Fleming v. City of Memphis

Mr. Justice Lajnsden

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff sued the city of Memphis for damages for injuries which she received as the result of the alleged negligence of the defendant in - maintaining certain streets, so as to suffer a dangerous hole, ditch, or washout to be and remain thereon. The city demurred to the declaration, assigning as cause thereof that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in this case because the city of Memphis “by special dispensation from the legislature is not liable for the negligence of its agents, employees, and servants in the construction of bridges and highways, nor for their negligence in leaving the same ih a dangerous condition in the city of Memphis.”

The question presented for determination is the validity of Acts 1879, eh. 11, as amended by chapter 96 of the Acts, of 1881, which, after amendment, reads as follows:

“That the counties in which the taxing districts are situated, and the taxing districts themselves shall not be liable for damages, or injuries to persons, or property, by reason of defects in the streets or alleys or other property under the control, and within said taxing districts, or for the conduct of those managing the affairs of such districts.”

*335This statute applies to no other municipality than the city of Memphis. The learned trial judge sustained the demurrer and dismissed tlie suit, which action was affirmed by the court of civil appeals upon the authority of Williams v. Taxing District, 16 Lea, 531, and an unreported case said to have been decided by this court in 1907. Section 8 of article 11 of the constitution of this State provides as follows:

“The legislature shall have no power to suspend any general law for the benefit of any particular individual, nor to pass any law for the benefit of individuals inconsistent with the general laws of the land, nor to pass any law granting to an individual or individuals, rights, privileges, immunities or exemptions other than such as may be by the same law extended to any member of the community who may be able to bring himself within the provisions of such law.”

We think it too clear for argument at this late day that the exemption, or “special dispensation,” as counsel denominate it, in favor of the city of Memphis in the foregoing provision of its charter, is violative of the section of the constitution just quoted. This question has been determined time and again by this court, and resort need not be had to other authority than our own reported cases. There is not a single case, unless it be Williams v. Taxing District, supra, which intimates to the contrary. Commencing with our latest case of Malone v. Williams, 118 Tenn., 425, 103 S. W., 807, 121 Am. St. Rep., 1002, we will review only a few of them. In this last casé, the court said:

*336“It is true that the legislature has power to grant special charters to municipal corporations, and may, in general, include within those charters such peculiar provisions, not to conflict with the constitution, as may be needed for the convenience and wellbeing of the particular community. But where these provisions are so general as to fall within a classification common to all the citizens of the State, there can be no justification for erecting a single city into a class by itself, with provisions more onerous than are imposed upon all other citizens occupying the same situation, or more advantageous. It was so held many years ago, in a case cited infra, where the legislature attempted to exonerate the city of Memphis from the burden of executing cost or appeal bonds. B'y the general.law of the State,• applicable to all citizens, tax officers are permitted to dis-train for delinquent taxes. Nowhere else in the State are they permitted to distrain for tax not delinquent except in the city of Memphis, under the section above quoted. The said section creates an unconstitutional discrimination in favor of the city of Memphis, and thus is in violation of the section of the constitution above referred to.”

It is true that laws public in their character, and otherwise unobjectionable, may extend to all citizens or be confined to particular classes. With respect to the provision of the constitution under consideration, citizens or municipalities may be classified when the object of the legislature is to confer upon them certain rights, privileges, immunities, or exemptions not enjoyed by *337the community at large. But this classification must not be mere arbitrary selection. It must have some basis which bears a natural and reasonable relation to the objects sought by the legislation, and there must be some good and yalid reason why the particular municipality upon whom the benefit is conferred should be so preferred. Stratton v. Morris, 89 Tenn., 522, 15 S. W., 87, 12 L. R. A., 70; State v. Railroad, 124 Tenn., 1, 135 S. W., 773; Soon Hing v. Crowley, 113 U. S., 709, 5 Sup. Ct., 730, 28 L. Ed., 1145; Connolly v. Union Sewer Pipe Co., 184 U. S., 540, 22 Sup. Ct., 431, 46 L. Ed., 679.

It was determined at an early day in Humes v. Mayor and Aldermen, 1 Humph., 403, that a municipal corporation for the government of a town or city is the proprietor of the streets, which it bolds as easements, in trust for the benefit of the corporation, and which it has the power to grade, pave or otherwise improve. “And it is well settled at this day,” said the court, “both in England and America, that such a corporation is liable to be sued in actions of tort in like manner as natural persons.” Memphis v. Lasser, 9 Humph., 757; Nashville v. Brown, 9 Heisk., 1, 24 Am. Rep., 289; Niblett v. Nashville, 12 Heisk., 684, 27 Am. Rep., 755.

In Knoxville v. Bell, 12 Lea, 157, the court reviewed the authorities in this State, and held that the doctrine was established that “municipal corporations, are liable in civil actions for injuries to persons sustained by reason of their negligence or failure to keep their streets in safe condition for persons traveling or passing the *338same, too firmly now to be shaken,” and declined to consider authorities from other jurisdictions holding to the contrary. Therefore the general rule of law, applicable alike to all municipalities, at the date of the passage of the statute in question, made each of them liable to any citizen for injuries received as a result of its negligence in failing to properly maintain its streets. If this section of the defendant’s charter is valid, we have a general law applying to all other municipalities, which by express legislative enactment is suspended for the benefit of the city of Memphis. That such a law is not the law of the land is clearly settled by Budd v. State, 3 Humph., 483, 39 Am. Dec., 189, reaffirmed in Mayor, etc., v. Dearmon, 2 Sneed, 104, and followed in Hatcher v. State, 12 Lea, 368. Even in Williams v. Taxing District, supra, the correctness of this position is recognized, because the court said that “it is very true that a provision of a municipal charter which undertakes to make a law for, or in regard to, that municipality different from the general law, or to withdraw from the operation of a general law, applicable to all municipal corporations, a particular corporation, or class of such corporations, would be obnoxious to the clause of the constitution last cited, because not the law of the land.”

Whatever may be said of the correctness of the decision of the court in that case, it seems that the statute under consideration was confused with statutes granting particular franchises or rights to certain municipalities. This statute confers an immunity upon the municipality, and, if it could be valid at all, it must be *339general to all municipalities, or tlie particular municipalities to which the immunity is granted must be classified, so that every municipality which is in, or may come in, the situation and circumstance which constitutes the reasons for and basis of the classification, can be entitled to the immunities conferred by the statute. And the classification itself must rest upon some difference which bears a reasonable and just relation to the immunity granted to the class, and it can never be made arbitrarily and without reasonable basis.

We have already seen, and this is recognized by Williams v. Taxing District, that the general rule of law in this State makes all municipal corporations liable for neglect of their streets, and it is immaterial whether this rule originates Avith a statute or is found in the common law. It is a rule of law, both in England and America, and has been repeatedly so announced by this court before the passage of the act of 1881. It can make no difference what the rule is called, whether it be regarded as “only a consensus of decision” or otherwise! It is equally effective to determine the liability of all municipalities for neglecting their streets, and judgments for such neglect, based upon such liability, are daily enforced against them by the courts of this State. It is a seizing of the Avord and a dodging of the idea to say that this rule of liability, so long and constantly enforced, is not a general law of the land, suspended by the act in question for the particular benefit of the city of Memphis. Such is its effect and substance, as well as its form. With its policy, this court has nothing *340to do. But it is its highest duty, as well as its pleasure, to require that tMs and all other statutes shall square with the constitution.