OF A. had not existed before at common law, although it was conceded
that there was no case in which independently of the section an action would lie against the county for any cause whatever at common law.
In Young v. Davis 1 the plaintiff relied on S. 6 of 5 and 6 Will. 4, C. 50, which required a parish to appoint a surveyor of highways (TAS.).
"which surveyor shall repair and keep in repair the several highways in the said parish." At this stage, therefore, there was not only a person who could be sued but a specific duty cast upon that person by statute. The action was held not to be maintainable. The statutory duty was enforceable, but not by action for damages. The case of Couch v. Steel 2 was distinguished on the ground that the duty in that case was imposed for the benefit of a limited class, whereas the duty imposed by 5 and 6 Will. 4, C. 50, was imposed
for the benefit of the public at large." It is to be noted that Channell B. said 3: "This is not a case in which a surveyor of highways has done any act which of itself has caused injury to the plaintiff. If, personally or by his servants, he had put a heap of stones in the road and left them there at night without being sufficiently protected, that would be an omission to do something to render harmless an act which he had affirmatively done." It was, the learned Baron proceeded, "a mere case of omission to repair a road." It is also, I think, worthy of note that the liability which Mr. Young asserted was a personal liability in the surveyor, and Pollock C.B. 4 was impressed by the probable difficulty, if the action were allowed, of "finding persons willing to discharge the duties of the surveyor of highways," and the passage which follows suggests that further inconvenience would arise from the fact that juries in those days were sympathetic towards plaintiffs.
In Gibson v. Mayor of Preston 5 yet another statute, the Public Health Act, 1848 (11 &12 Vict. C. 63) came under consideration. The plaintiff was stronger here in that he had a corporation with corporate funds, in which was vested every highway in its district, and which was given the "management and control" of every such highway. On the other hand, no express statutory duty to " " repair and keep in repair," such as had been imposed on the surveyor by 5 and 6 Will. 4, c. 50, was imposed on the corporation. The duty alleged by the declaration was a duty to repair." It was again held that the action could not be maintained. Apart
1(1862) 7 H. &N. 760 [158 E.R.
2(1854) 3 E. &B. 402 [118 E.R. 1193].
3(1862) 7 H. &N., at pp. 775, 776
675]; (1863) 2 H. &C. 197
[158 E.R., at p. 681.]. [159 E.R. 82].
4(1862) 7 H. &N., at p. 772 [158
5(1870) L.R. 5 Q.B. 218.