Lewis v. City of Miami

173 So. 150, 127 Fla. 426, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1462
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedMarch 4, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 173 So. 150 (Lewis v. City of Miami) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. City of Miami, 173 So. 150, 127 Fla. 426, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1462 (Fla. 1937).

Opinions

Davis, J.

The City of Miami maintains and operates a jail for the incarceration of prisoners who have been convicted of offenses against the ordinances of the city. In this case the City of Miami was sued by one Pat Lewis, a minor, who alleged in his declaration that the municipality aforesaid knowingly failed to segregate from among pris *428 oners whom it confined within its said city jail, one of its prisoners who was known to be then and there infected with a vile and loathsome venereal disease, as a direct and proximate result of which alleged breach of legal duty on the defendant municipality’s part, plaintiff, while himself a city prisoner, became exposed to the vile and loathsome venereal disease from which his fellow prisoner was known by the jail authorities to be suffering, and thereupon became grievously infected in his right eye which contracted said vile and loathsome venereal infection under the circumstances aforesaid, all to plaintiff’s great personal suffering, injury and damage in the premises.

The case was decided against the plaintiff in the court below on the city’s demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration. From the resultant final judgment for defendant on said demurrer the cause has been brought to this Court on writ of error. So the question to be decided is: Was the City of Miami immune from civil liability. under the pleaded circumstances on the theory that in maintaining and operating a city jail and in keeping confined the prisoners sentenced to serve therein, it was performing a purely governmental function for which no civil liability can be imputed as to the manner in which its jail and the prisoners therein were kept and confined?

At the outset is is conceded by the plaintiff in error that with the exception of our liberalized view of the law as to municipal liability in such cases, recently expressed in this Court’s opinion in the case of Ballard v. City of Tampa, 124 Fla. 457, 168 Sou. Rep. 654, no liability for negligence attaches to a municipality under the strict rule of the common law for the municipality’s alleged negligence in the performance of the governmental duty implied in the maintenance of a city lock-up or jail for the confinement of per *429 sons under arrest, or serving sentences, for the violation of its municipal ordinances. Carty’s Admr. v. Village of Winooski, 78 Vt. 104, 62 Atl. Rep. 45, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 95 and note. Compare: Hillman v. City of Anniston, 214 Ala. 522, 108 Sou. Rep. 539, 46 L. L. R. 89 and note. See also 13 A. L. R. 751, 23 A. L. R. 297, and A. L. R. 1137.

The common law is in force in this State (Section 87, C. G. L., 71 R. G. S.) and were there nothing in the statutes to expressly or impliedly modify the doctrine of non-liability in such cases as that now before the Court, we would be bound to affirm the judgment appealed from, or deliberately place the jurisprudence of this State with the rule of Edwards v. Town of Pocahontas, 47 Fed. 268, which is decidedly contrary to the weight of authority in the United States in general on the subject. This we are not inclined to do at this time, inasmuch as there are other considerations upon which this appeal can be decided without aligning the jurisprudence of this State altogether against the weight of authority which upholds a rule of non-liability criticized by Mr. McQuillan in his second edition on Municipal Corporations (Section 2813). There he condemns the gross injustice of the strict common law rule that has been so generally approved by the American negligence decisions as to prisoners in jails and work-houses when they undertake to maintain tort actions against the authorities for acts of negligence causing injuries to their health or persons.

Under Sections 3947-3955 C. G. L., 7829, Acts 1919, the public policy of this State has been legislatively declared in favor of the protection of the interest of the inhabitants of this State, as individuals, from exposure to persons known to be afflicted with vile and loathsome communicable infections, contagious and communicable venereal diseases, such -as syphilis, gonorrhea and chancroid. Under that *430 statute all persons confined or imprisoned in any municipal prison of this State are subject to being examined and treated for venereal diseases by the health authorities or their deputies. Section 3952 C. G. L. And to that end persons found infected with venereal diseases may be compulsorily detained and treated in order to prevent the dissemination of the infection. .Section 3951 C. G. L.

An acknowledged rule of the law of actionable negligence is that the violation of a legislative enactment by doing a prohibited act, or by failing to do a required act, makes the actor liable for the invasion of the interest of another where the intent of the statute is to protect the interest of the injured person as. an individual, the interest invaded is one the statute was intended to protect, the interest invaded was intended to be protected from the particular hazard and the violation is a legal cause of the invasion and the other has not so conducted himself as to disable himself from maintaining an action for the violation of the statute. See: American Law Institute Re-Statement of the Laws of Torts (Negligence) Section 286, page 752, et seq.

Section 3947 C. G. L. makes it unlawful for any person infected with venereal disease, contagious, infectious, communicable and dangerous to the public health, to expose another to infection and its effect is to make the person violating such statutory prohibition subject to both civil and criminal liability under the rule of common law liability for negligent injuries done through the violation of an express statute, above stated. By necessary implication it is likewise unlawful for the legal custodians or keepers of the persons of individuals known by them to be infected with vile and loathsome communicable venereal disease to knowingly neglect to protect others likewise within their keeping *431 or custody from exposure to such contagious, infectious communicable and dangerous venereal disease.

In the case of - municipal prisoners the prisoners are deemed to be within the custody of the municipality as a public corporation, notwithstanding the fact that designated municipal officials, as individuals have been charged with specific duties and responsibilities respecting the keeping' and sustenance of such prisoners, as well as the execution of the laws and ordinances respecting them. It is on this theory that cities have been generally held liable for the board of municipal prisoners held in county jails as places of detention. Waukesha County v. Village of Waukesha, 78 Wis. 434, 47 N. W. Rep. 831; State v. Hollis, 59 N. H. 390. And in this State of negligent injuries inflicted by municipal convicts on third parties, see: Wolfe v. City of Miami, 103 Fla. 774, 137 Sou. Rep. 892, 134 Sou. Rep. 539.

There was a time when all municipal functions were governmental and therefore municipal corporations were wholly free from responsibility for torts or civil wrongs, by the common law. Jones on Negligence of Municipal Corporations Sec. 18.

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Bluebook (online)
173 So. 150, 127 Fla. 426, 1937 Fla. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-city-of-miami-fla-1937.