Trower ex rel. Trower v. City of Louisiana

200 S.W. 763, 198 Mo. App. 352, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 15
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 5, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 200 S.W. 763 (Trower ex rel. Trower v. City of Louisiana) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Trower ex rel. Trower v. City of Louisiana, 200 S.W. 763, 198 Mo. App. 352, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 15 (Mo. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, P. J.

(after stating the facts as above). — There are four assignments of error.

The points argued are to the overruling of the objection of the defendant to the introduction of any evidence and to overruling the demurrer to the evi[361]*361dence at the close of the case. Under this it is argued, first, that plaintiff bases ' his cause of action solely on the negligence of the defendant in permitting an unlawful obstruction, to-wit, a shooting gallery, to be placed on one of its streets; that he does not charge that the alleged permitting of the shooting gallery to be placed there, or that the shooting gallery itself, or the operation thereof caused the injury but alleges that a bullet fired in the shooting gallery caused the injury. Second, that the defendant city is not liable for failure to prevent a violation of the law nor for - failure to enforce its ordinance. Third, that the plaintiff contributed directly to his injury by voluntarily placing himself in a dangerous position; that he was injured while a spectator in attendance at the shooting gallery to witness the shooting and enjoy the pleasure that the shooting afforded and was not a traveler upon the highway.

Defendant did not demur to the petition but objected, when the trial opened, to any evidence, on the ground that the petition failed to state any cause of action. This objection was properly overruled. The petition does aver that plaintiff was injured by an unlawful obstruction in the street and so far it was good. Whether the averment' was sustained by the evidence, is another matter.

In the light of the testimony in the case we dismiss from consideration the claim that plaintiff was injured by reason of an obstruction in the street. The carnival, and as part of it, the shooting gallery, did not obstruct plaintiff in the use of the street. When he was injured, according to his own testimony, he had passed beyond the various booths and exhibits pertaining to that affair and was beyond and north of the shooting gallery or target stand. Even granting that the carnival being permitted to show on the public streets created an obstruction and was a nuisance, its allowance was a wrong common to the public and gave plaintiff no right of private action. [Nagel v. Lindell Ry. Co., 167 Mo. 89, 66 S. W. 1090.] Plaintiff was in[362]*362jured, not by an obstruction, as such, but by the allowance by the city officers of the unlawful use of one of the features of the carnival, that is, allowing one of its adjuncts to be used for the firing off of guns loaded with bullets. If the presence of the carnival in the street was a nuisance, it was common to the public and plaintiff could only recover for damages specially sustained by him by reason of obstructing his use of the street.

Beyond all question, the cities and municipalities of our State are liable for injuries caused by obstructions. Our reports are full of cases of that kind, sustaining actions against the city, but in all those cases the liability is fixed upon the city not by reason of its violation or disregard of its police powers, or the doing of acts in connection with its police powers, but by reason of its failure and neglect to properly discharge its corporate' duties apart-from the duty it owed as a miinieipality. Such are all the cases cited by learned counsel for respondent, of which Benton v. City of St. Louis, 217 Mo. 689, 118 S. W. 418, and Buttron v. Bridell, 228 Mo. 622, 129 S. W. 12, are types. Those cases and the like are .not applicable here. The injury which plaintiff sustained was the result of a splinter from a bullet fired from a shooting gallery or target tent, allowed and suffered by the city authorities to be placed and operated in the streets of the city, and the crucial question in this case is whether the city, as a municipality, is liable for damages sustained by reason of allowing this shooting gallery, as we will call it, in the street.

We may premise our consideration of the discussion of the question here involved by saying that neither by general statute nor by the acts of incorporation under which the city of Louisiana is acting, nor by any valid contract, is there any liability thrown upon the city. Its liability, if existing, is referable entirely to its position as agents of the people of the community and of the State.

[363]*363We find arid are referred to no decision of the courts of our State that covers the same state of facts as here present, that is, an injury to a pedestrian by reason of the city allowing firearms to be used in its streets. That is the real point here,

It is said in 28 Cyc., p. 1289, sec. III. par. b;

“In applying the principle that where a municipality is acting in its governmental capacity it cannot be held civilly liable for any act or omission, it is held that there is no liability for a failure to pass ordinances, even though they would, if passed, preserve the public health or otherwise promote the public ‘good, or for any omission to enforce such ordinances or to see that they are properly observed by its citizens or those who may be resident within the corporate limits, or for injury ‘occurring while the operation of an ordinance is suspended under the action of the municipality. This doctrine has been applied to actions brought to recover damages from the municipality for injuries both to person and property based upon failure to enact or enforce ordinances with regard to the use of streets and sidewalks ; to injuries resulting from the firing of explosives or setting off of fire works, even though the acts were permitted or participated in by the municipality through' its officers; ... ”

In the same work, p. 1299, par. h, subsection 1, it is said:

“When, by the action of the state, a municipal corporation is charged with the preservation of the peace, and empowered to appoint police boards and other agencies to that end, the corporation pro tanto is charged with governmental functions in the public interest and for public purposes, and in the exercise of its powers and duties in respect of the enactment and enforcement of police regulations it is entitled to the same immunity as the sovereign granting the power unless such liability is expressly declared by the sovereign. The police regulations of a city are not made and enforced in the interest of the city in its corporate capacity but in the interest of the public.”

[364]*364It is further said in the same work,, p. 1356, par. II, see. f:

“The manner in which a highway of a city is used is a different thing from its quality and condition as a street. The construction and maintenance, of a street in a safe condition for travel is a corporate duty, and for a breach of such duty an. action will lie; but making and enforcing ordinances regulating the use of streets brings into exercise governmental, and not corporate, powers, and the authorities are well agreed that for a failure to exercise legislative, judicial, dr executive powers of government, there is no liability. Hence, upon this principle, it has been held that a municipal corporation, in the absence of an express statutory declaration to the contrary, is not liable for an injury caused by the failure to pass or to enforce an ordinance prohibiting the firing of cannon or firearms in its streets; the explosion of fireworks; the running at large of cattle and swine; horse-racing; or the riding of bicycles upon the sidewalks. ’ ’’

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200 S.W. 763, 198 Mo. App. 352, 1918 Mo. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trower-ex-rel-trower-v-city-of-louisiana-moctapp-1918.