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Windle v. City of Springfield

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division Two
Jun 21, 1928
8 S.W.2d 61 (Mo. 1928)

Summary

In Windle v. City of Springfield, 320 Mo. 459, 8 S.W.2d 61, 62, the City was held liable under the nuisance theory for constructing a sewer which percolated adjoining land, contaminated plaintiff's spring and ladened the air with foul odors.

Summary of this case from Rodgers v. Kansas City

Opinion

June 21, 1928.

1. JURISDICTION: Change of Venue: No Record Showing: Presumption. Where the venue of a cause is in one county, and nothing appears in the abstract to show that it was by change of venue transferred to the circuit court of another county where it was tried, it will be presumed, where the parties appeared and participated in the trial without interposing any objection to the regularity of the proceedings, that the court in which it was tried, having, as it does, jurisdiction of the subject-matter, acquired jurisdiction by change of venue, and its jurisdiction will not be impugned because the record does not show that a change of venue was granted.

2. DAMAGES: Polluting Spring: City: Governmental Capacity: Ordinance. In the planning, installation and use of a sewer which results in injury to private property, the act of the city is neither quasi-judicial nor legislative, but ministerial; and if the city constructs a sewerage system, not according to any plan or according to a plan not properly adopted, it is not acting in its governmental or legislative capacity, and cannot escape liability on the ground that the extension of the sewer, from which percolated the sewage which polluted plaintiffs' spring and lake, was not authorized by an ordinance duly enacted as required by statute (Sec. 7976, R.S. 1919).

3. SEWER: Constructed under City Authority: Continued Use: Pollution of Private Waters. If the city makes such a use of a sewer constructed by its authority on its own land, after its construction, as to constitute a private nuisance, it is liable in damages. If the sewer, whatever its plan, or the conditions under which it is installed, is so constructed as to cause a positive and direct invasion of private property, caused by the sewage percolating the soil in such a manner as to contaminate the owner's water to such an extent as to render it unfit for use, the city is liable for the damages arising from such injury.

Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Appeal and Error, 4 C.J., Section 2072, p. 391, n. 66. Courts, 15 C.J., Section 418, p. 994, n. 3. Municipal Corporations, 43 C.J., Section 1907, p. 1148, n. 36, 37; Section 1909, p. 1151, n. 72. Venue, 40 Cyc., p. 176, n. 84; p. 177, n. 86.

Transferred from Springfield Court of Appeals.

AFFIRMED.

Dan M. Nee and William B. Skinner for appellant.

(1) Every city of the second class shall have power by ordinance to construct sewers and drains and to regulate the use thereof, to care for and dispose of sewage, offal, garbage and other refuse and to establish sewer and storm sewer districts and to construct such sewers therein. Sec. 7976, pars. 11, 14, 29 and 72, R.S. 1919. (2) Municipal corporations are the mere creatures of the law, established for special purposes, and deriving all their powers from the acts creating them. The corporate acts must not only be authorized by the charter, but these acts must be done by such officers or agents and in such manner as the charter directs. St. Louis v. Clemens, 43 Mo. 404. (3) In applying the law to the acts of municipal corporations there is a clear distinction to be observed between legislative and ministerial powers. Legislative power implies judgment and discretion on the part of those who exercise it and a special confidence and trust on the part of those who confer it. Ruggles v. Collier, 43 Mo. 353; Bigelow v. City of Springfield. 178 Mo. App. 463. (4) The charter is the power of attorney granting a municipal corporation authority to act and the manner prescribed in it must be strictly carried out, and unless the act complained of is shown to have been authorized by an ordinance, duly adopted, the municipality is in no manner responsible for the acts of its officers, agents or servants, who may have engaged in the commission of such act. Thomas v. Boonville, 61 Mo. 282; Worth v. Springfield, 22 Mo. App. 12. 78 Mo. 107; Hilsdorf v. St. Louis, 45 Mo. 94; Hunt v. Boonville, 65 Mo. 620; Stewart v. Clinton, 79 Mo. 603; Rowland v. Gallatin, 75 Mo. 134; Maudlin v. Trenton, 67 Mo. App. 456; Kroffe v. Springfield, 86 Mo. App. 530; Thrush v. Cameron, 21 Mo. App. 394; Jones v. Caruthersville, 186 Mo. App. 404. (5) The law requires that in constructing sewers and drains and in caring for and disposing of sewage the municipality must exercise its legislative power by passing an ordinance. After the ordinance is passed the act of the officers under it are ministerial. The ministerial power may be delegated; the legislative power cannot be. "The ordinance marks the authority, and acts wrongfully done within the scope of that authority will make the municipality liable, but in the absence of the authority the act of the individual who holds a ministerial office is no more than the act of that individual. The municipality, as a corporation, has not exercised the power which is necessary for it to exercise, in order that it may act at all." Bigelow v. Springfield, 178 Mo. App. 473. (6) A municipal corporation cannot accomplish by resolution that which under its charter can only be done by an ordinance, duly adopted. 2 McQuillin, Municipal Corps., sec. 633; Bigelow v. Springfield, 178 Mo. App. 471. (7) In order to hold a municipal corporation liable for an alleged negligent act, it devolves on the complaining party to show affirmatively that the act in question was authorized by such municipality, as provided by its charter. Stewart v. Clinton, 79 Mo. 603. (8) The ratification of an unauthorized act by a municipal corporation can only be accomplished, if at all, by an ordinance passed for that purpose. Koepen v. City of Sedalia, 89 Mo. App. 648; Reed v. Peck, 163 Mo. 333; Kolkmeyer v. City of Jefferson, 75 Mo. App. 678.

Fred A. Moore, E.J. McNatt and Hamlin, Hamlin Hamlin for respondents.

Sec. 7976, pars. 11, 14, 29, and 72, and Secs. 8131, 8132, 8133 and 8134, R.S. 1919, when read together, grant to cities of the second-class the right, by ordinance, to establish, construct and regulate public, district, joint district, and private sewers for the disposal of sewerage. Public sewers are to be paid for by a general property tax, district and joint sewers by special tax bills, and private sewers by the parties constructing same. All this must be done by ordinance to be the act of the city. In the case at bar, the city is not charged with either establishing, constructing, or regulating the use of either a public district, joint district, or private sewer; but with causing one of its public sewers, duly accepted by ordinance, to be connected to a cave on appellant city's ground. There is nothing in the city's charter requiring that this act be done by ordinance. This was simply one of those many acts that a city may do by motion, as was done in this instance, under what is known as the public power or general welfare grant in the charter. Secs. 7979, 7980, R.S. 1919. In all the cases cited by the appellant to the effect that to be the act of the city, an ordinance must have been passed authorizing in the first instance or ratifying afterwards such act, the charter itself authorized such act to be done by ordinance. But that is not of the charter in this case. It nowhere specifically authorized the city by ordinance to cause a duly established and constructed public sewer to a cave. The city had the authority solely by virtue of the general welfare clause, supra, which does not specify that any act done under its authorization shall be by ordinance, and Section 7980, provides that the council may legislate by motion. If not originally authorized, it was certainly ratified by the city's act in using the connection to and into the cave to carry the sewerage of the city's public sewers. Soulard v. St. Louis, 36 Mo. 553; Dooley v. Kansas City, 82 Mo. 444; Foncannon v. Kirksville, 88 Mo. App. 284; Devers v. Howard, 88 Mo. App. 261.


This is a suit brought by a husband and wife, residents of Greene County, to recover damages for the pollution of a spring and lake on their land located in said county. It was tried in Lawrence County, presumably on a change of venue, and a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, from which the defendant prosecuted an appeal to the Springfield Court of Appeals, wherein the judgment of the Circuit Court of Lawrence County was reversed and remanded, and the case certified to this court on the alleged ground that the opinion rendered was in conflict with the case of Foncannon v. City of Kirksville, 88 Mo. App. 279, decided by the Kansas City Court of Appeals.

It is unnecessary to set forth the evidence. Its probative force was sufficient to authorize the finding by the jury that the pollution of the plaintiffs' spring and lake was due to percolations from a sewer connection installed by contractors employed by the defendant. The sole question demanding solution is the liability of the defendant, to be determined from its legal connection with the installation of this system of drainage which caused the contamination of the plaintiffs' water and their consequent injury.

The record of the proceedings of the City Council of Springfield shows that under the authority of that body the Commissioner of Streets and Public Improvements was authorized by a resolution to purchase and install and that he did purchase and install the sewer pipe through which the sewage from that section of the city was caused to flow upon and through the land belonging to the plaintiffs upon which the spring and lake were located. At the close of the testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs the defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence which was refused, defendant excepting.

The defendant then introduced testimony to the effect that the water of the spring was not contaminated. The testimony of defendant's witnesses was in the main contradictory of that of the plaintiffs. The jury gave credence to the testimony of the latter.

I. There is nothing in the abstract to show how or in what manner this case was tried and determined in Lawrence County. Its proper venue was in Greene County. The abstract should Change of at least have shown how the transfer was made. Our Venue. circuit courts are of a like general jurisdiction. Each court, therefore, in this instance had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this action, unless the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Lawrence County can be impugned because the record does not show that change of venue was granted and an order therefore was made. In view of the fact that the parties appeared and participated in the trial without interposing any objections to the regularity of the proceedings, the wholesome presumption, recognized by tribunal elsewhere, that where a court of like powers and subject to the same system of procedure as another, takes jurisdiction of a case, it acquires by such change the same jurisdiction which would have been possessed by the court from which the venue was changed. Adopting this presumption we hold that the Lawrence County Circuit Court was authorized to render any judgment which might have been rendered by the Greene County Circuit Court. [Hazen v. Webb, 65 Kan. 38, 93 Am. St. Rep. 276; State v. Kusel, 29 Wyo. 287, 213 P. 367, 7 R.C.L. sec. 72, p. 1040.]

II. The contention of the defendant is that the extension of the sewer not having been authorized by the enactment of an ordinance it cannot be held liable for injuries resulting from the use of the same. This contention is based upon the assumption that the statute (Sec. 7976, Sub-divs. XI, XIV and XXIX, R.S. 1919) is mandatory, and not permissive, and instead of conferring power upon the city it is a limitation upon its power in regard to the construction and installation of sewers. It is enough to say that the initial sentence of said section (7976) in defining the powers of cities of the class of defendant provides that "every city of the second class shall have power, by ordinance, not inconsistent with the Constitution, or any laws of this State, or of this article" to enact ordinances as thereinafter set forth. This initial sentence sufficiently defines the character of the city's power in this regard without requiring a further consideration of the same, especially in view of the facts in this case. From the contention as thus made the conclusion necessarily follows that the act of the city being wholly unauthorized or void, it should not be held liable for the injury which was the result of an act ordered by the defendant when initiated and approved by it when completed. This contention seeks support in the assumption that the act of defendant was legislative rather than ministerial and that the contractor performing the work may be held answerable in damages for any injury resulting from the installation of the sewer and not the defendant. On the contrary, it has been held in many cases in different jurisdictions that in the planning, installation and use of a sewer which results in an injury to private property, the act of the municipality is neither quasi-judicial nor legislative but ministerial; and that the municipality may be held liable for the same. Following the trend of these cases we find that it has been held if a city constructs a sewerage system, not according to any plan or according to a plan not properly adopted, it is not acting in its governmental or legislative capacity and cannot escape liability on that plea. [Evansville v. Decker, 84 Ind. 325, 43 Am. Rep. 86; Hart v. Neillsville, 125 Wis. 546, 4 Ann. Cas. 1085, 1 L.R.A. (N.S.), 952 and notes.]

The question of the defendant's liability under the facts in this case does not depend upon the character of its act in ordering the installation of this sewer. That it was constructed under its authority it concedes and defendant contends that its act in so doing was not ultra vires. We are, therefore, confronted with this state of facts, in determining the defendant's liability; was the control and use of the sewer after its installation and during its operation such as to cause the damages complained of by the plaintiffs?

However uniform the rule may be as to the non-liability of a municipality for acts in the exercise of its governmental or legislative capacity, it does not apply when the municipality makes such a use of its own land after the construction of the sewer as to constitute, as at bar, a private nuisance. Here the sewer was constructed upon the land of the city. In its use sewage flowing through the sewer percolated the adjacent soil and contaminated the plaintiffs' spring and lake, rendering the water of same unfit for domestic or other use and ladening the air with foul odors.

This general rule, sanctioned by many courts of last resort, may, under the facts at issue, be held applicable in the determination of the instant case; if a sewer, whatever its plan, or the conditions under which it was installed, is so constructed as to cause a positive and direct invasion of the plaintiffs' property by percolating the soil in such a manner as to contaminate the owner's water to such an extent as to render it unfit for use, then the city may be held liable in an action for damages arising from such injury. [Joplin Consol. Min. Co. v. Joplin, 124 Mo. 129, 27 S.W. 406; Cape Girardeau v. Hunze, 314 Mo. l.c. 471, 284 S.W. 471; Smith v. Sedalia, 152 Mo. 283, 303, 53 S.W. 907.]

The case of Foncannon v. Kirksville, 88 Mo. App. 279, announces the correct rule under a like state of facts to that at bar. The judgment of the trial court is without error and it is affirmed. All concur.


Summaries of

Windle v. City of Springfield

Supreme Court of Missouri, Division Two
Jun 21, 1928
8 S.W.2d 61 (Mo. 1928)

In Windle v. City of Springfield, 320 Mo. 459, 8 S.W.2d 61, 62, the City was held liable under the nuisance theory for constructing a sewer which percolated adjoining land, contaminated plaintiff's spring and ladened the air with foul odors.

Summary of this case from Rodgers v. Kansas City
Case details for

Windle v. City of Springfield

Case Details

Full title:L WINDLE and MARY WINDLE v. CITY OF SPRINGFIELD, Appellant

Court:Supreme Court of Missouri, Division Two

Date published: Jun 21, 1928

Citations

8 S.W.2d 61 (Mo. 1928)
8 S.W.2d 61

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