Smith v. . City of Rochester

76 N.Y. 506, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 527
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 76 N.Y. 506 (Smith v. . City of Rochester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. . City of Rochester, 76 N.Y. 506, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 527 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

Miller, J.

The doctrine is well settled, that municipal corporations are within the operation of the general rule of law, that the superior or employer must answer civilly for the negligence or want of skill of an agent or servant in the course of their employment, by which another is injured. It is essential, however, to establish such a liability that the act complained of must be within the scope of the corporate powers, as provided by charter or positive enactment of law. If the act done is committed outside of the authority and power of the corporation as conferred by statute, the corporation is not liable, whether its officers directed its performance, or it was done without any express direction or command. It is ultra vires, and cannot be made the basis of an action for damages for that reason. These general principles are fully sustained by the authorities. (See Dillon on Mun. Cor., §§ 766, 767, and authorities cited.)

The liability of the defendant is sought to be maintained upon the ground that, although the defendant’s horses and hose cart were purchased and designed for public service in the fire department, and were generally employed in that service, it was competent for the defendant to employ them in some other service, not of a public, but purely of a private character, so as to render the defendant liable for damages arising from their negligence. This position rests upon the ground that the corporation is liable whenever it uses the property in a service which is not of a public nature authorized by law, and its orders impose upon servants who have the charge and control of such property the duty of obedience, and render the corporation responsible for the negligent misconduct of the servant, as much as that of any other superior, or as for any other malfeasance.

We are referred to some authorities which, it is claimed, uphold the doctrine contended for ; but we think that they do not sanction any such principle, as is manifest from an *510 examination of the same. In Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H., 285, the action ivas for an injury caused by the giving away of the flooring of a town-house erected by the town, which was imperfectly constructed ; and it was held that no action would lie against the town. The dictum of Pebley, Ch. J., in the opinion, as to the liability of corporations for private injuries caused by improper management, does not go to the extent of holding that they are liable for acts done by its officers or managers beyond the scope of the powers conferred by law ; nor was it intended, we think, to hold that, in the latter case, the corporation was liable when the property was not employed for the purposes and objects for which it was designed. So also the remarks in Bailey v. The Mayor (3 Hill, 531), of Melsom, Ch. J., which are cited to the effect that municipal corporations, in their private character as owners and occupants of land, must be regarded the same as individual owners, and dealt with accordingly, must be restricted, I think, to apply only to cases where the officers do not exceed their powers. In the case of Neuert v. City of Boston (120 Mass., 338), where the corporation was held liable for damages occasioned by the negligent suspension of a telegraph wire for the use of the fire department, the wire was for the benefit of and used by the corporation, attached to a building belonging to the city, and ivas owned and maintained for the use of the fire department. It had also caused or authorized its removal, and hence, the injury occurred while the city had control over it and its agents were acting by its authority. In Lee v. The Village of Sandy Hill (40 N. Y., 442), the town officers were acting under a resolution of the board of trustees to remove obstructions from the street. They made a mistake and committed a trespass, but acted in entire good faith in the performance of a public duty. As they exceeded their powers while engaged in an act lawful in itself, it ivas held that the corporation was. liable, whether the trustees were regarded as mere agents of the corporation, or the trespass Avas deemed the act of the corporation itself. The *511 case differs from one where there is an absence of authority from the beginning and the agents were acting entirely beyond their powers. The rule laid down in Dillon on Corporations, § 780, that municipal corporations are liable for the improper management and use of property, in the same manner as private corporations and natural persons, must be regarded as relating to acts done which are lawful in themselves, where a liability is created by reason of the result which flows from the manner in which such acts are performed, or . for a neglect of duty in the lawful care and management of the public property, and not to cases where there is no authority whatever to bind the corporation, and the injury done is caused by an act which is not sanctioned by law. The remarks cited from Jewett v. The City of New Haven (38 Conn., 386), that where the question is whether the principle of respondeat superior applies to a municipal corporation, it should distinctly appear, in order to hold them liable, that the service in which the party doing the mischief was engaged at the time was private and not public, were not required for the decision of the case; and if they can be considered as sustaining the doctrine contended for, cannot lie regarded as sound law. No reported case sustains the principle, that when the common council of a municipal corporation exceed the powers conferred by the charter of the city they represent, by using the property of the city, as Avas done in this case, for purposes not recognized by kiw, that the corporation is answerable for negligence in the management of such property. Such a rule would place in the hands of the members of the common council of a municipal corporation a power to create liabilities of the tax-payers, which is without any precedent or authority of laAV, and which might be liable to great abuse. The decisions of the courts are, avc think, in a contrary direction, and the cases establish, beyond question, that to authorize the conclusion that the order to the driver of the hose cart was justified by tlie common council, it should appear that there Avas express authority in the charter, or that it was done in *512 pursuance of some general authority to act for the corporation in reference to the matter. The rule on the subject is well stated in the opinion of Shaw, Ch. J., in Thayer v. The City of Boston (19 Pick., 516), as follows: “As a general rule, the corporation is not responsible for the unauthorized and unlawful acts of its officers, though done colore officii; it must further appear, that they were expressly authorized to do the acts, by the city government, or that they were, done bona fide in pursuance of a general authority to act for the city, on the subject to which they relate ; or that, in cither case, the act was adopted and ratified by the corporation.” This rule is upheld in Lee v. The Village of Sandy Hill (supra), in the opinion of the court, as well as in other decisions. See The Mayor v. Bailey

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Bluebook (online)
76 N.Y. 506, 1879 N.Y. LEXIS 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-city-of-rochester-ny-1879.