Opinion op the court by
JUDGE SETTLEAffirming.
. The appellant, Wesley Twyman, as administrator of the estate of James Twyman, deceased, sued the appellee, City of Frankfort, in the Franklin circuit court, for $20,000 damages for the death of his intestate, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of its police officers in wrongfully exposing the intestate to inclement weather while he had smallpox, by removing him from a comfortable home to the pesthouse used for smallpox patients, which was badly crowded, poorly ventilated, and wholly unfit for the purpose for which it was used. It was averred, in substance, in the petition, that the appellee, -as a city of the third class, is empowered to enact ordinances to prevent the introduction of contagious diseases in its corporate limits, to adopt quarantine laws and enforce the same within ten miles of its- limits, establish hospitals, boards of health, and make all necessary regulations for the protection of the public health; that in pursuance of the powers enumerated, the appellee has enacted many ordi*521nances for the protection of the public health, and it has established a pesthouse for persons afflicted with contagious diseases, but has never appointed a board of health, for which reason it directed its mayor, other officers, and agents to enforce the ordinances, and to remove any and all persons afflicted with smallpox to its pesthouse, and such officers and agents acted under the authority thus conferred in doing the negligent: acts complained of, whereby the intestate lost his life. A demurrer vras filed to the petition by appellee, and, the same having been sustained by the lower court, the appellant refused to plead further. The petition was thereupon dismissed, and appellee given judgment for its costs.
The case is now before this court, and the only question presented upon the appeal is, does the petition state a good cause of action?
If the acts complained of in the petition were done by the appellee in the effort to protect the public health, which is a duty that appertains to the city in its public, and not in its corporate or private, capacity, it would seem that there can be no liability upon its part, even though such duty was negligently performed by those to whom its performance was entrusted. “The power or even duty on the part of a municipal corporation to make provision for tihe public health, and for the care of the sick and destitute, appertains to it in its public and not corporate, or, as it is sometimes called, private, capacity; and, therefore, where a city, under its charter, and the general law of the State, enacted to prevent the spread of contagious diseases, establishes a hospital, it is not responsible to persons injured by reason of the misconduct of its agents and employes therein. . . .” Dillon on Muncipal Corporations, sections 977, 989, 981, 982. City of Richmond v. Long’s Adm’r, 17 Grat., 375, 94 Am. Dec., 461. Sherbourne v. Yuba County, 21 Cal. 113 81 Am. *522Dec., 151. Perhaps no better statement of the law on this subject can be made than is found in the following quotation from 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1141, viz.: “While the difficulties surrounding all attempts to state a rule embracing the torts for which a private action will lie against a municipal corporation have been often deplored, yet it is believed that the following formula is both accurate and complete: So far as municipal corporations of any class, andl however incorporated, exercise powers conferred upon them for purposes essentially public — purposes pertaining to the administration of general laws, made to enforce the general policy of the State— they should be deemed agéncies of the State, and not subject to be sued for any act or omission occurring While in the exercise of such power, unless by statute the action be given. In reference to such matters they should stand as does the sovereignty whose agency they are — subject to be sued only when the State, by statute, declares that they may be. In so far, however, as they exercise powers not of this character, voluntarily assumed— powers intended for the private advantage and benefit of the locality and its inhabitants — there seems to be no sufficient reason why they should be relieved from liability to suit, and measure of actual damage, to which an individual or private corporation exercising the same powers for purposes essentially private would be liable.” We find the same principle announced in Taylor v. City of Owensboro, 98 Ky., 271, 17 R., 856, 32 S. W,. 948, 56 Am. St. Rep., 361, wherein it is said by this court: “. . . 'The municipal corporation in all these and like causes represents the ¡State or the public. The police officers are not the servants of the corporation, and hence the principle of respondeat superior does not apply, and the corporation is not liable unless by virtue of a statute expressly creating the liability. *523. . .” In the same case it is further said: “The above principle is sustained by an almost unbroken line of decisions of the courts of this country, and by this court in the cases of Pollock’s Adm’r v. Louisville, 13 Bush, 221 (26 Am. Rep., 260); Jolly’s Adm’r v. Hawesville, 89 Ky., 279, 11 R., 477, (12 S. W., 313); Prather v. Lexington, 13 B. Mon., 559 (56 Am. Dec., 585).”
We do not regard the cases of Clayton v. Henderson (103 Ky., 228, 20 R., 87) 44 S. W., 667, 44 L. R. A., 474; Paducah v. Allen, (23 R., 701) 63 S. W., 981, and McGraw v. Marion 98 Ky., 673, 17 R., 1254, 34 S. W., 18, 47 L. R. A., 593, cited by counsel for appellant, as authorities in point. The two cases first mentioned involved the illegal action of the boards of councilman of the cities of Henderson and PaduGah in improperly locating pesthouses in violation of the statute, thereby creating nuisances, to the injury of the property rights of contiguous residents, and endangering the lives of their families; and towns and cities can always be held liable for nuisances created or maintained by them. And in the case last mentioned, though the city of Marion was held liable in damages for the arrest and prosecution of McGraw for peddling without license, the arrest was made under a void ordinance, which was enacted for municipal revenue, of which the city of Marion was the sole beneficiary. It is well settled that a city may be held liable for an act resulting in injury to another, where the city derives some special benefit from such act. Counsel for appellant relies upon Aaron v. Broiles, etc., 64 Tex., 318, 53 Am. Rep., 764; Dallas v. Allen (Tex. Civ. App.) 40 S. W., 324. The former was an action against the board of health, mayor, and marshal of Ft. Worth, and not against the city; and, upon the state of facts presented, it was held that the persons sued were liable. We have been unable to find or *524examine the case of Dallas v. Allen, supra; hut, conceding that the Texas doctrine is as contended by counsel for appellant, it has not been accepted in this State, and is, we think, against, the weight of authority outside of it.
We are unable to see how the failure of the appellee city to appoint a board of health can affect the question under consideration. A boardi of health would be but an instrumentality or agency in the hands of the municipal government to be employed in protecting and maintaining the public health. Any other means to the same end that would prove as effective as a board of health might be employed by the city, and still the duties to be performed would be such as grow out of the exercise of powers purely governmental.
It is insisted for the appellant that the a'ppellee city participated in the alleged negligent acts of i!ts officers in the manner of removing the intestate to the pesthouse, because it directed the removal. It is not, however, contended that the city council gave any special direction to remove the intestate to the pesthouse, though it is conceded that it adopted proper ordinances under which to care for the public health. It can not be denied that it is the duty of the city authorities to enforce these ordinances by removing those who are afflicted with contagious diseases to the place provided for them. We fail to see, therefore, how, in performing these duties, the city can become a participant in the negligent acts of those who simply have in hand the removal to the pesthouse of persons thus afflicted. At most, only the officers or agents' guilty of such negligence may be held liable therefor. Taking all that is alleged in the petition to be true — and it must be so considered for the purposes of the demurrer — it shows beyond question that the acts complained of were such as appertained or were incidental to appellee’s duty to the public, and were done for the *525protection of the public health. The power exercised was therefore solely for the public good.
Finally it is insisted for appellant that in event this action was authorized by section 6, Ky. St., 1903, which provides that “Whenever the death of a person shall result from an injury inflicted by negligence or wrongful act, then in every such case damages' may be recovered for such death from the person or persons, company or companies, corporation or corporations, their. agents or' servants, causing the same. . . The statute was enacted to conform to section 241 of our present Constitution, which confers the same right. We can not believe that the statute and provision of the Constitution supra were intended to give a right of action against a municipal corporation for the death of a person occurring as a result of the act done, as in this case, in the performance of a duty which the municipality owed to the public, and the doing of which was but the exercise .of power purely governmental. It seems to us that to hold otherwise would practically do away with municipal authority in the matter of preserving the public health, which would result in consequences disastrous to the public welfare, and ruinous to every city in the State.
For the reasons indicated, the judgment is affirmed.
Petition for re-hearing by appellant overruled.