Manning v. City of Pasadena

209 P. 253, 58 Cal. App. 666, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 226
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 4, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 4227.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 209 P. 253 (Manning v. City of Pasadena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manning v. City of Pasadena, 209 P. 253, 58 Cal. App. 666, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 226 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

*667 STURTEVANT, J.

The plaintiff, by his guardian, brought an action against the defendant, the city of Pasadena, to recover a judgment in damages for personal injuries which the plaintiff alleged he had suffered. Judgment went for the plaintiff, and the defendant has appealed.

The appellant makes several points, including the contention that the defendant, the city of Pasadena, is not liable for acts of negligence on the part of its employees occurring in the performance of a governmental duty, and that the alleged injuries occurred under such circumstances. The respondent concedes that the defendant would not be liable if the injuries occurred in the performance of a simple governmental duty, but contends that under the facts the alleged accident occurred while the city of Pasadena was engaged in a private venture.

The city of Pasadena is a municipal corporation organized under a freeholders’ charter. Prior to the accident alleged the city had adopted an ordinance under and by virtue of which private persons were compelled to place in a receptacle the garbage of a household. It also provided that the expression “garbage” as used in the ordinance should mean all animal and vegetable refuse from kitchen and household waste that should have been prepared for or intended to be used as food or should have resulted from the preparation of food, and all animal and vegetable refuse from institutions where foodstuffs intended for human consumption should be handled commercially. The ordinance prohibited private individuals from collecting and disposing of such garbage. After the enactment of the ordinance the garbage in the defendant city was gathered by the employees and agents of the city. Under the directions of the head of the department the garbage was collected and delivered at the municipal incinerator. Prior to the accident in question the city had entered into a contract with A. B. Miller under and by virtue of which the city sold at $4.10 per ton the garbage so collected by it. Under that contract the purchaser agreed to remove the garbage from the incinerator. At about half-past 5 on the morning of the 28th of October, 1919, while it was still dark, municipal employees had driven their truck into Center Street for the purpose of collecting garbage. Near Euclid Avenue they had stopped the truck on the left-hand side of Center Street and facing *668 to the east. At that time the truck had two oil lamps, one on each side of the driver, but neither of those lamps was lighted. It had one large light near the windshield beside the driver focused down on the street. While at the time the truck stood in that position, the plaintiff drove west on Center Street riding on a motorcycle. He did not see the truck and collided therewith, hitting it between the middle of the radiator and outside of the north wheel. It is for the injuries sustained in that accident that this action is brought. There were three employees with the truck on the morning in question. They were engaged in collecting the garbage from the several garbage cans and hauling the same to the incinerator. The ordinance above mentioned was approved March 9, 1917. The contract with Miller was executed on the fifteenth day of January, 1918. The plaintiff offered a summary of expenditures and receipts of the refuse collection department from which it appears that for the fiscal years 1914-1920 the revenue collected by the department during each year or fraction thereof amounted to in round figures from $4,500 to $9,100, but that the expenditures were such that a balance was raised by tax levy which varied from $319 to $11,644. The totals for the same years showed total expenditures in the sum of $68,763.62, revenues $42,688.23, salvage and abatement expense $1,532.79, balance raised by tax levy $24,542.60. Excepting as the above facts may be evidence thereof, there is no evidence in the record that the city of Pasadena was conducting a garbage business for the purpose of making a profit. However, the respondent takes the position that the foregoing facts show that the defendant city was at the time and under the circumstances delineated conducting the garbage business for a profit and that the defendant city is liable for the negligence of its servants in the performance of the duties cast upon them in gathering together the garbage, and in this behalf respondent cites McQuillin on Municipal Corporations, sections 2625, 2673; Chicago v. SelzSchivab & Co., 104 Ill. App. 376, 381; Hourigan v. Norwich, 77 Conn. 358, 365 [59 Atl. 487]; Judson v. Borough, 80 Conn. 384 [15 L. R A. (N. S.) 91, 68 Atl. 999], As we understand the appellant, its position is that without regard to what may be the rule in other states, the facts of this case do not show that at the time of the accident the *669 city of Pasadena was engaged in the garbage business for profit, and therefore the respondent did not bring himself within any exception to the above rule that cities, as subordinate agencies of the state, are intrusted with the exercise of limited governmental powers for the benefit of the local public in the performance of which, in this state, there being no statutory provision to the contrary, they are not liable for the negligence of their officers, agents, and servants through whom they act. The most that can be said in favor of the respondent’s position is that the evidence before the trial court showed that in collecting the garbage the city of Pasadena did not lose every dollar it expended, but that it recouped some of its expenses by virtue of its sales. The fact that it collected some moneys to cover expenses did not ipso facto render the city liable to the same rules that would apply to private individuals. In performing the function of collecting garbage and disposing of the same in a sanitary method and in enacting the ordinance above mentioned and enforcing its provisions the city was acting within its police powers. (In re Zhizhuzza, 147 Cal. 328 [81 Pac. 955].) Conceding, without deciding, that when thereafter at the incinerator and after the garbage had been gathered together, the city offered the same for sale and did sell the same; that therein and thereby it was performing a purely private business function, it suffices to point out that the accident in question did not arise in the performance of this last-mentioned function but did arise in the performance of the above-mentioned function of gathering the garbage together. The fact that the city of Pasadena sold the garbage after it had been collected did not operate to convert a governmental function into a proprietary function. The question involved in this ease in this state is not an open one. Chapman v. State, 104 Cal. 690 [43 Am. St. Rep. 158, 38 Pac. 457], and Denning v. State, 123 Cal. 316 [55 Pac. 1000], seem to us to be determinative of this litigation. Both cases involved the acts of the employees of the state harbor commissioners at the port of San Francisco. Those commissioners were acting under the provisions of section 2504 of the Political Code. They performed many functions. They acted as wharfingers. As such, they received and discharged freight. In handling a *670

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Bluebook (online)
209 P. 253, 58 Cal. App. 666, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-city-of-pasadena-calctapp-1922.