Meares v. Commissioners of the Town of Wilmington

31 N.C. 73
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 31 N.C. 73 (Meares v. Commissioners of the Town of Wilmington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meares v. Commissioners of the Town of Wilmington, 31 N.C. 73 (N.C. 1848).

Opinion

Pearson, J.

We think the charge of his Honor was fully as favorable to the defendants, as they had a right to ask. The whole of it is in their favor, except the instruction : “That if, in doing the work, ordinary skill and caution had not been used, and the plaintiff was damaged thereby, she was entitled to recover.”

It is true, his Honor did not instruct the jury, what would amount to ordinary skill and caution ; but no such instruction was asked for ; and the defendants have no right now to except, because it was not given.

Our consideration is, therefore, confined to the single instruction above stated.

His Honor instructed the jury, that the acts of the defendants were lawful, provided they were done with or. dinary skill and caution. He assumed that the defendants, as commissioners, were vested, by the several acts *77 of the Legislature upon the subject, with full power to cause the grading to be done, and to levy a tax upon the citizens of the town to defray the expense ; and he put the plaintiff’s right to recover, upon the question, whether ordinary skill and caution had been used.

If the defendants had caused the grading to be done with ordinary skill and caution, and, by the erection of a substantial wall as the excavation proceeded, had so managed, as to prevent any caving in of the plaintiff’s lot, so that the damage, if any, would have resulted, not from a want of ordinary skill and caution, but merely from the fact, that, by reason of the grading, the lot was left higher above the level of the street, and, so, was more difficult of access, and, therefore, less valuable, the case would have presented a very grave question; and we are strongly inclined to think with his Honor, that the plaintiff would have been without remedy ; for, as it was lawful for the defendants to do the work, if it was done in a proper manner, although the plaintiff was dam* aged thereby, it would be “damnum absque injuria,” and give no cause of action. To subject the defendants to an action for exercising in a proper manner power vested in them, by the sovereign authority, for the convenience of the public, would seem to involve an absurdity ; hence if the property of one is made less valuable by being left too high, and that of another is made less valuable by being left too low, the parties must submit to the loss for the convenience of the public ; unless the law, authoris-ing the act to be done, contains some provision for making compensation, as, injustice, it should do, whenever the work, although done in a skilful and proper manner, will be productive of special damage to an individual; but there can be no provision made for damage, which is the result of a want of ordinary skill and caution in doing the work, as it cannot be anticipated. And this furnishes a strong argument for giving an action to recover damage. *78 which is the result of a want of ordinary skill and caution ; although no action will lie, when the work is properly done ; and the individual must submit to the damage, unless his case is specially provided for. It is apprehended, that there was error in not adverting to this distinction in the decision of some of the cases which were relied upon in the argument, and to which attention will be called in the course of this opinion ; for which reason it has been dwelt upon somewhat at length.

The jury has found, that the defendants did not use ordinary skill and caution in doing the work, and, as the plaintiff has been compelled to erect the walls, which proper skill and caution made it the duty of the defendants to have erected, in order to protect the lot from the effect of their act, it seems clear that she is entitled to recover. Suppose the case of two individuals : if one digs a ditch or cellar upon his own land, so as to cause the land of another to cave in, or walls of houses to- fall, he violates the maxim, “one must use his own so as not to do damage to another,” and is as clearly liable to an action, as one who erects a dam upon his own land and 1 hereby ponds the water back upon that of another. The defendants insist, that, if the plaintiff had a cause of action, it is against them as individuals, and not in their corporate capacity, for, as they contend, a corporation cannot be sued in “tort.”

It is true, that it was formerly so held, and the reason given in the books is, that the usual process in an action of lort, to-wit, the capias ad respondendum, could not be served upon a corporation. The law, however, has been settled to the contrary, and the idea, that corporations are less accessible, and less responsible to actions than individuals, (which, by the bye. was one reason why corporations have always been looked upon by the public with so much jealousy and so little favor,) has yielded to common sense, and has been held, ever since the case of Yar *79 borough v. The Bank of England, 10 East. 6, when the matter underwent a full discription, and all the objections to the action were satisfactorily disposed of, that corporations were as liable as individuals to be sued in contract or in tort, or to be indicted.

In the United States, the liability of corporations to actions of tort is well settled ; indeed the charters of al[ corporations in this State, provide for the manner and name in which they shall sue and be sued, and no distinction is made between actions in contract and in tort.

We think the plaintiff had her election to sue the corporation, who did the work, or to sue the defendants as a corporation, in which capacity they procured the work to be done, and are liable for the damage done by their agent, under the rule respondeat superior. A superior is not liable for the wilful act of his agent, but is liable for the damage resulting from a want of skill and due caution in doing the work.

If the work be done according to the directions of the superior, and the agent is sued and pays damage, he has his redress against the superior ; if the work is done contrary to the directions of the superior, and the superior is sued and pay's damage, he has his redress against the agent.

It is not necessary to decide whether the action could have been maintained against the defendants as individuals. Certainly it is better for the defendants to be sued as a corporation ; for the question, how far they have a right to pay the damage out of the funds of the corpora* tion, will be presented in a more favorable point of view, than if they had been sued as individuals.

The defendants further insist, that, admitting that the plaintiff could maintain an action for the damage supposed, against a private corporation, as a rail road or canal company, yet no action will lie against them, they being a municipal or public corporation, for an exercise *80 of the power vested in them by the sovereign authority, ior the convenience of the public; and contend for this distinction, because, in the former case, the act is done for the benefit of the private corporation, to enable it to make money for the individuals composing the corporation ; while in the latter the act is done for the benefit of the public at large.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.C. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meares-v-commissioners-of-the-town-of-wilmington-nc-1848.