Klingenberg v. City of Raleigh
Klingenberg v. City of Raleigh
Opinion of the Court
There is no allegation that the valley gutter constructed on North Person Street at the point where said street intersects Jones was negligently constructed or that it was in a state of bad repair. The substance of the plaintiff’s allegation of negligence is to the effect that the existence of a valley gutter of this type upon a public street makes the street dangerous for traffic and creates hazards to the public,' and that it is negligence on the part of the city and a failure to exercise reasonable care to permit such condition to exist and continue.
While the construction and maintenance of public roads and streets is a governmental function the courts have almost universally permitted recovery against a city or town where injury results from negligence in the construction of a street or from negligent failure to maintain the
A municipality, in determining the character or plan of construction of streets, sidewalks and other public ways, acts in a legislative, quasi-judicial and discretionary capacity. Therefore, it is not' ordinarily liable for injuries resulting from danger or defects inherent in the plan of construction adopted or due solely to a mistake of judgment in adopting the plan. The rule is not limited to cases where the plan adopted was determined in advance, but applies equally where it was ratified and adopted by the municipality after the actual work of construction. 43 C. J., 1015; L. R. A., 1918-D, 1103; 37 L. R. A., N. S., 1150; 43 A. R., 655.
In Blackwelder v. Concord, 205 N. C., 792, Brogden, J., quotes from Martin v. Greensboro, 193 N. C., 573, with approval, as follows: “But in view of the allegations in the complaint, we must furthermore assume that the sidewalks were built and the railway track was laid in pursuance of a plan approved and adopted by the authorities of the city. We are not at liberty to conclude that they acted without deliberation or without due regard to the safety of the public. If they erred, at least the reasonable inference is that their error was one of judgment. It is generally held that a municipal corporation is not liable for injuries to person or property resulting from its adoption of an improper plan when the defects in such plan are due to mere error of this kind. It must follow that the exercise of judgment and discretion in the adoption by the city of a general plan for the improvement of its streets, the building of its sidewalks, and the selection or approval of the space to be occupied by the track of the street railway is not subject to revision by a court or jury in a private action for damages based ou the theory that the plan was not wisely or judiciously chosen; although a private action may be maintained for defective construction of the work or failure to keep it in repair. Herein is the distinction between injuries resulting from the plan of a public improvement made in a city or town and those resulting from the mode of its execution. The adoption of the general plan involves the exercise of judgment; the duty of constructing and maintaining the work done in pursuance of the plan is ministerial. The exercise of discretionary or legislative power is a governmental function, and for injury resulting from the negligent exercise of such power a municipality is exempt from liability.” 90 A. L. R., 1495.
“As a branch of the rule of nonliability of municipalities for torts in connection with the exercise of governmental functions, is the rule which distinguishes (1) ministerial duties from (2) legislative, judiciál, and discretionary functions. Where the duty is not governmental, but ministerial and absolute, as distinguished from legislative, discretionary, judicial or gwasi-judicial, the municipal corporation is liable for damages arising because of omission to perform it, or for negligence in its execution. ■. . .
“However, the line between ministerial and legislative or judicial duties is sometimes difficult to draw. The distinction would seem necessarily to rest upon a discretion had by the city to discharge or not to discharge the duty because, where the duty is absolute and imperative and the city has no discretion, the duty is ministerial, its discharge not depending on the exercise of judgment, but being required by law. It is by force of this reason for the distinction between ministerial and judicial duties that a duty which is judicial before the municipality has entered upon the performance of it, frequently becomes, when its performance is entered upon, ministerial. The municipality has a discretion to do or not to do the work; the duty is, therefore, judicial up to the time that it is determined to do the work; but when the work is ordered the law often requires that it be done in a particular manner, or that it be not done in a certain way, and, therefore, after the work is ordered, the duty of the municipality to do the work in the manner required and not to do it in the way forbidden, is ministerial. The municipality as to these two things has no discretion; as to them its judgment is superseded, controlled and directed by the requirements of the law, and its duty is to comply with these requirements. . . .
“Official action is judicial where it is. the result of judgment or discretion. It is ministerial when it is absolute, certain and imperative, involving merely the • execution of a set task, and when the law which imposes it prescribes and defines the time, mode and occasion for its performance with such certainty that nothing remains for judgment or discretion . . . (not so in this case).
“When the municipal council acts in its legislative capacity for governmental purposes the municipality is no more liable than the State would be for similar action taken by the Legislature. Likewise, a municipality is not liable for a failure to exercise powers entrusted to the judgment and discretion of its proper authorities, or for errors committed in their exercise. Dargan v. Mobile, 31 Ala., 469, 133 Am. Dec., 505; Judd v. Hartford, 72 Conn., 350, 44 Atl., 510; Vaughtman v. Waterloo, 14 Ind. App., 649, 43 N. E., 476; Stackhouse v. Lafayette,*553 26 Ind., 17, 89 Am. Dec., 450; Brinkmeyer v. Evansville, 29 Ind., 187; Kelley v. Portland, 100 Me., 260, 61 Atl., 180; Claussen v. Luverne, 103 Minn., 491, 115 N. W., 643, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.), 698; Carroll v. St. Louis, 4 Mo. App., 191; Rosenbaum v. New Bern, 118 N. C., 83, 24 S. E., 1, 32 L. R. A., 123; Hill V. Charlotte, 72 N. C., 55, 21 Am. Rep., 451; Richmond v. Virginia Bonded W. N. Corp. (Va.), 138 S. E., 503, 506, citing the text.”
When North Person Street and other streets in that vicinity were paved it was a proper governmental function of the city of Ealeigh to make provision to take care of the surface water. The commissioners determined that catch basins and a storm sewer were too expensive and decided to use the only other engineering practice for such purpose, which was the use of valley gutters.
When the street was constructed the top surfacing of the valley gutters, as well as of the street, was of asphalt composition. A change of the surfacing to concrete so as to better care for the increasing traffic upon this street was not a departure from the original plan, such as would impose liability upon the city.
■ It might be well to note that while the statute prescribing rules and regulations for the operation of motor vehicles provides for certain maximum limits of speed, the controlling rule is that a motorist must at all times operate his motor vehicle with due regard to the width, traffic and condition of the highway. It is to be doubted that there is any danger existing to traffic by reason of the construction of these valley gutters so long as motorists operate their vehicles across the same with due regard to the condition existing. It is difficult to make any road or street free of hazard. The court below correctly held that this action is controlled by the principles enunciated in Blaclcwelder v. Concord, supra. The judgment below is
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority opinion holds that the judge in the court below should have peremptorily instructed' the jury in favor of the city of Ealeigh on the issue of negligence. From this view I dissent.
Ordinarily negligence is one of mixed law and fact (Filer v. N. Y. Central R. R., 49 N. Y., 47), but the question of negligence is primarily factual. Lane v. Town, 142 N. Y., 510, 37 N. E., 473; 1 Shearman & Eedfield, the Law of Negligence, 6th ed., sec. 52. “It is well settled that where there is uncertainty as to the existence of either negligence or contributory negligence, the question .is not one of law but of fact, and to be settled by a jury; and this whether the uncertainty arises from a con-
The majority opinion recognizes that a city is liable for negligence in the care and maintenance of its streets, but that this rule is subject to an exception: Where the defect is one which was a part of the original, general plan of the city in constructing the streets, the city is not liable for injuries caused thereby. The majority rests the decision in this case upon this exception as stated in Blackwelder v. Concord, 205 N. C., 792. The exception, as there stated, dealt with a “fault ... of the original plan of construction and drainage,” and the decision was that the injury resulted “from the plan adopted in the exercise 'of the judgment of the governing authorities ,and not from neglige:nce in the execution of the flan in the construction and maintenance of the streets.” (Italics mine.) Ibid., p. 795. If there was no general plan in the present case, or if after the adoption of such a plan it was executed negligently or the construction and maintenance was executed negligently, the rule of the Blaclcwelder case is itself authority to support a recovery by the plaintiff.
Whether the defect in the street involved in this case was a part of the original plan of construction or grew out of the later construction and maintenance of this street is the determinative question. On this score the majority view is that there was no evidence of a departure from the original, general plan. Here I differ. There was some evidence that there was no general plan at all, and there was considerable testimony to the effect that changes had been made in the state of the street at this point. The following, which in my opinion should have gone to the jury, indicates the tenor of this evidence:
The construction engineer, who was with the city when the street was originally paved in 1915, testified: “There was no general plan adopted by the city of Raleigh prior to the pavement on Person Street. Arrange
The police officer in charge of the traffic department who served with the Ealeigh police from 1924 to 1933 testified to the numerous accidents
There was a considerable body of similar evidence supporting this evidence of tbe engineer and police officer. In my opinion this evidence was ample to support tbe finding that tbe Raleigh officials, recognizing tbe defect in tbe original construction in tbe face of tbe increasing traffic load, undertook again and again to alter and modify that plan so as to reduce tbe hazard. It appears clear that such efforts, extending over a period of twenty years, were clearly ministerial in nature and not governmental, and that these were decisions of administrative officers in tbe discharge of mandatory general duties of maintenance.and not tbe solemn acts of tbe governing body in tbe discharge of a quasi-judicial discretion in laying out a general plan of street construction. So long as they relied upon tbe original plan of construction they might have been protected, although there is authority to tbe contrary. District of Columbia v. Caton, 48 App. D. C., 96; Perotti v. Bennett, 94 Conn., 533, 109 Atl., 890; Lebanon v. Graves, 178 Ky., 749, 199 S. W., 1064; Malloy v, Walker, Twp., 77 Mich., 448, 43 N. W., 1012.
Even where tbe rule permitting reliance upon tbe protection of tbe original plan is followed, if a city materially alters tbe original condition of a highway in tbe discharge of its duty to maintain it and in doing so leaves it in a condition dangerous to the general public, it should be held liable for an injury caused by its negligence. Particularly where a municipality has for twenty years bad notice of tbe danger of a defect ,in original construction and has on numerous occasions altered tbe original condition of tbe street but without remedying tbe defect, I think it should be left to tbe jury to determine whether tbe city has departed from tbe original plan and, if so, whether tbe city in tbe discharge of tbe administrative duty of maintenance has been negligent.
A dangerous defect in a street is not by reason of its age any less dangerous to persons passing over it for tbe first time. A municipality does not by prescription attain tbe right to be negligent. Rather to tbe contrary, tbe older the defective condition tbe greater tbe certainty that tbe officials have notice of it. Municipalities should not be encouraged to maintain conditions which they know to be dangerous. Tbe click of singletree and tbe jangle of trace chains have given way to tbe purr of engines and tbe scream of brakes. Highway conditions which were safe enough for travel in a more leisurely era may become .a menace in tbe hurried life of today. Time marches on, and so must tbe law. Old rules, born of another day, must constantly be scrutinized in tbe light of a changing world. Tbe ever restless troops of time in
Eetrospect: Tbe plaintiff was a guest in a Buick sedan (1933 model) driven by her husband, on tbe way from New York to Florida. Tbe plaintiff, her husband, and two friends were in tbe car. They bad stopped overnight at a tourist home in Ealeigb. At about 7:30 o’clock tbe next morning they started on to Florida. Plaintiff was sitting in tbe back seat with a lady friend. Her husband was driving about 18 or 20 miles an hour along Person Street, going south on U. S. Highway No. 1, and at tbe intersection of Person and Jones streets, plaintiff testified: “Tbe car went down in a ditch and I was thrown up to tbe top of tbe car. It went down and I was thrown up again to tbe tóp of tbe car. I did not know what was going on. I just couldn’t pick myself up. I fainted. That ditch was on one side of tbe street, on Person Street, at tbe intersection of Jones. I went into tbe first ditch and before I knew what happened we went into another ditch. ... I was put into a cast from my knees up to my chin. ... I bad no use of my bands or arms. I couldn’t sleep during that period and they bad to give me injections — about four or five a day — to kill tbe pain for a short time, but it always came back. I cried all tbe time, it hurt me all
The two ditches or gulleys were six or seven inches deep, and the car in crossing caused plaintiff, while riding in the rear seat, to be thrown to the top of the car. The testimony of the city engineer shows no city planning by the governing body of the city at this intersection — at least this was a question for the jury, if the planning would determine this controversy. It was in evidence that on numerous occasions accidents occurred and cars and persons were injured at the intersection where these dips and gulleys were, and the accidents reported to the city of Raleigh. The jury awarded plaintiff a small verdict — $1,500.
We are now spending hundreds of thousands of dollars inviting strangers to North Carolina. We should at least assure these strangers of a safe haven within our borders. The jury of twelve men, under the law of “Good moral character and sufficient intelligence,” gave damages. I think their verdict should be sustained. To the traveling public let us wave the usual signal, “Thank you; come again.”
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MRS. ANTONIE KLINGBNBERG v. THE CITY OF RALEIGH
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- 4 cases
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- Published