It is settled law in Michigan that the failure of a municipal
corporation to keep in repair a sidewalk in a public street when
the duty to do so is imposed upon it by statute does not confer
upon a person injured by reason of a defect in such sidewalk caused
by neglect of the corporation to perform that duty, a right of
action against the corporation to recover for the injury caused
thereby.
The local law of a state concerning the right to recover from a
municipal corporation for injuries caused by defects in its
highways and streets is binding upon courts of the United States
within the state.
This was an action commenced in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Eastern District of Michigan against the City of
Detroit to recover for injuries suffered by the plaintiff by reason
of a defect in a sidewalk within the city limits. The defendant
pleaded a general demurrer. This being overruled, the general issue
was pleaded, and a trial was had which resulted in a verdict for
the plaintiff for $10,000, and judgment on the verdict. The
defendant sued out this writ of error. The case came here with
exceptions to the rulings of the court upon questions of evidence
and exceptions to the charge, but, in the view taken by this Court,
it is unnecessary to refer to them. The issues raised by the
demurrer and argued by counsel were (1) whether the city was, by
the local law of Michigan, answerable in damages for such injuries;
(2) whether the circuit court of the United States was bound by the
local law if the general law was to the contrary.
Page 135 U. S. 495
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
On November 19, 1883, the defendant in error, while walking on
Church Street in the City of Detroit, was thrown to the ground and
received severe personal injuries in consequence of a defect in the
sidewalk. For these injuries she, as a citizen of Ohio, brought her
action in the circuit court of the United States against the city,
and recovered a verdict and judgment for $10,000. 32 F. 37. The
city alleges error, and its principal contention is that under the
rulings of the Supreme Court of Michigan, municipal corporations
are not liable in damages for personal injuries of this nature, and
that, such being the settled law of the state, it is binding upon
the federal courts. This contention suggests two inquiries: first,
what is the settled law of Michigan? and second, if it be as
claimed, is it binding upon the federal courts?
The answer to the first inquiry is easy and clear. The precise
question was presented in 1870 to the Supreme Court of Michigan in
the case of
Detroit v. Blackeby, 21 Mich. 84. In that
case, the injury resulted from a defect in the streets and from
failure to keep them in proper repair. Under the laws then in
force, both the power and the duty of keeping streets in repair was
vested in the city, but the supreme court held that this duty was
to
Page 135 U. S. 496
the public, and not to private individuals, the mere neglect of
which was a nonfeasance only, for which no private action in
damages arose. The power of the legislature to create a liability
to private suit was conceded, but it was decided that in the
absence of express action of the legislature creating such
liability, the mere grant of the power, and the imposition of the
duty, to keep streets in repair was not sufficient to sustain a
private action for injuries resulting from a failure to keep such
streets in repair. This doctrine had never been departed from by
the supreme court of that state, and no action had ever been taken
by the legislature, up to the time of this accident, to change the
rule of liability thus announced. In 1879, an act of the
legislature was passed, Laws of 1879, c. 244, p. 223, for the
collection of damages sustained by reason of defective public
highways, streets, bridges, cross-walks, and culverts. That statute
came before the supreme court for examination in the case of
Detroit v. Putnam, 45 Mich. 263, and it was held first
that "a statutory liability created in derogation to common law
cannot be enlarged by construction," and secondly that the act,
omitting sidewalks, left the law in respect to sidewalks not in
repair as it was before, and that no private action against the
city for damages springing from a defective sidewalk could be
maintained. In
Church v. Detroit, 64 Mich. 571, an act
purporting to extend the liability of municipal corporations to the
case of damages resulting from defective sidewalks was declared
unconstitutional. Thus, by the concurrent action and judgment of
the Legislature and the Supreme Court of the State of Michigan
there was, up to and beyond the time of the injury complained of in
this action, no liability on the part of a municipality for such
injuries. The case of
Detroit v. Chaffee, 70 Mich. 80, in
no manner conflicts with this established rule. In that case, a
judgment had been obtained against the city in the United States
circuit court for personal injuries caused by a defective sidewalk
in front of a lot owned by Chaffee. The city had no right of appeal
to this Court, the judgment being under $5,000, and brought its
action against Chaffee, the owner of the lot, under section 57,
Page 135 U. S. 497
page 614, Stat.Mich. 1883, which provides that
"The common council shall have power to provide and ordain by
ordinance that whenever any sidewalk requires to be built or
repaired, the said council may direct the board of public works to
notify the owner, agent, or occupant of any lot or parcel of land
in front of or adjacent to which such walk is required to be built
or repaired to build or repair the same, and that if such agent,
owner, or occupant shall neglect, for a time to be specified in the
ordinance, to do such building or repairing, it shall be the duty
of the said board to at once do or cause the same to be done, and
in such case the expense thereof shall be assessed upon such lot or
parcel of land, and shall be a lien thereon until collected and
paid in a manner to be prescribed in such ordinance, and the owner
so neglecting to build or repair shall be liable to the city for
all damages which shall be recovered against the city for any
accident or injuries occurring by reason of such neglect, and also
to prosecution in the recorder's court, and on conviction to be
fined not to exceed five hundred dollars, and the penalties in the
city charter else where provided."
A judgment in favor of the city was ordered. But this section of
the statute was similar to one in force at the time of the decision
in
Detroit v. Blackeby, Laws of Michigan, 1865, p. 679, c.
325, § 1. There being no change in the statute in this respect, it
cannot be held that any change was contemplated in the rule of
liability by the legislation of 1883, and the decision in
Detroit v. Chaffee was simply the enforcement of a right
given by both the statutes of 1865 and 1883, springing out of a
judgment not subject to the supervising control of the supreme
court of the state. In answer to the first inquiry, it must
therefore be affirmed that the law of Michigan is against any
liability on the part of the city for injuries like those in this
action.
The second inquiry must be answered in the affirmative. If it is
a matter of local law, that law is obligatory upon the federal
courts. It must be conceded that this adjudication as to the
liability of a city for injuries caused by a defect in the
sidewalks the repair of which it has both the power and duty
Page 135 U. S. 498
to provide for is not in harmony with the general rule in this
country, 2 Dillon on Mun.Corp. 3d ed. §§ 1017, 1018, nor in accord
with the views expressed by this Court. In
Barnes v. District
of Columbia, 91 U. S. 540, this
Court, after referring to the case from 21 Mich.,
supra,
and the doctrine stated therein, observed that
"the authorities establishing the contrary doctrine, that a city
is responsible for its mere negligence, are so numerous and so well
considered that the law must be deemed to be settled in accordance
with them,"
citing in support a long list of authorities. The authorities
which support a different view are collected in
Hill v.
Boston, 122 Mass. 344. But even if it were a fact that the
universal voice of the other authorities was against the doctrine
announced by the Supreme Court of Michigan, the fact remains that
the decision of that court, undisturbed by legislative action, is
the law of that state. Whatever our views may be as to the
reasoning or conclusion of that court is immaterial. It does not
change the fact that its decision is the law of the State of
Michigan, binding upon all its courts and all its citizens and all
others who may come within the limits of the state. The question
presented by it is not one of general commercial law. It is purely
local in its significance and extent. It involves simply a
consideration of the powers and liabilities granted and imposed by
legislative action upon cities within the state. While this Court
has been strenuous to uphold the supremacy of federal law and the
interpretation placed upon it by the federal courts, it has been
equally strenuous to uphold the decisions by state courts of
questions of purely local law. There should be, in all matters of a
local nature, but one law within the state, and that law is not
what this Court might determine, but what the supreme court of the
state has determined. A citizen of another state going into
Michigan may be entitled under the federal Constitution to all the
privileges and immunities of citizens of that state, but under that
Constitution he can claim no more. He walks the streets and
highways in that state entitled to the same rights and protection
as, but none other than, those accorded by its laws to its own
citizens.
Page 135 U. S. 499
This question is not a new one in this Court. In the case of
Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U.
S. 400, it was held that, when the settled decisions of
the highest court of a state have determined the extent and
character of the powers which its political and municipal
organizations may possess, the decisions are authoritative upon the
courts of the United States, and in the opinion it was
observed:
"It is undoubtedly a question of local policy with each state
what shall be the extent and character of the powers which its
various political and municipal organizations shall possess, and
the settled decisions of its highest courts on this subject will be
regarded as authoritative by the courts of the United States, for
it is a question that relates to the internal constitution of the
body politics of the state."
What was there decided in reference to the powers is equally
true as to the liabilities of a municipal corporation. The City of
Detroit, in the discharge of its public duty in respect to keeping
the streets and sidewalks in repair, is under no higher or
different obligation to a citizen of Ohio than to one of the State
of Michigan, and the measure of its liability under the statutes,
as stated, is to be determined by the judgment of the Supreme Court
of that state, and not by what our opinions might be as to the
proper construction of those statutes. Reference may also be made
to the recent case of
Bucher v. Railroad Company,
125 U. S. 555, in
which this Court followed, against its own judgment of the law, the
rulings of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts and held that a party
traveling on Sunday, and not for necessity or charity, in the cars
of a railroad company could not recover for injuries sustained by
the negligence of the company, because he was himself thus
violating the law of the state. Concluding the opinion of the court
in that case, it is observed:
"It may be said generally that wherever the decisions of the
state courts relate to some law of a local character which may have
become established by those courts or has always been a part of the
law of the state, that the decisions upon the subject are usually
conclusive, and always entitled to the highest respect of the
federal courts. The whole of this subject has recently been very
ably reviewed
Page 135 U. S. 500
in the case of
Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S.
20. Where such local law or custom has been established
by repeated decisions of the highest courts of a state, it becomes
also the law governing the courts of the United States sitting in
that state."
Nothing more need be added to express the views of this Court on
the question here presented. The judgment of the circuit court must
be
Reversed and the case remanded with instructions to sustain
the demurrer to the amended declaration.