Mayor of Baltimore v. State Ex Rel. Blueford

195 A. 571, 173 Md. 267, 1937 Md. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 10, 1937
Docket[No. 54, October Term, 1937.]
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 195 A. 571 (Mayor of Baltimore v. State Ex Rel. Blueford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor of Baltimore v. State Ex Rel. Blueford, 195 A. 571, 173 Md. 267, 1937 Md. LEXIS 308 (Md. 1937).

Opinions

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Marie Blueford, aged eleven, daughter of William and' Alice Blueford, left her home at 39 East York Street at about 1:30 o’clock p. m., on June 26th, 1933, to go to a swimming pool in Riverside Park, in Baltimore. Nothing more was heard of her until her body was found á few hours later at the bottom of the pool. The park' is one of the public parks of Baltimore City, and the-pool a public swimming pool maintained and managed'. *269 by the city. At the time of the accident a fee of five cents was charged for the use of the pool, a 'bathing suit, a locker and towels. The pool is elliptical in shape, and slopes uniformly from zero at its edge to about eight and a half feet in the center. It is 280; feet long and 180 feet wide, and is enclosed by a nine-foot wire fence. It is divided into an inner and outer zone, separated by a wire fence extending four and a half feet from the bottom of the pool. The inner zone is about 120 or 125 feet long and 90 feet wide, and is for the use only of swimmers, the outer or shallow zone is for the use of small children and persons who cannot swim. Entrance to the inner pool is through a gate at either end. Two guards are required to be on duty, when the pool is in use, to protect the bathers. One is stationed on a raft, the other rows a 'boat about the pool. Their duty is to maintain order, to protect the bathers from danger, and to see that none but persons able to swim are permitted within the inner or deep water zone. On the fence separating the zones signs, warning the bathers of the dangers of the inner zone and bearing the legend, “Deep water, for swimmers only,” appeared at the time of the accident. The body was found in the inner zone near the fence, about midway between the two gates, where the water would have, been over four feet deep. About 800 persons used the pool on the day of the accident, and at the time the body was found from twenty-five to forty persons were using it, of whom about fifteen were in the inner zone.

The guards were on duty on the day of the accident, but neither of them saw Marie Blueford, nor did any other witness in the case see her there or know when or under what circumstances she disappeared.

Several months after the death of Marie Blueford, her parents brought this action in the Baltimore City Court against' the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore to recover damages for the loss which they sustained as a result of her death, on the theory that the city’s employees were negligent in permitting Marie to enter the *270 inner zone, and also in allowing her to drown when they knew, or should have known, that she was in danger. A demurrer to an amended declaration which presented that theory was overruled, and the case was tried before the court and a jury. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs, and upon that verdict the judgment from which this appeal was taken was entered.

There are five exceptions in the record, of which four relate to rulings on evidence, the other, the fifth, to the rulings' on the prayers. Of the exceptions to the evidence the only one argued in this court was the second, noted to the action of the court in admitting in evidence a transcript of a death certificate issued by the health department of Baltimore City, in which appeared the statement that an autopsy had disclosed that the cause of death was drowning. The transcript was not authenticated, it was hearsay and irrelevant, and should have been excluded. Standard Gas Equipment Co. v. Baldwin, 152 Md. 321, 325, 136 A. 644. Code, art. 43, sec. 27, and Code (Supp. 1935) art. 35, sec. 54A, cited in support of the ruling, are not in point. Article 43, section 27, relates to certificates issued by. the state registrar {State, use of Schiller v. Hecht Co., 165 Md. 415, 424, 169 A. 311) as to the fact, not the cause, of death, and article 35, section 54A, relates to copies of business records. Assuming that, ’under Code Pub. Loc. Laws, art. 4, sec. 31, a certificate, properly authenticated, of the fact of death would have been admissible, the finding of the coroner as to the cause of death was not. Standard Gas Equipment Co. v. Baldwin, supra. But, in view of the conclusions announced infra, the error is not reversible.

The plaintiffs offered two prayers which were granted, the defendant sixteen, of which eight were granted and eight refused. Although it excepted to the adverse rulings in respect to the plaintiff’s prayers and to the refusal of its second and third prayers, no objection to those rulings was argued in this court, and they may be disregarded except in so far as the granting of the plaintiff’s prayers was inconsistent with the theory pre *271 sented by the defendant’s demurrer prayers. The important questions in the case are raised by the refusal of the defendant’s A prayer, a general demurrer to the evidence, its B prayer that there was no legally sufficient evidence of primary negligence, its D prayer that the decedent was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law, and its F prayer that in maintaining the pool the city was exercising a governmental function and was not subject to liability for any negligence or.fault in the performance thereof.

In orderly sequence the question first to be decided is whether the municipality is subject to liability for negligence or other default in the maintenance and management of the swimming pool.

It is an elementary and firmly established principle of municipal law that the state cannot be sued in its own courts without its consent. 59 C. J. 300; State v. Wingert, 132 Md. 605, 104 A. 117; State of Maryland v. Balto. & O. R. Co., 34 Md. 344, affirmed 21 Wall. 456, 22 L. Ed. 678. The reason for the immunity is that, to subject the state to the coercive control of its own agencies would not only be inconsistent with its sovereignty, but would so hamper and impede the orderly exercise of its executive and administrative powers as to prevent the proper and adequate performance of its governmental functions. So it was said in State v. Balto. & O. R. Co., swpra: “This immunity belongs to the State by reason of her prerogative as a sovereign, and on grounds of public policy. Parties having claims or demands against her, must present them through another department of the Government—the Legislature—and cannot assert them by suit in the Courts.” That immunity extends to such agencies of the state as have no separate corporate existence but are employed by it merely as hands or instruments to execute its will (McQuillen, Mun,. Corp. sec. 2793), but not to its creatures, such as municipal corporations, except when exercising some governmental function of the state itself. Id.; Wynkoop v. Hagerstown, 159 Md. 194, 150 A. 447. Where, however, a municipality is- *272 engaged in the performance of a governmental function as an agent of the state, the same principle which protects the state from liability also protects the municipality. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
195 A. 571, 173 Md. 267, 1937 Md. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-baltimore-v-state-ex-rel-blueford-md-1937.