The plaintiff alleges that Sam Finley, who was employed by the State Highway Commission to surface certain roads in the county of Gaston, by agreement with the Southern Railway Company, built a tank, or tanks, on the railroad’s right of way in the town of Lowell within a few feet of overhead wires which were charged with an electric current of high voltage; that these tanks contained asphalt, which was to be used in surfacing the roads then in process of construction; and that the plaintiff’s intestate, a road inspector in the employ of the Highway Commission, went to one of the tanks in obedience to orders given him, and mounting a ladder undertook, by means of an iron rod,
The Highway Commission demurred on the ground that the complaint does not state a cause of action against them in that the commissioners are agents of the State engaged in the performance of a public service, and are not subject to suit for the cause alleged. The demurrer was sustained, and the plaintiff excepted and appealed.
The appeal presents the question whether the allegations in the complaint constitute a cause of action which can be maintained against the State Highway Commission in the Superior Court. It is not necessary to consider the alleged cause of action against Finley (who is named as a defendant) for the reason that Finley has never been served with process and is not in court, and because, moreover, the demurrer was filed only by the Highway Commission.
In 1915 the General Assembly established a State Highway Commission, to consist of the Governor and six others, and afterwards increased the number of commissioners, enlarged their duties, and more clearly defined their powers. Public laws 1915, ch. 113; Public laws 1919, ch. Í89; Public laws 1921, ch. 2. Section 10 of the act of 1921 clothed the commission with the general supervision of all matters relating to the construction of the highways of the State, including the execution of contracts, the selection of the materials to be used, the control for the benefit of the State of any existing county or township roads, the regulation of the use of the roads and of the police traffic thereon, responsibility for the maintenance of all highways other than streets in towns and cities, and other enumerated powers. The commission was not incorporated with the right to sue and to be sued, but was manifestly established as an agency of the State for the purpose of exercising administrative and governmental functions.
The principle is firmly established that a State cannot be sued in its own courts or elsewhere unless it has expressly consented to such suit, except in cases authorized by Article XI of the Constitution of the United States, or by some provision in the State Constitution represented, for example, by Article IY, section 9, of the Constitution of North Carolina. In Beers v. Arkansas, 20 Howard, 527, Chief Justice Taney said: “It is an established principle of jurisprudence in all civilized nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its own courts, or in any other, without its consent and permission; but it may, if it thinks
• It is true that a suit against the officials of a State is not necessarily a suit against the State, for the nature of the action must be determined by the substance of the relief sought. Ins. Co. v. Herriott, 91 Fed., 715; Bain v. State, 86 N. C., 49. But where a suit is prosecuted against an officer or agent who represents the State in action and liability, and the State is the real party whose action would be controlled by the judgment and against which relief is sought, the action is in effect a suit against the State. North Carolina v. Temple, 134 U. S., 22; Louisiana v. Steele, 134 U. S., 230; Smith v. Reeves, 178 U. S., 436.
The plaintiff insists, even if these propositions be conceded, that the original jurisdiction of the Supreme Court conferred by Article IY, section 9, of the State Constitution is not to be exercised if by the ordinary process of the law a plaintiff can regularly constitute his case in court and obtain relief against the defendant (Bain v. State, 86 N. C., 50), and that the instant action can be maintained on two distinct grounds: (1) that authority for the commission to sue and to be sued is implied from the character and purpose of the legislation by which it was established; and (2) that the action was instituted for the recovery of damages caused by the negligence of the officers or agents of the State and not as a suit againt the State.
As to the first ground, we understand the plaintiff to admit, in accordance with the decisions, that the power to sue and to be sued given under O. S., 1126, applies only to private and gwcm-public corporations, and not to the governmental agencies of the State. Moody v. State Prison, supra. Besides this, the mere right to sue and to be sued, even if expressly granted the commission, would not destroy the public policy on which immunity from a suit in tort is made to rest. In Moody’s case, supra, it is said: “But even if such authority was given, it would cover only actions ordinarily incidental in its operation, and would not extend to causes of action like the present. There is a distinct difference between conferring suability as to ‘debts and other liabilities for which the State Prison is now liable,’ and extending liability for causes not heretofore recognized. Grate Co. v. Commonwealth, 152 Mass., 28. ‘The exemption of the State from paying damages for accidents of this
As to the second ground relied on by the plaintiff, we concede the proposition that the immunity of the State from suit does not save its officers and agents from liability for a trespass committed in breach of an individual’s legal rights under conditions prohibited by law, even when they act or assume to act by authority of the State. This doctrine is maintained in courts of the highest repute and is illustrated in numerous decisions. In Poindexter v. Greenhow, 114 U. S., 270, it appeared that the plaintiff owed certain taxes to the State of Virginia; that the defendant, as treasurer of the city of Richmond, was charged with the duty of collecting the tax, and made demand on the plaintiff for payment of the taxes due; that the plaintiff thereupon tendered to the defendant in payment thereof 45 cents in money and certain matured coupons issued by the State of Virginia by virtue of an act of the General Assembly; that the defendant refused to accept the coupons and money in payment of the plaintiff’s tax, and levied upon and took possession of certain personal property belonging to- the plaintiff for the purpose of selling the same to pay the taxes; and that the plaintiff then brought his action in detinue for the recovery of the property levied on by the defendant. The defendant objected that the suit could not be maintained because it was substantially a suit against the State of Virginia, to which it had not assented, and that the defendant acted only in an official capacity and was guilty of no personal wrong. In deciding the question, Mr. Justice Matthews said: “A defendant, sued as a wrongdoer, who seeks to substitute the State in his place, or to justify by the authority of the State, or to defend on the ground that
This principle is sustained in Scott v. Donald, 165 U. S., 58; Elmore v. Fields, 153 Ala., 345; Burroughs v. Commonwealth, 224 Mass., 28. In Hophin v. Clemson College, 221 U. S., 636, on which tbe plaintiff chiefly relies, tbe facts were that tbe defendant maintained an embankment on tbe eastern side of tbe Seneca Eiver to protect its lands from overflow, but its construction narrowed tbe channel of tbe river and caused tbe current of tbe stream to flow across tbe banks of tbe plaintiff’s lands, causing injury. Tbe appeal raised tbe question whether a public corporation can avail itself of tbe State’s immunity from suit in a proceeding against it for so managing tbe land of tbe State as to damage or take private property without due process of law. Tbe college was not acting in a governmental capacity. In reference to tbe question, tbe Court said: “Again, and still treating tbe question as though involved in tbe plea to tbe jurisdiction, that is not an action against tbe college for a tort committed in tbe prosecution of any governmental function. Tbe fee was in tbe State, but tbe corporation, as equitable owner, was in tbe possession, use, and enjoyment of tbe property. For protecting tbe bottom land,, tbe college, for its own corporate purposes and advantages, constructed tbe dyke. In so doing it was not acting in any governmental capacity.” With respect to tbe question of liability, there is a well defined distinction between institutions which are regarded as ministerial agencies of tbe government and
We have referred to the doctrine of the individual liability of a public officer or agent because the questions relating to it were discussed in the argument here, but it should be noted that the members of the Highway Commission are not sued as individuals. The plaintiff caused the summons to be served only on the chairman, and seems to- have dealt with the commission as if it were a corporation. If the demurrer be treated as a general appearance, such appearance was limited and confined to the capacity in which the commission was sued.
The judgment sustaining the demurrer is
Affirmed.