McConnell v. Dewey

5 Neb. 385
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 5 Neb. 385 (McConnell v. Dewey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConnell v. Dewey, 5 Neb. 385 (Neb. 1877).

Opinion

Gantt, J.

This action was brought by plaintiff against defendant, as supervisor of highways, to recover damages for an in-j ury received in crossing over a bridge on the highway, alleging that the defendant suffered the bridge to be and remain in such bad repair and condition as to be unsafe and dangerous. The defendant pleaded a general demurrer, which was sustained, and judgment was rendered in favor of defendant.

The only question presented for consideration by the pleadings is, can a private action, under the statutes of our state, be maintained against a supervisor of highways for an injury occasioned to the property or person of a citizen, by reason of a bridge on the public road being out of repair? And upon this question, there is some conflict of authority; but this conflict seems to consist in exceptional cases, except in the state of New York. In that state it seems to be settled by the more recent decisions, that all officers are liable to a private action for negligence, excepting, however, judicial action from such liability; but it must, however, be observed that this doctrine of liability of all officers to private action, is a great departure from the earlier decisions of that state, and, therefore, it may be proper to briefly refer to the New York cases, and notice how this departure obtained in that state.

In Hutson v. The City of N. Y., 5 Sandf., 321, Sandford, J., says, the true distinction is that “when the duty is to individuals specially, for a reward emanating from them, a civil action may be brought for neglect, whether of themselves or their subordinates; but when it is a duty to the public generally, undertaken alike for all citizens, the remedy for neglect is by indictment only, together with removal from office, when prescribed by law.”

[387]*387In Bartlett v. Crozier, 17 Johns., 440, Chancellor Kent, in delivering the opinion of the court, held, that no civil action will lie against an overseer of highways, at the suit of an individual, for an injury which he has sustained in consequence of the neglect of the overseer to keep a bridge in repair; nor, it seems, against the commissioners of highways, though if such private action would lie at all, it would be against them. Freeman v. Cornwall, 10 Johns., 470.

This seems to have been the settled rule in that state until the case of The Mayor, etc., v. Furze, 3 Hill, 617, in which Judge Nelson seems to have based his opinion upon the case of Henly v. Mayor etc. of Lyme Regis 5 Bing., 91. He quotes with approval, from the latter case, the broad expression that it “ was undoubted law, that where an indictment lies for non-repair, an action on the case will lie at the suit of a party sustaining any peculiar injury.” But when the questions involved in the case of Henly v. The Mayor etc. are critically examined, it seems clear that this expression partakes more of the nature of a dietum than an authority, and that it was incautiously used. It must, however, be observed, that as a rule of law, any such general remark of the judge, expressed in an opinion, should be understood with reference to the case under consideration, and not as extended to a class of cases subject to the operation of a different principle, and, therefore, the proposition above quoted should be taken with considerable limitation, and be applied alone to the case in which it was asserted.

It has, however, been said that the cases cited in Henly v. The Mayor etc. do not sustain the proposition enunciated. The argument in that case is, that there is no distinction between a liability by prescription and a liability arising within the memory; that if the origin of the liability was legal, it is wholly unimportant when [388]*388it took place, and. then it is added: “ We do not go the length of saying that a stranger can take advantage of an agreement between A. and B., nor even of a charter granted by the king, when no matter of general and public concern is involved; but where that is the case, and the king, for the benefit of the public, has made a certain grant imposing certain public duties, and that grant is accepted, we are of opinion that the public may enforce the performance of these duties by indictment, and individuals peculiarly injured, by action.” This rule applies strictly to corporations by charter or prescription, where an original liability attaches, and not to' political subdivisions of the government, constituting quasi corporations. In the ease referred to by Judge Nelson, the king by letters patent granted to the defendant, the borough or town by the name of Lyme Regis, a charter, and also the pier, quay or cob, with all the liberties, qjrofits, etc., belonging to the same, and remitted part of the rents, declaring in the grant that the mayor and burgesses, and their successors, should repair, maintain and support the buildings, banks, sea shore, etc., within the said borough, or situated between the same and the sea, at their own costs and charges. Hence, the argument seems to be based on the ground that having accepted the charter with its benefits and profits and the duties imposed, the defendant became legally bound to keep the buildings, etc., in repair, for the reason that the things granted by the charter were the consideration for the repairs to be made. This seems to be the extent to which the doctrine of liability can be legitimately carried in the case of Henly v. The Mayor etc. of Lyme Regis, and it will not be questioned that this is the settled rule at the present day. It applies to chartered corporations which derive some advantage to themselves.

The case of The Mayor etc. v. Furze, which seems to have been based wholly on that of Henly v. The Mayor [389]*389etc. of Lyme Regis, was soon followed by that of Adsit v. Brady, 4 Hill, 632, though in the latter it is said, that the “neglect should have been charged to be willful and malicious.” And this departure from the common law doctrine has ever since been followed in the courts of New York. And in Robinson v. Chamberlain, 34 N. Y., 389, the doctrine of liability to private action for negligence is extended to all officers, except that “reason and public policy alike exempt judicial action from liability, in order to secure the perfect independence of the judiciary and for other controlling reasons.”

Is this departure from the earlier adjudicated cases in New York sustained by the common law? I think not. On the contrary, the doctrine that a private action cannot be maintained, at common law, for an injury sustained by neglect of one whose duty is to repair highways, seems to be a very ancient one. In Brook’s Abr., Title, Action on the Case, it is said upon the authority of the Year Books, that if a highway be out of repair, so that a horse was ruined and injured, no action lies by the owner against him who ought to repair it, for it is a public matter and ought to be reformed by presentment; and this doctrine was affirmed in the case of Russell v. Men of Devon, 2 T. R., 608, in which Ashurst, J. delivered the opinion, and after giving other reasons why the action could not be sustained, says: “But I think the case cited from Brook’s Abr. is a direct authority to show, that no action could be maintained; and the reason of that case is a good one, namely, because the action must be brought by the public.”

That case was followed in the case of Riddle v. The Proprietors, etc.,

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Bluebook (online)
5 Neb. 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-dewey-neb-1877.