Autumn Biscamp v. Special Pals Incorporated

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2020
Docket01-19-00005-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Autumn Biscamp v. Special Pals Incorporated (Autumn Biscamp v. Special Pals Incorporated) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Autumn Biscamp v. Special Pals Incorporated, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 13, 2020

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-19-00005-CV ——————————— AUTUMN BISCAMP, Appellant V. SPECIAL PALS, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 133rd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2017-37057

MEMORANDUM OPINION

While performing community service at an animal shelter, Special Pals, Inc.

(“Pals”), appellant, Autumn Biscamp, was bitten by a dog and injured. Biscamp

sued Pals for negligence, and Pals asserted an affirmative defense of release. A jury

found both Pals and Biscamp negligent and awarded Biscamp damages. Pals moved for judgment on its affirmative defense, which the trial court granted and rendered a

take-nothing judgment against Biscamp. In her sole issue, Biscamp contends that

the trial court erred in rendering judgment against her because the pre-injury releases

she signed do not comport with the express negligence doctrine and thus are

unenforceable as a matter of law.

We affirm.

Background

Pals is a limited-intake, no-kill animal shelter that rescues dogs and cats and

provides them with temporary shelter and medical care until adopted into permanent

homes. Pals is a non-profit organization that operates on private donations. Pals is

a member of the Harris County Community Supervision and Correctional

Department (“HCCSCD”) Community Service Restitution Program (“Program”).

As a member of the Program, Pals is an approved location for the HCCSCD to assign

individuals to perform court-ordered community service hours.

After a trial court ordered Biscamp to complete community service hours

through the Program, she selected Pals. On May 31, 2015, as a condition of her

service, Biscamp signed certain documents, including a Community Service

Agreement (“Agreement”) and a Tetanus Vaccination Waiver (“Waiver”).

The two-page Agreement includes the following release:

I understand that although [Pals] will make every attempt to ensure the safety of their volunteers and animals, rescue animals are by nature 2 unpredictable in their behavior. Therefore, I assume the risks of being bitten, scratched, injured, or frightened by cats, kittens, dogs, and puppies in connection with my volunteer work for [Pals]. Neither [Pals] or any of its Directors, volunteers, fosters, or other affiliates are liable to me for any injuries, damages, liabilities, losses, judgments, costs, damage to property or expenses whatsoever that I might suffer or sustain in connection with the performance of my volunteer activities for [Pals]. I will indemnify, defend, and hold the [Pals] Board of Directors, volunteers, fosters, or other affiliates harmless from and against any claims, lawsuits, injuries, damages, losses, costs, or expenses whatsoever sustained by any foster animal or any person in connection with my intentional misconduct or grossly negligent performance of volunteer activities for [Pals] or my breach of [Pals’s] rules, regulations, policies, and programs.

The one-page Waiver includes the following release:

I agree that on behalf of myself, my heirs, personal representatives and executors, I release, discharge indemnify, and hold harmless [Pals], its agents, employees, directors and board of directors from any and all claims, causes of action, or demands of any nature of cause, including costs and attorney’s fees incurred by [Pals] in connection with the same, based on damages, or injuries which may be incurred or sustained by me in any way connected with my services for [Pals], including but not limited to animal bites, accidents or injuries.

During Biscamp’s first day of service, June 3, 2015, a dog bit her leg, as

discussed below. Biscamp sued Pals for negligence, alleging that Pals failed to

provide a safe environment, adequate equipment, safe cages with “properly locking

latches,” and adequate training and supervision. She further alleged that the dog at

issue had “dangerous propensities,” of which Pals failed to warn her. Biscamp

sought past and future medical care and expenses; past pain, suffering, and mental

anguish; future pain and suffering; past and future physical impairment and

3 disfigurement; lost earnings; loss of earning capacity; “fear of future disease or

condition”; and “cost of medical monitoring and prevention in the future.”

In its answer, as amended, Pals generally denied the allegations and asserted,

among its affirmative defenses, that Biscamp’s claims were “barred by the defense

of waiver, release, quasi-estoppel, and assumption of the risk.” Pals asserted that

Biscamp “had knowledge of the facts basic to the exercise of her rights and

intentionally and unequivocally released, discharged and waived those rights by

agreement.” Further, her alleged damages were caused, in whole or in part, by her

own negligence, and she assumed the risk inherent in the work and failed to mitigate

her alleged damages.

At trial, Biscamp testified that, on May 31, 2015, she attended an orientation

session at Pals and signed the Agreement and Waiver. The trial court admitted the

Agreement and Waiver into evidence. After reading aloud to the jury the release

paragraphs contained in the Agreement and Waiver, stated above, Biscamp testified

that she understood them.

On Biscamp’s first day of service, June 3, 2015, one of her assigned duties

was to clean cages, which involved moving dogs housed in inside cages to one of

twelve outside cages. A Pals staff member, “John,” explained to her that some of

the outside cages were “good” and some were “bad.” Biscamp testified that a “good

cage” was one that, when “the door was closed,” the door and cage “[met] at the

4 bottom.” A “bad cage” was one that, when the door was closed, “it wasn’t all the

way closed” at the bottom. Accordingly, John instructed her not to put small dogs

in “bad cages.”

Biscamp testified that, after moving five dogs, she moved “Moses,” a black

Labrador Retriever, who was “about 55 pounds,” to “cage number 5.” Then, while

moving a yellow Labrador Retriever (“yellow Lab”) to an outside kennel, she passed

by Moses. While she and the yellow Lab were “5 or 10 feet away,” Moses started

growling. She noted that the two dogs were the same size. Biscamp testified that

she tried to move the yellow Lab, but, “once [she] looked down,” “Moses was just

right there on [her] knee,” and he bit her on her right knee.

Biscamp noted that shelter personnel placed a bandage on her knee and that

she completed a Pals incident report. In the report, which the trial court admitted

into evidence, Biscamp handwrote the details of the incident as follows: “Walking

the dogs out and Moses got out of his cage along with another[.] [Tried] to hold one

back but my leg was in the way therefore he bit my leg[.]” Biscamp signed

underneath her notes and again under a pre-printed statement: “*NO MEDICAL

ATTENTION WAS DESIRED AND/OR REQUIRED.”

Biscamp continued working and did not go to a doctor. Later that day, she

became sore and went to two urgent care clinics. She stated that they “didn’t do

5 anything,” however, and she went home. She later went to a third medical provider,

who cleaned her knee and gave her antibiotics and pain medication.

On June 5, 2015, Biscamp’s leg was swollen and painful, and she was having

difficulty walking. She testified that she went to a hospital, where she was diagnosed

with “flesh-eating bacteria” and underwent surgery. She noted that, afterwards, she

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