Court Opinion

ID: 9808012
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-31 20:24:37.701969+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:07:20.610948
License: Public Domain

Avery, J.,
dissenting: It is always safe to recur to fundamental principles. It is perilous to. refrain from going to the fountain-head where the controversy arises out of an attempt of a public agency to use or destroy without compensation what is claimed to be private property. The very question involved in the case at bar is, What are the rights respectively of the servient and dominant owners— the town and the abutting proprietor in a street — what passed to the public with the easement and what residuary interest remained in the owner after the appropriation by the municipality for corporate purposes? The taking of private property for a public highway, like any other exercise of the right of eminent domain, can he justified only on the ground of public necessity — that it is essential, in order to subserve the convenience or promote the prosperity of the great body of people comprehended under the general designation of the public, to give them the use of it for certain specified purposes. Cooley Con. Lim., 643. Where an easement is acquired, whether by grant, dedication or condemnation, nothing more passes to the public than the power to use the land strictly in furtherance of the objects *403for which the Legislature authorized its appropriation. Except in so far as his right of enjoyment is restricted by the inhibition against his interference with its use for the particular public purposes, all of the rights of ownership are still retained by the holder of the servient tenement. The other estate dominates and overshadows his right only so far as is necessary to subserve the ends for which its privilege lias been granted.
The residuary rights of the abutting owner in a. street are somewhat more restricted than those of an- adjacent proprietor in a jmblio road, because, in contemplation of law, the damages for the taking are measured by the extent of the public use and the consequent limitation of private enjoyment by the servient owner.
I may safely lay it down as a general proposition that when the Legislature permits private property to be taken by a public or quasi-public corporation the State intends that it shall be appropriated only for corporate purposes— such uses as may be necessary in «order to enable the public agency to perform its duties to the State and enjoy the compensatory privileges granted to it. Whatever rights of property in streets do not pass, from the very nature of a municipality, as necessary to the discharge of its public functions or as inseparable incidents to the franchise granted, remain in the abutting proprietor, reserved by implication of law for his benefit, whether the city or town has accpiired the fee or an easement either by grant, dedication or condemnation, and whether the line of such abutting owner extends to the margin or middle of the street. The abutting proprietors have a qualified property in a street which entitles them to make “any beneficial use of the soil of such highway which is consistent with the prior and paramount rights of the public therein for street purposes proper.” 2 Dillon, sec. 6565. “If they own the foe to *404the renter line of the streets” (says Judge DilloN) “their rights therein are legal in their nature. If they own the fee to the -line of the streets their rights in the street are in the nature of equitable easements in fee, but in extent arc substantially the same as when the fee is in them subject to public use.” Ibid., secs. 663, 664, 661; Bliss v. Ball, 99 Mass., 597. “ Where one’s land is bounded on a public highway” (says Judge Cooley in his work on.Torts, p. 317) “it presumptively extends, not to the outer line, but to the middle of the road, and his supreme dominion embraces the whole, qualified only by the public easement.” In this respect there is a striking analogy between abutting and riparian owners of the fee, in that a certain- incidental qualified property attaches in the highway, whether it be a public road or navigable water. Bond v. Wool, 107 N. C., 139; Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wall,, 497. The street consists of the carriage wa.y and sidewalk, the enjoyment and' use of both of -which are recognized Iry the Courts as the right of the abutting proprietor, of which he cannot bo deprived by the municipality or even by the Legislature without his consent and without adequate compensation. Moose v. Carson, 104 N. C., 431; State v. Brown, 109 N. C., 802. A municipal corporation though authorized by statute to widen streets can do so only where some mode of ascertaining the damage done by taking additional land and of enforcing its payment is prescribed by law and pursued by the. corporation. On the other hand., a city or town has no right to sell a portion of a street in front of an abutting owner or to diminish its width in any way without compensation and contrary to his wishes. Moose v. Carson, supra. It being conceded that the abutting owner has a qualified property in the street on his front, the only safe criterion by which to test the justice of a claim to any specified light is the consistency or inconsist*405ency of its exercise with the use of the highway by the municipality for corporate purposes. The original owner of the soil surrenders his absolute property in his frontage for a qualified one in full contemplation of the authority of the corporation whenever it may become necessary for public purposes cither to elevate or lower the level of the street, though he may suffer some inconvenience from any alteration of the grade, and consequently it is supposed that such damage was considered when the cost of the easement was estimated and paid or that a donation was made, subject to the contingency of suffering such loss.
Guided by the principles stated, this Court held that for loss caused by excavation on embankments made in changing the grade of a street the abutting owner could not recover unless the injury was directly due to want of skill or negligence in the excavation of the work. Meares v. Wilmington, 9 Ired., 73; Wright v. Wilmington, 92 N. C., 156.
In such cases it was considered that the alteration in the highway was not a new taking, but a use of it that was in contemplation at the time when the- easement passed to the public. Cooley Con. Lim., p. 671; 2 Dillon, sec. 992,'and note. Even this rule, however, has proven so oppressive in practice as to lead in some of the States to the enactment of statutes and the amendment of constitutions so as to create a liability as for an original taking, when there is a change of grade such that damage ensues to an adjacent proprietor. Lewis on Em. Domain, ch. 8, especially sec. 221.
“The public,” says Mr. Lewis, “acquire no right in the use of springs in the highway and cannot divest them for the purpose of making a public watering-place. ' The owner of the land cannot change the location of the road when it crosses his land. He may deposit materials on the surface of the vray, plant shade trees or ornamental trees therein, set hitching posts, etc: * * * The public cannot place *406structures on the soil which have no connection with its use as a highway.” Lewis on Em. Domain, p. 759; Deaton v. The County of Polk, 9 Iowa. 594. “Subject to the paramount right of the public the rights of the owner of the fee remain the same as though the public casement did not exist. * * * As against the public he may make any use of the land which does not interfere with the use and enjoyment of the same as a highway.” Ibid, sec. 589, p. 758. The learned author claims for the owner of the fee the right to plant trees in the highway both for shade and ornament, and it cannot be denied that ho acquires a qualified property in the fruit of his labors when they grow so as to subserve his purpose. It is conceded to be the law in North Carolina that such shade trees can be cut down by a city when the grade is changed, because they are planted in contemplation of the principle that the power to grade is a continuing one, and that “of the necessity or expediency of its exercise the governing body of the corporation, and not the Courts, is the judge.” 2 Dillon, sec. 686 and note.
But though a tree be planted subject to the right of the city to destroy it in the exercise of this continuing power to improve its streets, it is nevertheless the property of the owner of the fee, and when no change of grade is ordered the governing authorities of the town have the right to remove it only on the ground that it obstructs the highway and is therefore a public nuisance, or after condemnation and the payment of compensation ascertained in a mode pointed out by law.
Mr. Wood, in his work on Nuisances, section 294, not only agrees with such other able and discriminating text-writers as Judge DilloN in declaring that the adjacent owner has a property in trees planted in his front, but in maintaining that the municipal authorities are responsible if *407they deal with them as nuisances, when in fact they do not interfere with the ordinary use of the streets and sidewalks. He says: “Shade trees set. in a street or highway without authority of law, which in any measure obstruct travel, are a nuisance. * * * But they can be removed only by the owner or the public authorities, and if they (the public authorities) remove them when they do not obstruct travel they are liable to the owner in damages therefor.” See also, Clark v. Doseo, 34 Mich., 86. If damage can be recovered it must ex necessitate be assessed by a jury, since it will not be contended that it is a taking in the exercise of the right of eminent domain for which the law provides any other mode of fixing the compensation.
Thus we find that all of the leading text-writers concur in construing the decisions which I cite to sustain my view, and to have settled the principles in this country generahy that a shade tree is the property of the abutting owner which cannot be destroyed as a nuisance unless it hinders the free use of the highway by the public, and where it is not an obstruction the owner may recover damages of the authorities of a city for its wrongful removal. In treating of the power to prevent and abate nuisances Judge DilloN says: “This authority and its summary exercise may be constitutionally conferred on the incorporated place, and it authorizes its counsel to act upon that which comes within the legal notion of a nuisance, but such power conferred in general terms cannot be taken to authorize the extra judicial condemnation and destruction of that as a nuisance which in its nature, situation or use is not such. * * * It is a doctrine not to be tolerated in this countiy that a municipal corporation without any general laws of the city or of the State within which a given structure can be shown to be a nuisance, can, by the mere declaration that it is one, subject it to removal by any person supposed to be aggrieved or even by the city *408itself.” Everett v. City of Council Bluffs, 46 Iowa, 66; 1 Dillon, sec. 374; Yates v. Milwaukee, 10 Wallace, 498; State v. Jersey City, 29 N. J. Law, 170; Cooley Const. Lim., 242, 741, note; State v. Mott, 61 Md., 297; Ward v. Little Rock, 41 Ark., 526; Fertilizer Co. v. Hyde Park, 70 Ill., 634; How & B. Mun. Corp., sec. 252.
If the destruction of the tree complained of is to be imputed to the defendant it is not contended that there was any other law authorizing the act than the general authority to prevent nuisances. Whether a city acts in such a case as this under the general power to abate nuisances or under special authority to remove obstructions, the rule is the same. “Power to a city to regulate the use of streets and alleys and to prevent and remove obstructions from them contemplates the preservation of actual ways against nuisances which, interfere with their accustomed use, and until they have become actually open obstructions thereon, under a claim of title apparent on the face of the prosecution, cannot be dealt with under an ordinance in the municipal tribunal, but the rights of the parties must be determined in the public courts." 2 Dillon, sec. 680, p. 809, and note; Jackson v. People, 9 Mich., Ill; Phifer v. Cox, 21 Ohio, 248.
While in the exercise of the continuing authority to raise or lower the grade of streets the law requires of the 'city only good faith, care and skill, the arbitrary destruction of property or what is equivalent to its confiscation cannot be justified on the ground that the act was done under the honest belief that it was a lawful abatement of a nuisance because it obstructed the highway. If the tree was property and was not planted in contemplation of legal authority in the city, express or implied, to cut it down at will, but only in view of the possibility of its destruction as a nuisance, then unquestionably the plaintiff would have the right to have any disputed facts, such as the question where the tree MTas *409standing, tried by a jury, with instruction from the Court as to what constituted nuisance such as the city might summarily abate. Good faith 'will not protect an officer who commits a trespass without the color of authority and thereby leave remediless one whose property is destroyed without reason or necessity. Elliott on Roads and Streets, p. 521.
An obstruction is defined as “anything which, without reasonable necessity, impedes the use of the streets for lawful purposes.” Horr & Bemis Mun. Pol. Ord., sec. 230. “’When adjacent owners retain the fee in the streets the corporation has no right to destroy the trees, unless they grow within the street or so as to obstruct traffic.” Horr & Bemis, sec. 229; Bliss v. Ball, 99 Mass., 597; White v. Godfrey, 97 Mass., 472; Tortor v. Morristown, 19 N. J. Eq., 46 ; Cross v. Morristown, 18 N. J. Eq., 313; Bills v. Belkry, 36 Iowa, 583; Everett v. Council Bluffs, supra.
Whether trees in a public highway are a-publie nuisance “is a question of fact for the jury” in all cases. Phifer v. Cox, 21 Ohio, 248. If an overseer cuts down a tree which does not obstruct or interfere' with the public use of the road he is a trespasser, and if he does so maliciously is liable to exemplary damages. Winter v. Peterson, 4 Zabriskie (N. J.), 524.
The case of Chase v. City, 6 Am. R. and Corp. Cases, 1, may appear upon first view of it to be in conflict with the general current of authority and with the cases we have cited, some of which are collated in a note appended to it; hut upon a closer examination it will appear that the opinion rests upon the ground that the common council are by special provisions of the charter to “protect the streets from any encroachment or injury,” and “to prevent, prohibit and cause the removal of all obstructions in and upon all streets in said city.”
*410The charter of the city of Greensboro provides for condemnation of property for the purpose of changing or widening the streets already in existence and laying out new ones, but we find no special warrant for assuming the judicial function of declaring any obstruction in the whole street a nuisance. If the Legislature had constituted the Mayor and commissioners, or the street committee selected by them, a special court and had empowered them to remove obstructions which, in their judgment, were nuisances, we would still have been compelled to meet the question whether the Legislature could in that indirect way clothe the officers of a municipality with the authority to destroy such private property and deprive the sufferer of the right to “the ancient mode of trial by jury” guaranteed to him “in all controversies respecting property ” by the Constitution (Art. I, sec. 1), unless the trees had been planted in contemplation of an express power conferred upon the town council to clear all parts of the streets of trees. This grave question does not arise in this case and the discussion of it is therefore unnecessary. When the point shall be properly presented it will be necessary to determine whether the Legislature can dispense with the right of trial by juiy in any case involving the title to property when the litigant could have claimed it under the ancient common law.
It seems that in the recent case of O’Connor v. Telephone Co., Vol. XIII, No. 10, p. 336 of Canadian Law Times, the appellate Court of Nova Scotia has held that the rights of the abutting owners of the fee on a street extended to the-middle of the highway in his front, and that he had a property in ornamental shade trees in the street in his front and could maintain an action against a telephone company for damages (to be assessed, of course, by a jury) for mutilating such trees.
*411Says Lawson (Yol. Ill, Rights and Rem., p. 1758): “Adjacent land owners may lawfully use the space between the carriage path and sidewalks for the growing of trees for ornament or use. Trees thus situated are in no sense nuisances, but private property.” But the right of property stands upon the more substantial ground of inexorable reason since the city does not appropriate the space between the sidewalk and the street for corporate purposes, and the residuary right of the owner of the fee empowers him to use it.
Even where the right is in the dominant owner to extend its actual dominion if it becoine necessary no such summary destruction without reason is permitted. Where the fee is condemned for a railway for a distance of one hundred feet on either side of the track, while the corporation may build an additional track if requisite for the transaction of its business at any time during the period of its corporate existence, or may erect structures for corporate purposes upon the land appropriated, yet if the adjacent owner plant and raise corn within the limit of one hundred feet, but not upon the portion of the way actually occupied by the company, the law neither imposes the duty nor confers the power on the latter to cut down such corn as a nuisance because it may obstruct the view of an engineer and prevent him from seeing cattle approaching the line of railway. Ward v. Railroad, 109 N. C., 358; Ward v. Railroad, 118 N. C., 566. On the other hand, the corporation mat- in that case remove ti’ees, because that is authorized by statute, lest they become a nuisance by falling upon the track. But the facts are found and in our opinion the tree was not shown to be a public nuisance subject to summary removal by the city, but was the property of the plaintiff, for the willful destruction of which an action for damage lies against the trespassers and those under whose *412authority they may have acted. There was no pretense of a condemnation for a public purpose or of authority to take, if it was private property, other than in the mode pointed out in section 60 of the charter, upon a valuation by three freeholders. There was no evidence that the tree was unsound so as to endanger the safety of travelers on the highway, and there was provision of law in or out of the charter authorizing the cutting down of trees located on the margin of the sidewalks qr at any point on the streets to avert danger to the public. The authority to make improvements given in a charter, like that to widen the streets, was coupled with the condition that commissioners should be appointed to assess any damage that might be caused by the changes made.
In the case at bar the Court found as a fact that the trees did not obstruct the sidewalk, and in effect that they were not nuisances, and therefore that there was no authority for destroying them.
When such shade treees neither impede the passage of vehicles nor unreasonably obstruct the sidewalks the municipal authorities may enact general ordinances to protect them even against wanton injury or destruction by the owner, but are not empowered by orders or by-laws to cause them to be removed as nuisances, when in law and in fact they are not nuisances. Horr & Bemiss, sec. 252, 229; McCarthy v. Boston, 135 Mass., 197; Wood on Nuisances, sec. 294. An adjacent owner, notwithstanding an order or ordinance of municipal authorities authorizing it, is entitled to recover damages for any invasion of his individual rights, such as the destruction of shade trees in his front, when they do not interfere with the use of the highway for any public purpose whatever. Horr & Bomis, sec. 7; Bliss v. Ball, supra; Wood, supra, sec. 294; Elliott on R. and S., p. 536. And the destruction of shade and orna*413mental trees, located in a public highway in front of tho premises of the abutting owner, has been held to be an irreparable injury to him, and for that reason has been enjoined where their removal was not necessary to the enjoyment of the easement by the public. Tainter v. Morristown, 19 N. J. Eq., 46; Gross v. Morristown, 18 N. J. Eq., 305; Bills v. Belknap, 36 Iowa, 583. “As owner of the fee” (says Elliott, supra, 536), “subject only to the public easement, the abutter (who owns the fee) has all the ordinary remedies of the owner of a freehold. He may maintain trespass against one who unlawfully cuts and carries away the grass, trees or herbage, and even against one who stands upon the sidewalk in front of his premises and uses abusive language towards him, refusing to depart.”' State v. Davis, 80 N. C., 351.
If the shade trees in .front of the plaintiff’s house were not a nuisance at common law, nor so declared by statute, no ordinance or proceeding of the municipal authorities or their agents could justify their destruction in the face of the objection of the plaintiff’s husband. Miller v. Birch, 5 Am. Rep., 242; Yates v. Milwaukee, supra; 1 Dillon, secs. 374 to 379; Everitt v. City of Council Bluffs, 46 Iowa, 66 ; Cooley and Fertilizer Co. v. Hyde Park, supra. The three oak trees cut down by the street force, in obedience to the command of the defendant’s street committee,. King and Scott, after securing the approval of Mendenhall of the same committee, stood at the outer edge of a sidewalk eight feet wide, and within the line of the curbing, and, being directly in front of the plaintiff’s dwelling-house, contributed to the comfort of its inmates. The space between the trees and the inner line of the sidewalk was not uniform in width. It averaged eight, but was at no point less than seven feet in width, and was found by the Court to be sufficiently wide to afford “room for persons to pass in the usual manner without inconvenience.”
*414The Judge below found also that “the leaves on said trees obstructed the rays of the sun and so shaded the street as to cause it to be and continue damp for a portion of the time.” The finding excludes the idea that the trees were a nuisance in obstructing the sidewalk, and the mere fact that the shade was so dense as to cause occasional dampness under it is not satisfactory evidence that they so inter-ferred with the use of the street as to constitute them a nuisance. Bliss v. Ball, supra. It is a matter of common observation that all trees which subserve the purpose of shading the ground prevent the earth, within the line of their shadows, from becoming dry so soon as the surrounding space. And the commissioners were not authorized, because they had created a stench by filling a hole near the trees with green limbs, to declare them a nuisance as the cause of the offensive odor, since the Court finds that, after removing them, the-municipal authorities, by filling the hole with stone, put the street in good condition, and that this remedy could have been effectually used without molesting the trees at all. So far from showing that the removal was demanded for the benefit or convenience of the public, the conclusion of fact submitted by the Court sustains the contention of the plaintiff that being within the curbing (but seven feet or more from the fence) the trees neither obstructed the sidewalk nor the twenty-three feet of carriage way; that the hole could and would have been filled with stone or earth, and that if the dampness under the dense foliage of the trees made them a nuisance every shade tree that subserves the purpose of planting it, if it casts a shadow' upon a higli-way, would be liable to destruction at the arbitrary bidding of any agent of a town who might ho entrusted with the duty of repairing its streets. Lawson R. and Rem., sec. 1033, p. 17-58. The statutes, which in some States protect such trees, are in *415affirmance of the principle that the owner surrenders to the public only such dominion over the land as he could not exercise without interfering with the easement of the public for use as a highway. The admitted right of the abutting owner under the common law to the herbage, and to sue or sometimes cause to be indicted and punished criminally a forcible trespass committed on'the highway in his front, is an illustration of this well-established principle.
It is urged, however, on behalf of the city of Greensboro that it cannot be held answerable for the trespass committed under the direction of the defendants King and Scott, because it appears that “no action was taken or order made by the Board of Aldermen in respect to the removal of the trees, nor was any report made by the street committee to the said Board with regard to their action in the premises.”
It was provided in section 12, ch. 1 of the city ordinances that a number of committees, composed of four aldermen each, should be appointed from the members of the Board to take charge of certain departments of the municipal government, and among them was that composed of defendants King and Scott and Aldermen Glenn and Mendenhall, who by the terms of the next section were entrusted with the “control and supervision o.f all matters relating to the streets, sidewalks and pumps of the city,” etc. This appointment, without any further recognition of their acts, constituted King and Scott the agents of the city for the supervision of the streets and all that could be done for the improvement and reparation of them. 2 Dillon, 979 (777). “Towns, counties, villages and cities must respond for such torts of their officers, agents and servants as have been suffered or committed by corporate authority.” Cooley on Torts, p. 122. As agents the relation of the members of the committee to the town was legally the *416same as that of any servant to his master, and the responsibility of the municipality as superior is likewise governed by the rules applicable to such relation.
Where a trespass is committed in the course of the employment of an agent or a servant and is intended and believed by the trespasser to operate for the benefit of his superior, though it may be willful such superior is none the less answerable for damages. 1 Shearman & Redfield on Nog., sec. 151; Cooley on Torts, p. 536; 4 Am. & Eng. Enc., pp. 252, 253, note 1; Johnston v. Barber, 5 Gilman (Ill.), 425; Limpas v. Omnibus Co., 5 H. & C. Rep. (Exc.), 526. “If in exercising its power to open or improve streets or to make drains or sewers the agents or officers of a municipal corporation, under its authority or direction, commit a trespass or take possession of private property without complying with the charter or statute, the corporation is liable in damages therefor. In such cases also an action will lie against a city corporation by the owner of land through which its agents have unlawfully made a sewer, or for trees destroyed and injuries done by them.” 2 Dillon, sec. 974 (772). “Where the working and repair of streets is treated (as in North Carolina) as a municipal duty, and the officer in charge as a corporate in distinction from an independent public officer, or where the injury was negligently caused by such officer in the process of executing upon the streets an authorized corporate improvement or work for them, the doctrine of respondeat superior would apply.” 2 Dillon, secs. 979 (777), 980 (778) and 983 (4th Ed.). If, then, the city was acting through the members of the committee as its agents, it was in the exercise of its ministerial or corporate as distinguished from its judicial, legislative or discretionary duties, and was therefore answerable as superior for sucli acts done in the course of their employment as wore manifestly intended to enure to the benefit of the *417corporation. Moffitt v. Asheville, 103 N. C., 237; Cooley on Torts, p. 63 9; Ibid., 122. The implication from the finding of the Conirt (if that was necessary) is that the committee “ concurred'ka the conclusion that the trees should be removed ” in order to improve the street, and that King and Scott, as aldermen, intended to benefit the corporation when they directed the street force to do the work. They then sustained the same relation to the municipality, that a conductor or other agent bears to a quasi-public corporation, such as a railroad or street-car company, and it is well settled by numberless cases that, though the agent or servant of such corporations may willfully commit a trespass in the course of his employment, yet if the act is done with the belief that it will benefit the principal or master and the intention to advance its interest, the principle of respondeat superior applies. Moore v. Railroad, 4 Gray (Mass.), 465; Shea v. Sixth Avenue Co., 62 N. Y., 180’; Seymour v. Greenwood, 6 H. & N. (Ex.), 359; 1 Shear & Red., sec. 150; Cooley on Torts, pp. 533 to 537; Simpson v. Omnibus Co., supra; Pollok on Torts, p. 15.
But not only is the corpoi-ation responsible for acts done By its agents in the execution of the duties assigned to them, but a joint action for the tort will lie against the company and the servant. Hewett v. Swift, 3 Allen, 420; Johnston v. Barber, supra; Wright v. Wilcox, 19 Wendell, 343.
The lawis founded upon the highest conceptionsof natural justice. It is impracticable for a Mayor and Board of Commissioners to move in a body along every street of a city and sit in judgment upon the proposed removal of a tree. A city must work through agents constituted by its governing authorities, and when an agency is entrusted to a street committee there is no principle of law, reason or justice that will relieve the municipality of liability for their torts when engaged in the business entrusted to it, because the *418committee did not desist on an objection to the removal of the tree, stop the street force from work and call a meeting of the council to authorize or ratify the act. The town when engaged in the improvement of its streets or in the performance of any act intended for the benefit of the municipality is liable both for the negligence and willful torts of its agents, just as when an officer or servant of a quasi-public corporation commits little overt acts or negligently omits to discharge his duty he subjects the company that he represents to liability for consequent injury. Moffitt v. Asheville, supra; Cooley on Torts, p. 619'. Tf a director of a railroad company were appointed to act as conductor the company could not escape liability for removing a passenger on the ground that by disorderly conduct he had been guilty of nuisance when, in fact, his acts did not justify the conductor in ejecting him. The committee were not the less agents of the town council because they wore selected from the body itself. It is a well-known fact that the governing authorities of pur towns usually, if not universally, entrust the management of improvements, not involving the condemnation of private property, to committees selected from their own bodies. To absolve the towns from liability for a trespass committed by such agents or under -their direction for the benefit of the corporation, when in many cases such committeemen are irresponsible primarily, would be to countenance oppression and in some instances what would be equivalent to confiscation.
An ordinance provided that the street committee “shall have control and supervision of all matters relating to streets, sidewalks and pumps, and shall determine the amount of labor and material to be used * * * and shall report to the board from time to time and perform the duties imposed upon them by the Board of Aldermen.” Would the ordinary regulation that conductors should report to the president of the company or superintendent *419the fact that he had ejected a passenger excuse the "company from responsibility for injury caused by a wrongful expulsion? When acting for it's own benefit a municipality stands upon precisely the samé footing as to liability for the acts of its agents as does a quasi-public corporation. See Moffit v. Asheville, supra, and authorities cited. Suppose such a corporation should by means of a by-law declare the conductor, engineer, baggage-master and flagman a committee to have control of the question of ejecting drunken or disorderly passengers or such as failed to secure tickets or pay fare, would the corporation be allowed to evade liability for the wrongful, willful and violent expulsion of a passenger by the conductor and baggage-man after consulting the flagman, because the engineer did not approve the act till it was communicated? Cooley on Torts, p. 539. To apply the same principle to such agencies as govern in questions of the right of the directors of private corporations to bind their companies would bo the entering wedge to the destruction of all corporate liability for the torts of agents and servants. Means would be found by ingenious regulations to leave the public at the mercy or caprice of irresponsible and reckless agents and servants were the possibility of putting the corporation behind such bulwarks once suggested. The right to trial by jury is none the less a constitutional right because juries are sometimes misled by prejudice. The corrective for such an evil, if it exists, is the enactment of statutes requiring greater care in their selection, not judicial legislation restricting the operation of the original law. Says Judge Cooley, in his work on Torts, p. 122: “Towns, counties, villages and cities must respond for such torts of their officers, agents and servants as have been committed or suffered by corporate authorities.” “ It is not merely for the wrongful act that the agent or servant is directed to do, but the wrongful act he is suffered to do, that the city is responsible.” *420Ibid., p. 534. It was the duty of the city to see that its agents were attentive and prudent, and so conducted its business as not needlessly to injure others. Commissioners v. Nicholas, 10 Met., 259. The law presumes that tjie city looks after its street force, and the fact that it was engaged two or three days after the order was given by Scott and King in removing the trees is evidence that the Mayor and commissioners knowingly suffered the removal to be made. They knew' or ought to have known what these paid laborers were doing.
I think, therefore, that there w'as error in the ruling of the Court below- that the action could not be maintained either against the city or the two aldermen in their individual capacity. The two aldermen were guilty of a willful trespass, for which the corporation became liable, because it was committed in the attempt to discharge their duty to the corporation as agents named in the ordinance and with the intent to improve its streets. The act being willful, the agents were not relieved of responsibility because the principals w'ere made answerable. The committee wore not a corporation, but were the authorized agents of the town, and it was not essential that they should meet like stockholders at an appointed time or place. The question is not ■whether they could bind a municipality by a contract, but whether, as its servants acting within the line of duty prescribed for them, they could make the city a joint tort feasor with them. It was sufficient, I think, that a majority agreed upon a certain course of conduct and their purpose was carried out by the laborers at the bidding of two of the number, and they were not acting in strict conformity (as stockholders) to the terms of'a charter, but were agents carrying out a common purpose to cause a trespass to be committed.