v. Madison, 148 Wis. 396, 403, 134 N. W. 909; Piper v. Madison, 140 Wis. 311, 314, 122 N. W. 730; Nemet v. Kenosha, 169 Wis. 379, 383, 172 N. W. 711. It was clearly referring only to its conducting the waterworks system as a revenue producer and not when within the limited purpose of furnishing fire protection that this court speaks of it as acting in a proprietary capacity in Eau Claire Dells Imp. Co. v. Eau Claire, 172 Wis. 240, 252, 179 N. W. 2.

The clear distinction between such' two services and the acting by the municipality in its proprietary capacity in the one and its exercise of governmental function in the other is pointed out in Piper v. Madison, supra, and in Chicago v. Selz, Schwab & Co. 202 Ill. 545, 67 N. E. 386, there cited.

Upon the third point above stated and as urged here by the defendant, it was early held in this state, has been steadily adhered to since, and in accord with the general line of authority elsewhere, that a private corporation under contract with the city to furnish the water supply to such city and its inhabitants is not liable any more than is the city for damages arising from any breach of its contract obligations to furnish sufficient pressure in the waiter mains for fire protection. The question was squarely presented and fully discussed in Britton v. Green Bay & Ft. H. W. W. Co. 81 Wis. 48, 51 N. W. 84, where the damages sought to be recovered occurred by reason of the failure of the waterworks company to comply with a provision of its franchise with the city expressly requiring it to furnish [347]*347water both for public and private use and for the putting out of fires, and in that case the distinction between the two kinds of services was pointed out. Page 53. The question was again fully discussed and this court strongly urged to change the rule so announced in the Britton Case in the case of Krom v. Antigo Gas Co. 154 Wis. 528, 140 N. W. 41, 143 N. W. 163. Upon the first decision in the Krom Case it was held that there could be a liability under the treble-damage provisions of the public utility law, but upon rehearing that view was withdrawn and the court then agreed with the opinion expressed by Mr. Justice Timlin in his concurring opinion, in which is found a full discussion of this question. So the rule in the Britton Case was expressly reaffirmed and added weight given to it from the view the court then expressed (p. 544) as to the tremendous liabilities that would be now imposed upon such water companies which had assumed similar situations in evident reliance upon the rule announced in the Britton Case.

If, therefore, the complaint must receive the construction contended for by defendant, and there is much plausible support in the language used therein for such contention, then under the decisions above quoted there could be no escape from the conclusion that the complaint states no cause of action as against the defendant and the demurrer should have been, as it was, sustained.

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Bluebook (online)
190 N.W. 110, 178 Wis. 340, 27 A.L.R. 1268, 1922 Wisc. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/highway-trailer-co-v-janesville-electric-co-wis-1922.