Summary
holding that the State Road Commission of West Virginia is a direct governmental agency of the State and cannot be sued
Summary of this case from Parkulo v. West Virginia Bd. of ProbationOpinion
C. C. 341.
Submitted September 2, 1925.
Decided September 8, 1925.
Case Certified from Circuit Court, Wayne County.
Suit by Theodore Neekamp and others against the Huntington Chamber of Commerce and others. After sustaining a demurrer to plaintiff's bill of complaint, the court certified questions.
Affirmed.
Lovins Marks, for plaintiff.
C. W. Ferguson, for defendants.
This is a certified case from the Circuit Court of Wayne County. The declaration consists of four counts. The first count charges that the State Road Commission of West Virginia, a corporation, the County Court of Wayne County, a corporation, and C. E. Price were engaged in the construction of a "certain public highway," commonly known as the Tug River Highway in said county "at or near" a parcel of land owned by the plaintiff; that it was the duty of the defendants to provide the land of the plaintiff with lateral support; that they entered upon a "certain disused or abandoned portion of the county road adjacent to the land of the plaintiff" and there negligently and improperly made a large excavation, and that by reason of such excavation being below the level of the plaintiff's land, the plaintiff's land slipped, was broken, and rendered useless to the plaintiff, whereby he sustained $5,000.00 damages.
The second, third and fourth counts contained the same allegations as the first count, except that the second count charges that the road was being constructed by the State Road Commission of West Virginia, a corporation, the third count charges that the road was being constructed by the County Court of Wayne County, a corporation, and the fourth count charges that the highway was being constructed by C. E. Price. The Circuit Court sustained a demurrer to the declaration and to each count thereof, and on motion of the parties certified the following questions to this court:
"First, Can the State Road Commission of West Virginia be sued upon the grounds set forth in the declaration herein?
Second, Is the declaration herein sufficient in law?
Third, Can the joint Defendants herein be declared against separately as in the second, third, and fourth counts of the declaration herein?"
(1). By virtue of section 35, article 6, of the Constitution, an individual has no right of action against the state. He has no greater right against an agency of the state to which it has delegated performance of certain of its duties. The State Road Commission is such an agency. Therefore, the plaintiff herein cannot maintain his action against this Commission. The law in relation thereto is thoroughly established by the decisions of ts court in Barber, Admx. v. Spencer State Hospital, 95 W. Va. 463, in Miller v. State Board of Agriculture, 46 W. Va. 192, in Gordon v. State Board of Control, 85 W. Va. 739, and in Miller Supply Co. v. State Board of Control, 72 W. Va. 524.
The case of Tompkins v. The Kanawha Board, 19 W. Va. 257, relied on by counsel for plaintiff, is not parallel to the one at bar. The defendant in the Tompkins case was not an agency having to do directly with the administration of the State government. This distinction is sharply drawn by Judge ROBINSON in the Miller Supply Co. case, supra.
(2). The first and second counts of the' declaration are bad for the above reasons. The third count is defective because it is not shown that the Tug River Highway was a county district road. The fourth count, to-wit: the one against C. E. Price states a cause of action.
(3). As the declaration is good only as to C. E. Price, the third question becomes moot and no answer thereto is necessary.
The ruling of the Circuit Court in so far as it sustained the demurrer to the fourth count of the declaration is reversed, otherwise it is affirmed.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part.