Templeton v. Linn County

Lord, J.,

dissenting.—I am unable to concur in the reasoning or conclusion reached in this case. In this state, a county, through the agency of the county court, has entire charge and control of the highways and bridges within its limits, and has devolved upon it the duty to keep them in repair, and the power to raise money by taxation to enable it to perform that duty. In respect to bridges, the county court is directly authorized “to provide for the erection and repairing within the county of public bridges upon any road or highway established by public authority.”. (Hill’s Code, § 870, sub. 4.) Such being the duty and power of the county to keep in repair its. bridges, it ought, upon principle, to be held liable to anyone for an injury sustained in consequence of its failure to» keep a bridge upon the highway in repair. As Worden, , J., said: “The obligation thus imposed upon the board to. cause all bridges in the county to be kept in repair, with ample power to provide means to discharge the obligation, carries with it a corresponding right in every one having occasion, in the usual course of travel, to use the bridges, to have the obligation fulfilled, and the bridges kept in repair. And it seems to us to follow, that where the board. negligently suffers such a bridge to be out of repair, whereby a person, in the ordinary use of it, is injured in person or property, without his own fault, he must have an action against the board for damages; otherwise, there will be a wrong without a remedy.” (House v. Commissioners, 60 Ind. 583; 28 Am. Rep. 657.) While the courts held with a good deal of unaminity that a chartered corporation, with author- • ity to keep in repair its streets and bridges within its limits, and power to raise money by taxation for that purpose, is liable.*322in damages for injuries sustained by any one in consequence of ¿leglect to keep them in repair, unless otherwise provided iby statU-te, they have, with almost equal unanimity, denied the application of the same principle of liability to counties for failing to keep in repair the highways and bridges within their limits, when clothed with a like authority over them, and power to provide means to enable them to do so. But the reason given for this distinction, namely, that a liability should attach to municipal corporations, and not to counties, because the former are supposed to accept their charters voluntarily, and the latter to have the duties and obligations imposed upon them involuntarily, has not been satisfactory, but has been the subject of much adverse criticism.

“ There is no sound distinction,” says Judge Thompson, “between the sanction of an obligation voluntarily assumed by a public body and that of an obligation which the legislature, in due exercise of its powers, has imposed upon it.” (1 Thomp. Neg. 618.) “If it be granted,” says Judge Elliott, “that a public corporation, such as a city, is liable because it is charged with a public duty, and invested with the means to enable it to perform that duty, it is impossible, as it seems to us, for one who proceeds upon principle, to avoid the conclusion that a county charged with a specific duty and provided with the means of enforcing it, is not likewise liable.” (Elliott, Eds. & Sts. 41; 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. § 998.)

The leading case, on which the cases exempting counties from liability in this country are based, is Russell v. The Men of Devon, 2 T. R. 667. The action was brought by an individual against the inhabitants of the county of Devon for an injury sustained in consequence of a county bridge being out of repair. Two of the inhabitants, for themselves and others of the county, appeared and demurred generally, and there was judgment for the defendants. As showing the reasons given for the judgment, Lord Kenyon, *323C. J., said: “ But the question here is, whether this body of men, who are sued in the present action, are a corporation or a qua (corporation, against whom such an action can be maintained. If it be reasonable that they should be by law liable to such an action, recourse must be had to the legislature for that purpose. * * * I do not say that the inhabitants of a county or hundred may not be incorporated to some purposes; as if the king were to grant lands to them, rendering rent, like the grant to the good men of the town of Islington. But where an action is brought against a corporation for damages, those damages are not to be recovered against the corporators in their individual capacity, but out of their corporate estate; but if the county is to be considered as a corporation, there is no corporation fund out of which satisfaction is to be made.” Ashhukst, J., said: “But there is another general principle of law which is more applicable to this case—that it is better that an individual should sustain an injury than that the public should suffer inconvenience. Now, if this action could be sustained, the public would suffer a great inconvenience; for if damages are recoverable against the county, at all events they must be levied on one or two individuals who have no means whatever of reimbursing themselves; for if they were to bring separate actions against each individual of the county for his proportion, it is better that the plaintiff should be without remedy.” The reasons given for this judgment have no force under the law regulating our counties. The county is a body politic and corporate, and as such may sue and be sued, and ample provision is made for the satisfaction of judgments rendered against the county. As the court said in Dean v. New Milford, 5 V. & S. 547, in speaking of Russell v. The Men of Devon, supra, “the cause was decided for reasons which do not exist in this state. (1) That a county was not a corporation, and (2) that there was no county fund out of which satisfaction could be made. * * * The *324inference is by no means unreasonable that, had not these reasons existed, the judgment would have been different.” Judge Thompson says: “The ground on which Lord Kenyon placed his judgment in Russell v. Men of Devon, that counties have no corporate fund, and that judgments for damages against them would have to be levied off the property of any one or more of the individual inhabitants, is not sound when applied to counties in Missouri, Illinois, and other western states. The counties are political bodies, having a common administrative board, elected by the voters of the county, by which the business of the county is transacted. Through this board the county contracts, and is contracted with, sues and is sued. Many counties issue negotiable securities in large amounts. Their administrative boards possess a limited power of taxation for county purposes. In these respects no substantial difference is perceived to exist between them and chartered municipal corporations.” (1 Thomp. Neg. 618.) It must be confessed, then, as Judge Dillon says, “it is not easy to find a legal basis for the distinction between cities and counties in respect to the duty to keep the streets and highways under their respective jurisdictions in repair, whereby the former are held to an implied civil liability for damages caused by the neglect of this duty, and the latter are held not to be thus liable.” (2 Dill. Mun. Corp. 998.)

The truth is, there is no basis upon which to rest the distinction, for the reason that none exists. That eminent jurist, Black, C. J., says: “Every highway or thoroughfare which the public has the right to use, must be kept by somebody, in such order that it can be safely used; and if any serious injury happen to an individual in consesequence of its bad condition, those who are bound to repair must answer in damages.” After citing several authorities, he proceeds: “I have cited these several cases to show that a party bound to repair, whether it be an individual, a private corporation, a township, a district, or city, must perform *325the duty, or pay, in an action on the case, for all injuries to persons and property which may be caused by the omission.” (Erie City v. Schwingle, 22 Pa. St. 384; 60 Am. Dec. 87.)

So that, in my view, it is immaterial whether a right of action is given by statute or not, when the legislature, by statutory provision, creates a county into a body politic and corporate, giving it the power to contract, and to be contracted with, to sue and to be sued, and devolves upon it the duty to keep in repair the highways and bridges within its jurisdiction, and provides it with the means of enforcing the performance of this duty, the effect of such legislation is to create a liability against the county for a breach or non-performance of such duty, for which the common law will furnish a remedy. In other words, out of the obligation imposed, by such statutory provisions, there arises against the county a liability for an injury when it fails to keep in repair its highways and bridges, to be enforced by action as in like cases. As touching this identical question, I agree with Mr. Justice Deady, when he said: “ Upon this state of the obligation and power of the county, it is liable, in my judgment, for an injury sustained by any one in consequence of its failure to keep a highway or bridge thereon in reasonable repair; and, on principle, the common law would furnish a remedy therefor as in the case of an incorporated town.” (Eastman v. Clackamas Co. 32 Fed. Rep. 30.)

In addition to this, there are other considerations of a constitutional character that bear upon the right to maintain this action.

By section 4, Laws, 1854, 168, an action was authorized to be brought against any county in the then territory, either upon a contract, or “for an injury to the rights of the plaintiff, arising from some act or omission” of said county, which was continued in force after the adoption of the constitution by section 7, article 18, of the constitution, which provides “that all laws in force in the territory of Oregon when this constitution takes effect, and consistent *326therewith, shall continue in force until altered or repealed.” And by section 347 of the code of civil procedure, which took effect June 1, 1863, it was reenacted and continued with some verbal alterations. On February 21, 1887, section 347, supra, was amended limiting the right to maintain an action against a county to cases arising on contract, and not otherwise. (Hill’s Code, § 350.) It is provided by section 10, article 1, of the constitution, as follows: “ No court shall be secret, but justice shall be administered openly and without delay; and every man shall have remedy by due course of law for an injury done him in person, property, or reputation.”

In view of this state of the law, and this constitutional provision, guaranteeing to every man a remedy by due course of law for an injury done him in his person or property, the right of the plaintiff to maintain this actiom or to have a remedy for the injury sustained by the negligence of the defendant, is a vested right which the legislature cannot take away; and, as a consequence, the amendment to section 347, supra, denying such remedy, is null and void. As it is not doubted but that this constitutional provision preserved such remedies as the common law afforded, it is, difficult to understand, in view of the remedy afforded by the common law against incorporated towns or cities, why it should not preserve a remedy against a county for an injury arising from its neglect, when the statute of the territory, for years before, and at the time of the adoption of constitution, gave a right of action—a remedy—against a county for an injury caused by its wrongful act or omission.

If we admit that the common law did not furnish any remedy against a county, then this territorial statute was enacted to afford a remedy for an injury for which it did not provide, and thus obviate its defect and injustice. Such, then, being the law at and before the formation of the constitution, the provision that “every man shall have remedy by due course of law for an injury done *327him in person or property,” would preserve to him a remedy or right to maintain an action against a county for an injury sustained by its negligence. As observed by Mr. Justice Deady: “Whatever injury the law, as it then stood, took cognizance of and furnished a remedy for, every man shall continue to have a remedy for by due course of law. When this constitution was formed and adopted, it was and had been the law of the land from comparatively an early day, that a person should have an action for damages against a county for an injury caused by its act or omission. If this then known and accustomed remedy can be taken away in the face of this constitutional provision, what other may not? Can the legislature, in some spasm of novel opinion, take away every man’s remedy for slander, assault and battery, or the recovery of a debt, and if it cannot do so in such cases, why can it in this?” (Eastman v. Clackamas Co. supra.) In construing a similar provision under the constitution of Missouri, it was held by the supreme court of that state, that the provision meant that a remedy should be afforded for such wrongs as are recognized by the law of the land. (Landis v. Campbell, 79 Mo. 433; 49 Am. Rep. 239.) By the law of the land, is meant the general public law of the state, binding alike upon all the members of the community. The law of the land, at and before the adoption of the constitution, provided a remedy against a county for an injury to any one arising from its wrongful act or omission; and for such injuries or wrongs, as the law of the land recognized and provided a remedy, when the constitution was formed and adopted, the courts must afford a remedy under the guarantee of this constitutional provision. In the interpretation of the provisions of a constitution, contemporaneous construction is always resorted to to throw light upon them and explain their purpose and meaning. What was the law and practice at the time,—what was the wrong the law was designed to remedy,—the framers of the constitution are supposed to have known when they formed it, and *328the people when they ratified and adopted it. The case of Tribou v. Strowbridge, 7 Or. 156, illustrates the application of this principle of interpretation, and by analogy is decisive of the contention here involved. In that case, the validity of the statute authorizing the court in actions at law to refer causes which involve the examination of long accounts, whether the parties assent or not, was questioned upon the ground that the statute violated section 17 of article 1 of the constitution, which provides that “in all civil cases the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate." “This language of the constitution,” said Boise, J., “indicates that the right of trial by jury shall continue to all suitors in courts in all cases in which it was secured to them by the laws and practice of the courts at the time of the adoption of the constitution. So that, in order to ascertain whether such right exists in this case, we must look into the history of our laws and jurisprudence at and before the adoption of the state constitution. The statute in question was passed by the legislature of the late territory of Oregon in 1854, and has been copied into the present code, so that this statute has been in force since that time, and was the law of the territory at the time the constitution was adopted, and therefore does not abridge the right of trial by jury as it existed when we became a state. Under this statute cases like this have been referred and tried by a referee without question as to the authority of the court to order the reference, for a quarter of a century; and was there doubt as to the constitutionality of this statute, it would, under the circumstances and the sanction of long usage, have to be solved in favor of the statute.” Construed in the light of such legislative expositions, we are able to discover and understand the meaning of the provisions of the constitution, and the rights and remedies such provisions were intended to secure and preserve against legislative deprivations. As the territorial statute giving to every man a remedy against the county for neglect to *329keep in repair the highways and bridges within its limits was in force before and at the time of the adoption of the constitution, when the framers of the constitution inserted the provision securing to every man a remedy for an injury done him in person and property, the effect of that provision was to secure to every man, by due course of law, a remedy against a county for a breach of duty to keep in repair its bridges, which the legislature cannot take away. Nor is there anything in the case of O’Harra v. Portland, 3 Or. 525, in conflict with this result. There was no attempt by section 127 of the charter to deprive the person injured by a defect in a street, of a remedy. The liability was shifted from the city of Portland to the officer or officers upon whom the duty devolved and out of whose negligence the injury resulted. There was a remedy. Hence, as the case discloses, the point here was not involved, nor could it be raised.