Maia's Adm'r v. Eastern State Hospital

34 S.E. 617, 97 Va. 507, 1899 Va. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 16, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 617 (Maia's Adm'r v. Eastern State Hospital) 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
Maia's Adm'r v. Eastern State Hospital, 34 S.E. 617, 97 Va. 507, 1899 Va. LEXIS 65 (Va. 1899).

Opinions

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause was heard at a former term of the court, and an [508]*508opinion and judgment rendered reversing the judgment complained of. Hpon a petition to rehear, that, judgment was set aside, and at this term of the court the cause was again argued and submitted.

The plaintiff in error, who was the plaintiff in the court below, brought an action of trespass on the case to recover damages for the death of his intestate alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendant, or its agents, in requiring and permitting the intestate, whilst a patient and inmate of the defendant’s hospital for the insane, to dig and excavate in the side of an embankment, the property, of the defendant, without providing props or supports to prevent the overhanging earth from falling upon him.

The defendant demurred to the declaration, and to1 each count thereof, upon the ground that it was a public corporation—an agency of the State for the exercise of purely governmental functions—and that no action would lie against it for the injury complained of.

The first question to be considered is the character of the defendant corporation. Is the defendant a public corporation—an agency of the State exercising exclusively governmental functions?

By an act of the House of Burgesses, passed in the year 1769, after a preamble reciting that persons of insane or disordered minds had been frequently found wandering in different parts of the colony, and no certain provision has been yet made either towards effecting a cure of those whose cases are not become, quite desperate, nor for restraining others who might be dangerous to society, fifteen persons, 'among them John Blair, Peyton Randolph, and George Wythe, were “ constituted trustees for founding and establishing a public hospital for the reception of such persons as, from time to time, according to the rules and orders established by this act, may be sent thereto. And the said trustees shall be called and known by the name and 'style [509]*509of the court of directors of the public hospital for persons of insane or disordered minds.” 8 Hennings Statutes, p. 378.

By an act of the General Assembly, passed in 1785, the directors of the public hospital which had been organized and conducted under the act of 1769 and amendments thereto, was created a corporation (12 Hen. Statutes, 198), and has ever since existed as a corporation under various names, and is now known as “The Eastern State Hospital.” See Code of 1819, ch. 109; Code of 1849, ch. 85; Code of 1887, ch. 75; Acts of 1893-4, p. 397.

An examination of the statutes creating and continuing this hospital shows that.it was created and exists for purely governmental purposes, and is under the exclusive ownership and control of the State. It has no stockholders, no members even, except directors, having no interest in it or its affairs, who aro appointed by the Governor, by and with the consent of the Senate, .and are in fact public, rather than corporate, officials, endowed with a corporate being for a more convenient administration of the duties- imposed upon them by law, and are made liable to fines for any failure to perform their duties.

The money necessary to defray the expenses of maintaining and caring for its inmates is provided by annual appropriations made by the General Assembly out of the public treasury, and the manner of keeping and disbursing its funds is prescribed by statute. The directors are required to make, quarterly reports to the Auditor of Public Accounts, showing in d.etail how they have disbursed the funds, and to report annually to the Governor, for the information of the General Assembly, the condition of the hospital, and the sums received and disbursed by them.

It is plain under the authorities, and especially under the recent case of Phillips v. University of Virginia, ante p. 472, that the defendant is a public corporation, governed and controlled by the State, and acts exclusively as an agency of the State, for the protection of society and for the promotion of the best [510]*510interests of the unfortunate people of the Commonwealth of insane or disordered minds.

The next question is whether the defendant, a public corporation—an agency of tlie State exercising exclusively governmental functions—is liable for the injuries complained of in the declaration.

In the case of City of Richmond v. Long, 17 Gratt. 375, the liability of á municipal corporation for the negligence of its agents when in the exercise and performance of governmental powers and duties was considered. That was an action to' recover damages for the loss of a slave who, it ivas alleged, had lost his life by reason of the careless and negligent conduct of the agents of the city in permitting him to escape, whilst insane, from the small-pox hospital of tlie city, into- which he had been admitted for treatment in pursuance of the ordinance of the city. In that case the distinction was drawn between powers and duties which are granted to or imposed upon a public body as an agency of government to be exercised and performed exclusively for public, governmental purposes, and those powers and privileges which are exercised by the corporation or body for its own private advantage, and are for public purposes in no other sense than that the public derives a common benefit from a proper discharge of the duties arising from the grant.

Eor the negligent exercise or performance of the former class of powers and duties it was held that the city was not liable, and as the injury complained of belonged to that class, it was held that the action would not lie, whilst it was admitted that if the injury had resulted from negligence in the exercise or performance of the latter class of powers and duties, the city would have been liable in the same manner as an individual or private corporation. The doctrine enunciated in that case_was recognized, and the case cited with approval, in De Voss v. City of Richmond, 18 Gratt. 344; City of Petersburg v. Applegarth’s Adm’r, 28 Gratt. 343-4; Noble, &c. v. City of Richmond, 31 [511]*511Gratt. 278; Orme v. City of Richmond, 79 Va. 89; and in the very recent case of Terry v. City of Richmond, 94 Va. 537, 544-5, the distinction was again recognized and acted upon.

If a municipal corporation which has a two-fold character, one public -and the other private, is exempt from liability for the negligence of its agents when in the exercise and performance of its powers and duties as an agency of the government, a public corporation which was created and exists for no other than governmental purposes must necessarily be exempt from such liability. Otherwise there would be this anomaly, that for such negligence a corporation created partly for governmental purposes would be exempt from liability, whilst one created wholly for such purposes would not be, when the reason for such exemption is solely because it was in the exercise of governmental functions when the negligence occurred. But we are not left to determine this question upon reason merely. We have authority upon the subject.

In the case of Sayre v. Northwest Turnpike Road Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 617, 97 Va. 507, 1899 Va. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maias-admr-v-eastern-state-hospital-va-1899.