Clayton v. City of Henderson

JUDGE DuRELLE

delivered the opinion oe the court.

*231By an act adopted in 1886., embodied in section 3909 Kentucky Statutes, it was provided:

“It shall not be lawful to locate or maintain any pest-, house or other place intended for the treatment of eruptive diseases, or diseases which are contagious or infectious, within the corporate limits of-any incorporated city or town, -or within a distance of one mile of .the boundary line thereof. Any officer of any city or town, or other person, who shall violate the provisions of this act, or in anywise aid) or abet therein, shall be deemed guilty o.f a misdemeanor,, andj upon conviction thereof in any court of competent jurisdiction, shall be fined not less than five hundred dollars nor morte than onie thousand dollars', and be liable in damages to any person injured thereby, and, if wilfully done, such person or his heirs or representatives may recover punitive damages.”

Under this statute, which is set out in the petition, the appellant brought suit, making parties defendant the City of Henderson, the mayor thereof, the, members oif the common council, and the keeper of the pest-house and his surety; alleging that they had wilfully maintained, and aided and abetted in maintaining a i>est-house within one-half mile of. the limits of the city, near appellant’s residence; that they had sent persons afflicted with 'smallpox to the pest-house; that, by that means, that disease was communicated to her, to her damage, and that they had taken no steps, and provided no means, to prevent the spreading o.f the disease and) the communication thereof to other persons.

After various motions to require 'appellant to elect which of the defendants she would proceed against, and whether *232she would pursue a cause of action under the common: law or under the statute, had been overruled, general demurrers to the petition were sustained.

On behalf of appellees it is claimed that the act of 1885 was. repealed by implication by the act of June 14, 1893* for the government of cities of the third class, which provides (Section 3290):

“The common council of each of said- cities shall, within the limits of the. Constitution of the State and this act, have power by ordinance .... To prevent the introduction: of contagious diseases into the city, to make quarantine law's for the purpose and enforce the s-ame within ten miles of the city. To establish and erect hospitals, almshouses, city prisons, workhouses, make regulations for the government thereof, and to acquire and hold land for the purpose either fwithiru or beyond the boundaries of the city.”

'The claim is that the -act of 1886 is -a limitation upon the power of the common council of. cities of the third class, and, therefore, inconsistent with the grant of power in the .¿¡barter, which recognizes ho limitations except the Constitution and this act; and further, that the act of 1893 was intended to' cover the whole subject of the rights, -duties -and liabilities of cities of the class named; and it is urged that, being so intended), it is a repeal of all prior legislation upon the subject, even if miot in terms repugnant.

It was also urged that the intent of the Legislature to repeal the -act of 1886 is further shown by the provisions of the acts in regard to the government -of cities of the second and) fourth1 classes — notably the latter, which provides (section 3490, Kentucky Statutes) that the boards of council of *233said cities stall have power “to make ‘regulations' to prevent the introduction or spreading of contagious or infectious diseases in the city, pass quarantine laws for that purpose and enforce the same within one mile of the city; to establish and regulate hospitals or pest-houses in or outside of the city; to make all regulations necessary to secure the general health of the inhabitants of the city, and to regulate and provide for the burial of the dead.”

Undoubtedly, it needs no argument to show that the word “hospitals” includes pest-houses. But it does not follow because the city Council is authorized to establish hospitals and other named institutions, most of which are proper and' some of which are necessary to be situate-within the city its), and for such purpose is 'also authorized to acquire property wdthin or without those limits, that, therefore, all may toe established within the boundary. On the contrary, the preceding suib-section above quoted looks directly to the exclusion of contagious diseases from ‘the city limits; and it! would toe a strained construction to hold that the adoption of a|n act which was manifestly intended to authorize the deportation of cases of contagious diseases from cities of the third class accomplished the repeal of an act which forbid® the treatment of such oases within the limits, or in the vicinity of cities of all classes. It is (true that the Constitution (section 156) provides that “All municipal corporations of the same class shall possess the same powers and be subject to the same restrictionsand if the act of 1886 was applicable alone to cities of the third class, there might toe force in the contention that the act for thleir government was intended as a complete code of laws on the subject, and, therefore, re*234pealed all antecedent laws in relation thereto not embraced Sin its provisions. But t(he aot of 1886 is Mot restricted in its application to cities of the third class; it embraces, all municipalities, is a proper exercise of the general police powers of tlhe State gowernmenlt ta take measures for the security of fhie health of its citizens, and we do> not think it repealed by the act of 1893 any more than the common law of nuisances

thereby repealed as to1 nuisances established within the' limits of cities 'of the third class. Whether the general act is repealed as to cities of the fourth class by the act for their government is not presented by this record, and need not be here considered.

It is further contended on behalf of the city of Henderson that, even1 if the act of 1880 was not repealed, the city cannot be held liable, because the a,ct does not make the corporatio.n responsible, but only the- officers who shall violate its provisions; and further, because the act complained 'of, being- forbidden by statute, was beyond the scope of the powers of the municipality, was ultra vires, and therefore imposed ño liability upon the corporation. But in the contention that the act imposed no responsibility, upon the corporation, the common law liability for establishing a nuisance which inflicts special damages upon an individual is overlooked; and as it is not necessary, that the word “nuisance” should be used in the pleading, but only that facts be stated which show the existence of the nuisance and the damage resultant therefrom, we think a cause of action has been stated against the city.

“A pest-house erected by town, municipal or county *235authorities near the premises of another, injuring the health of his family or exposing them to contagious ■disease, is a nuisance for which an action will lie, and in the case of a county against the board or officers ■erecting it.” Wood’s Law of Nuisances, 2d Ed., sec. 66.

And in Haag v. Vanderburgh County, 60 Ind., 511 (28 A. R., 654), suit was brought against the board of commissioners of the county, which was held to be, in legal contemplation, the county; and the court held that it was a well-recognized rule that municipal corporations are liable for torts in certain classes of cases, including nuisances, in the same manner as natural persons; referring to 2d Hilliard on Torts (p. 273), Shear. & Red. on Negligence (sec. 120), 2d Dillon’s Municipal Corporations (p. 766).

And in the contention that the acts alleged in the petition being unauthorized can not impose a liability upon the corporation, counsel seem to confuse the liability of a municipality for unauthorized contracts with its liability for torts committed by its officers acting under its authority in a matter within the scope of its corporate powers, but in regard to which its powers have been abused. Said Chief Justice Shaw in Thayer v. City of Boston (19 Pick., 513), cited with approval in McGraw v. Town of Marion (17 R., 1258-9), in which a number of ■other cases upon'the subject are referred to:

The court is, therefore, of the opinion that the City of Boston may be liable in an action of the case where acts are done by its authority which would warrant a like action against an individual, provided such act is done by *236the authority and order of the city government, or of those branches of the city government invested with jurisdiction to act for the corporation upon the subject to which the particular act relates, or where, after the act has been done, it has been ratified by the corporation by any similar act of its officers.’-'

The rule in this respect is admirably stated in Dillon-on Municipal Corporations, 4th edition, section 968:

“To create such a liability, it is fundamentally necessary that the act done which is injurious to others must be within the scope of the corporate powers as prescribed by charter or positive enactment (the extent of which-powers all persons are bound, at their peril, to know); in-other words, it must not be ultra vires in the sense that it is not within the power or authority of the corporation to act in reference to it under any circumstances.”

And again in section 972:

“Prima facie, a municipal corporation is not liable for-the trespass and wrongful acts of its officers, though donecolore officii; but it will clearly be liable therefor where-the act, if not wholly ultra vires in the sense before explained, was expressly authorized by the governing body of the corporation, or where, without special authority, it was done by its officers in the scope of their duties, and employment, and has been ratified by' the corporation.”

The next question which arises is, whether the members of the board of council are, by the act of 1886, made-liable for damages caused by the establishment of the pest-house at a place within the statutory limits.

*237It seems quite clear that, in the absence of .statutory provision, they would not be.

They are invested with legislative powers; and, in the action complained of, were doubtless exercising those powers. “Where the officers of a municipal corporation are invested with legislative powers, they are, of course, exempt from individual liability for the passage of any ordinance within their authority, and their motives in reference thereto will not be inquired into; nor are they individually liable for the passage of any ordinance not authorized by their powers; for such ordinance is void, and need not be obeyed.” (1st Dillon’s Municipal Corporations, 4th edition, section 313, and authorities there cited.)

The question remains, however, whether the statute under consideration was intended to create a liability against all classes of officers, both legislative and ministerial, of a municipal corporation, concerned in the establishment of a pest-house within the forbidden limits, or whether it applied only to ministerial officers who might participate therein. With some hesitation, on account of the absence of direct authority, we have reached the latter conclusion. It would seem improbable that the Legislature intended to create a statutory liability ■against a class of legislative officers, based upon action taken by them in that capacity, without any specific mention of the class to which they belonged, which had uniiormly been held exempt from such liability. Such a construction would produce an interference with freedom of action by a legislative body, which ought not to *238be lightly inferred when the language construed does not expressly provide therefor. It seems probable, rather, that the act was intended to apply to the establishment of such an institution by the executive or ministerial officers of the municipality, to persons who might establish private pest-houses, and to persons who might aid or abet either officers or persons so offending. To the class first named belongs the mayor, as well as the keeper of the pest-house; but not the surety of the pest-house keeper, merely by virtue of the fact that he is such surety. The mere execution of the bond by him as surety does not, in any fair or just sense, render him liable for aiding or abetting in the establishment or maintenance of the pest-house within forbidden limits.

■ There remains to be considered, therefore, only the question raised by the motions to require an election by appellant, viz., whether an action under the common law against the city for special damages caused to appellant by its maintenance of a nuisance can properly be joined with an action for damages against an officer under the statute in question.

Under the code (section 83), several causes of action may be united, if each affects all parties to the action, may be brought in the same county, may be prosecuted by the same kind of action, and if all of them be brought for. injuries to person and property. The weight of authority seems to be that, where a specific proceeding is prescribed by the statute, it may not be joined with an action at common law; but that if a penalty or' damages be made recoverable in a specific form of action, counts therefor *239may be joined with counts for other causes of action in the same form, but not in different forms. (See authorities quoted in 11 A. & E. Enel., p. 1015m.) So it has been held that a common law action for negligence can not be joined with one for statutory negligence. (Kendrick v. Chicago & Alton R. R. Co., 81 Mo., 521. And see Felter v. Manville, 23 Kan., 191.)

On the other hand, it has been held that a statuory liability of a corporation and itg common law liability may be enforced in the same action. (Bottomly v. P., H. & N. W. R. R. Co., 44 Mich., 542.)

But in the case at bar, it is sought to recover at common law' against one defendant and under the statute against another. Under the averments of the petition, only compensatory damages can be recovered against the municipality, for the statutes, giving punitive damages does not apply to the corporation, and gross negligence is not averred. Under the statute, punitive damages are sought to be recovered against an individual, upon the allegation that the act done wTas willful. Without passing upon the question of whether or not averments might be made under which the city would be responsible in punitive damages, it is sufficient to say that such averments are not made in the petition in this case, and that we think a cause of action under the common law against one party for compensatory damages can not be properly joined with an action against another party for punitive damages, a right which is given under the statute, although both causes of action arise out of the same transaction.

*240For the reasons given, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.