Millwood v. DeKalb County

32 S.E. 577, 106 Ga. 743, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 742
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMarch 15, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 32 S.E. 577 (Millwood v. DeKalb County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millwood v. DeKalb County, 32 S.E. 577, 106 Ga. 743, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 742 (Ga. 1899).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

Mrs. Millwood sued the County of DeKalb for damages, alleging that the county authorities had exercised the right they had under the law to work the convicts in a county chain-gang upon the public roads of the county; that a named road which crossed a private way had been worked by the chain-gang in such a manner as that persons traveling the private way were liable to be injured; that in coming along such private way at night, having no knowledge of the condition in which the public road had been left at the point where the private way intersected it, she fell and was injured. There were allegations that the county authorities had failed to provide railings or other safeguards to protect persons who were traveling along the private way. The court upon oral motion ’at the trial term dismissed the petition; and to this the plaintiff excepted.

. At common law counties were not liable in a private action for damages sustained by any one in consequence of failure to keep in repair the highways and bridges within the county. Russell v. Men of Devon, 2 Term R. 662. The code of this State, which went into effect on 1st day of January, 1863, contained a provision which declared that “every county which has been, or may be, established is a body corporate, with power to sue or be sued in any court.” Code 1863, §463. This provision was carried into, the Code of 1868, and the following clause, which appears to have been taken from an act passed [744]*744in 1863, was added to the section: “And all inhabitants of counties in this State, who are competent jurors in other cases, are declared and shall be holden to be competent jurors in any case, in any court, where such counties are parties to the suit or interested therein in their capacity as corporations or quasi-corporations.” Code of 1868, § 525. The Code of 1873 as well as the Code of 1882 contained this law in exactly the same language as is found in the Code of 1868. Code 1873, §491; Code 1882, §491. Does this section impose a liability upon a county to be sued in all cases where ordinary corporations are so liable under the law? ' Or is it simply a declaration that a county may be sued, but the right to sue is limited to those cases only where the General Assembly has given the permission? This question was presented to this court in the case of Scales v. Ordinary of Chattahoochee County, 41 Ga. 225. Judge McCay, speaking for himself and Chief Justice Brown, there said: “Counties, as corporations, stand upon an entirely different footing. They are, as we have said, mere subdivisions of the State. The people have no privileges or immunities not granted to all citizens. They are in fact merely convenient modes by which the State governs the people. The corporate existence cast by law on counties is not asked for, and can not be set aside, but is the law of the State, and it can not be inferred that, in consideration of the grant and of the privileges conferred in the charter, the people of the county have undertaken the public duties cast upon them.” Again on page 228 he says: “The State is never suable except by express enactment, and this is also true of subdivisions of the State. They are parts of the sovereign power, clothed with public duties which belong to the State, and for convenience divided among local organizations. We are the more clear in this view of the law, from the fact that the Code provides two cases in which counties may be sued for damages caused by neglect to keep bridges in repair. . . It seems to us that the declaration of the Code, that the county shall be liable to these two cases, is a strong legislative intimation that it was not liable in other cases.” Judge Warner dissented, and in his opinion he contends that the section of the code above [745]*745.referred to, construed in connection with § 526 of the Code of 1868, which declares that “suits against a county must bé against the inferior court,” etc., makes the county subject to suit; it being apparent to him that “it was the clear and manifest intention of the legislature in making the several counties in this State bodies corporate, with power to sue and liable to be sued, to alter and change the common-law rule, as held by the court in Russell v. Men of Devon.” In Dent v. Cook, 45 Ga. 323, Judge McCay uses this language: “The county, it is true, is a corporation. Code, § 525. But this is only for certain specific purposes. This section of the Code is not even to be understood as putting counties on a footing of ordinary municipal corporations, such as cities and towns. They are created, and have special duties and special privileges, regulated by the charter of each, are sought for, and their charters may be forfeited, or lost by non-user, and the judgments of courts. But the counties are subdivisions of the State, imposed upon the people for State purposes. They are, in fact, but quasi corporations, and this section of the Code is not to be understood as conferring any powers, except the right to sue and be sued, since the other powers are all conferred and regulated by other statutes and provisions of the Code. Indeed the act of 1863-4 calls them corporations, or quasi corporations.”

In the case of Hammond v. County of Riehmond, 72 Ga. 188, it was held that, “In cases where the statute provides for the liability of counties, a recovery may be had against them; as when no sufficient bond is taken to keep bridges in repair.” In the case of Smith v. Wilkes and McDuffie Counties, 79 Ga. 125, an action' was brought against two counties, alleging that they had constructed a bridge across a river which was the county line; that plaintiff had a mill upon the stream; and that the mill was damaged by obstructing the river, the damage resulting from placing in the river certain piers for the bridge, and from throwing in a great quantity of stones, thereby causing a raft to form, etc. Chief Justice Bleckley in the opinion says: “Besides, there is no statutory provision for any such action as this. The counties, to be liable in an action at law -for damage done by those who construct or repair the pub-[746]*746lie roads or bridges, would have to be subjected to such action by statute. It is very improbable that a county can be sued in the superior court for the acts of the road-workers and overseers of roads if they turn water on adjacent lands by digging ditches or placing obstructions where they ought not. We can not suppose that there was any intention on the part of the framers of the constitution, to turn the citizens loose against the counties, without any statutory regulation, for all such causes of action as would be recognized by holding that anybody who, in behalf of the public, damages another’s property, thereby subjects the county to answer for it.” In the case of County of Monroe v. Flynt, 80 Ga. 489, Justice Blandford uses this language: “The liability of the county to be sued for damages is a statutory liability. There is no liability on the county for any cause whatever, except such as created by statute. Counties are not liable at common law, and it is for the reason that the several counties of the State are political divisions, exercising a part of the sovereign power of the State; and they can not be sued except where it is so provided by statute.” See also White Star Line Co. v. County of Gordon, 81 Ga. 47.

What is above set forth shows what was the law of this State in reference to suits against counties when the Code of 1895 was adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
32 S.E. 577, 106 Ga. 743, 1899 Ga. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millwood-v-dekalb-county-ga-1899.