May v. Juneau Co.

30 F. 241, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2260
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedFebruary 11, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 30 F. 241 (May v. Juneau Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. Juneau Co., 30 F. 241, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2260 (circtwdwi 1887).

Opinion

Bunn, J., (charging jury.')

This is an action of trespass on the case under the laws of congress for the infringement of a patent-right. The evidence, b.eing in on both sides, the defendant’s counsel now asks the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, upon the following grounds, to-vit: First, that the action being in tort for the infringement of a patent-right, the county is not liable; second, the assignment of the patent from the executor to the plaintiff did not carry with it the right to maintain actions for infringement of the patent occurring previous to the assignment of the patent, and during the life-time of her husband, the patentee.

i When this case was before the court upon demurrer to the complaint, the first question above stated was argued and submitted, and the court looked into the authorities, and considered the question of the liability of a county in such a case. The demurrer was overruled pro forma, and the question reserved for further consideraiou upon the trial, when it was supposed the facts would more precisely appear. The evidence is now in, and there is no question made about the facts. Prom these it appears that the plaintiff’s patent consists in a certain device for looking and unlocking at once ail the cells of a jail by the sheriff or turnkey from the outside, standing in a position where he can view the interior of the jail, and observe the situation and attitude of the prisoners, and so shield himself from assault by any desperate or ill-disposed prisoner. The pat[242]*242ent was issued to Edwin May, October 4, 1859, and was to run 14 years, or until October 4, 1873. There was an extension for seven years, which continued the life of the patent until October 4, 1880, when it expired. The Juneau county jail was built by a contractor, under a contract made with a committee acting for the county, in the summer of 1878. The contract provided' for one of these locks, and the contractor, through a sub-contractor of the iron work of the jail, 'pursuant to his contract with the’committee, put it on in the fall of 1878. The evidence, which is uncontradicted, shows that the county took possession of the jail about the first of January, 1879, but that this lock device was not used during that or the succeeding year, until after October 4, 1880, when the patent expired, and that neither the building committee, sheriff, nor architect knew anything of the patent, or that the contractor or subcontractor had put in the device without authority from the patentee.

Under these circumstances, it is difficult to see upon what principle the people of the county, who must be taxed to pay any judgment the plaintiff may recover, can be held liable in tort' for the infringement. The contractor, no doubt, might be made liable if be put in the device without authority from the patentee. And my first impression was that the county, if it adopted the device and used it, could not be heard to say that it had not authorized it, and in doing so had infringed the plaintiff’s patent. But the more I have thought of the question, and looked into the adjudged cases, the more have I been led to the conclusion that there is no principle of law, in the absence of any statutory provision, by virtue of which the county can be held in this form of action. The same question was argued on general demurrer before the United States circuit court for the Southern district of Ohio in the case of Jacobs v. Board Com’rs Hamilton Co., 1 Bond, 500, and it was there held that the board of county commissioners could not be made liable in their official capacity; following Commissioners Hamilton Co. v. Mighels, 7 Ohio St. 109, a leading and well-considered case, where all the authorities are reviewed. The question has also been decided in the same way by the supreme court of Iowa, and by various other courts. It would be difficult to answer the reasoning of these cases. At least, I have found it so. There are also some facts in this case, very favorable to the county, now appearing on the trial, which did'not appear in the adjudged cases referred to, and which were not presented by the demurrer in this case.

The way it now appears, from the undisputed evidence, is that the tax-payers of the county, who are the real parties in interest defendant, have had nothing whatever to do with the alleged infringement of the plaintiff’s right. They have not infringed it themselves, nor authorized any one else to so infringe it; and, if this is so, it is difficult to discover upon what principle they can be made to suffer as for a trespass. They have paid for what they got, and got what they paid for, without any knowledge or intimation that anybody’s rights had been infringed by the contractor until this suit was brought; and, though they paid the contractor for it, they had no use of the plaintiff’s device until after the [243]*243patent had expired. Whether they have ever used it since I believe does not appear in the evidence.

I am unable to discover anything in the case to connect the building committee with the infringement of the patent; but, even if there was, it would by no means follow' that the consequence of the malfeasance could be visited upon the county. They were appointed by the authorities o-f the county, the county board of supervisors, for certain specified and limited purposes. They were to make, receive, and examine plans and specifications, receive bids, and let tlio contract on behalf of the county. Their authority did not extend to the doing of any unlawful act whatever, and therefore, if they had infringed the plaintiff’s right in so doing, they were not acting within the scope of their authority. There is no one authorized to act as the general agent of a county. The relation of principal and agent does not exist between a county and any of its officers. All its officers are chosen with certain special and enumerated powers, which they cannot transcend. So long as they keep within these powers the county is bound, but no further.

The county itself is but a political subdivision of the slate, created by the sovereign power of the state, and sot apart for certain political and administrative purposes. The authority which it exercises is but part and parcel of the general police and administrative power of the state. The people of each county, it is true, have power to tax themselves for the building of a court-house and jail, and it is their duly to do so; but these, again, when constructed, aro a part of the general agency and appliances which the state adopts for the general administration of justice in the state, and the people of the county have only an interest in them in common with all the people of the state. The administration of civil affairs is imposed upon the county, not at their own solicitation, but by the sovereign power of the state. It is not so with municipal corporations proper, like cities and villages, which obtain their charters upon request, and which are granted certain privileges and franchises which are of value to the incorporators, and in which they have a direct interest not shared by others. And this seems to be one ground, perhaps the main ground, of distinction between the liability of cities and villages, which are municipal corporations proper, on the one hand, and towns and counties, which are but quasi corporations, on the oilier. The former may be held liable for the misfeasance or non-feasance of their officers acting in the line of their authority, while the hitter, it is generally held, cannot be, unless made so by statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. 241, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-juneau-co-circtwdwi-1887.