Buffington v. Nicholson

177 P.2d 51, 78 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1435
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1947
DocketCiv. 15514
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 177 P.2d 51 (Buffington v. Nicholson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buffington v. Nicholson, 177 P.2d 51, 78 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1435 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

YORK, P. J.

The plaintiffs Buffington, husband and wife, sued to recover damages for injuries alleged to have been sustained by Mrs. Buffington when she was attacked and bitten *38 by defendants’ dog. From a judgment awarding said plaintiffs the sum of $5,268 and costs, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, defendant Edward 0. Nicholson has perfected this appeal.

It appears from the record that appellant, the owner of a male pedigreed Doberman pinscher dog named “King,” and respondent W. L. Buffington, the owner of a female pedigreed Doberman pinscher dog named “Tina,” entered into an oral agreement in April of 1944 to mate the dogs, appellant to receive one female puppy as a “stud fee.” Pursuant thereto, appellant delivered his dog to respondents at their residence and turned him over to Mr. Buffington. About two weeks thereafter, on May 6, 1944, around five o’clock in the afternoon, when Mrs. Buffington, who had been feeding both dogs for about a week, entered the gate of the kennel carrying two pans of food, the dog King came toward her showing his teeth, leaped upon her with both paws and bit her on the right' wrist and hand. She held the dog’s mouth, from which the tissues of her hand were hanging like cords of thread, whereupon the dog relaxed his hold on her right hand but grabbed and bit her on the left forearm. Mrs. Buffington then kicked off her yard shoes, opened the gate and turned around in an effort to get away from the dog which grabbed her on the left side below the waist inflicting severe lacerations.

Mrs. Buffington’s acquaintance with the dog King dated from the day he was brought to her residence. However, some weeks prior thereto, Mr. Buffington had witnessed a demonstration of King’s “police training” at the movie studio where he was employed, at which time his business associate, Mr. Weston, who participated in the demonstration, told Mr. Buffington: “Don’t use a club with that kind of dog.” Mr. Buffington testified: “He had the dog there ... I believe somebody else held the dog by the collar and he picked up a paper or something, it looked like a stick. Q. And made a threatening gesture at the dog? A. Yes. Q. And what did the dog do? A. He showed his teeth then.” Mr. Buffington further testified that he acquired no knowledge from this demonstration of any propensities of the dog King to attack or bite, except when threatened with a stick; that neither Mr. Weston nor appellant ever demonstrated to him the male dog’s watch or guard training. Also, that previous to the attack, the dog showed no signs of being a dangerous animal; never threatened to bite anyone while in his possession; showed no *39 signs of viciousness when he whipped the dog to make it mind; that he had no occasion to warn his wife about the dog and did not do so; and that his information that the dog was vicious and had bitten several people was acquired after the attack on Mrs. Buffington.

Mrs. Nicholson testified to two instances occurring prior to the incident here, when King bit other persons: (1) When the dog had been put into the den of appellant’s home and told to stay there, Miss Moore, a guest, who had been drinking ‘ ‘ came screaming into the house and rushed into the den and the dog jumped at her and attacked her”; (2) “Mrs. Chapman and her son came up to visit me in the afternoon. I was alone at the house and the dog was with me in the living room, and Billy and I were sitting there talking and his mother came up to the back door, instead of calling or ringing the doorbell she walked in, and before I had a chance to get hold of King he had grabbed her when she was not more than about four or five feet inside the door. She also said, ‘I should never have walked into the door without ringing or without letting you know I was there.’ ” ,

Appellant, Edward C. Nicholson, testified that when he delivered the dog to respondents he “expressed the thought to Mr. Buffington that he' (the dog) was police trained, he was aggressive, and he wouldn’t stand for any strangers. . . . Q. Was anything said or discussed by any of you with respect to how King should be approached in the kennel ? A. Yes. I mentioned that since he was in a strange environment with strange people that he could be handled, he would in time become very loyal and affectionate to them, and I said, ‘The first couple of weeks that he is here, ’ I said, ‘be just a little cautious and call his name, and when the dog comes toward you, stop for just a minute and let him recognize you, and you will be all right.’ Q. Did you say that in the presence of Mrs. Buffington? A. I don’t remember; I mean it was a four-way conversation all the way around and she was talking to Mrs. Buffington and I was talking to Mr. Buffington, and then we talked back and forth. . . . Q. Are you sure that at least Mr. Buffington heard that statement? A. Mr. Buffing-ton heard that statement because we talked dogs there for at least an hour and a half.” This witness also testified to other situations subsequent to May 6, 1944, when the dog King bit other persons:

*40 “Mr. King was part of the real estate firm that sold me my house, and his office was on Laurel Canyon and Ventura Boulevard, ... I would stop in and talk to him. . . . This one day I was driving along down there and I stopped, and I had King on the leash with me ... it was rather hot, and I said, ‘Would you care to go across the street and have a glass of beer? ... I will put my dog in the car’ . . . and he said, ‘No, it is so hot ... we will leave the dog in the office.’ I said, ‘I don’t dare leave the dog in the office because somebody might come in, a stranger might come in, and then there would be trouble.’ He said, ‘I am the only person who has a key to the office, I will lock it, and I will not come back in until you do.’ I said, ‘Well, if you promise me on your word of honor not to go back in ... I will agree to it.’ ” The two men had their drink and appellant left Mr. King to make a telephone call. When he returned “and looked for Mr. King he was not there. So I went back across the street and he had opened the door with his key, and he had gone in, and no sooner had he put his hand in than the do^ got him, so he went against his promise and all my warnings. ’ ’

On another occasion, when appellant was giving a party at his house, the dog was “running loose . . . not bothering anybody,” when a young woman under the influence of liquor came in. Appellant said to her “Please do not molest the dog ... if he wants to come to see you, that is all right, but just leave him alone.” Appellant then placed King way over in the corner and told him to lie down and stay there, which he did. “Well, this girl came in, she borrowed a bathing suit and went swimming, and she came back and had two or three more drinks, and she said, ‘I want to pet the dog.’ I said, ‘Please leave the dog alone; please don’t bother him.’ ... I turned to mix another drink. In the meantime I saw her walking over to try to pet the dog, and she said, ‘Hello, fellow,’ or something like that, and stumbled around, and King just looked at her and growled just to warn her to please stay away from him. So she used some very foul language, picked up an empty bottle that was sitting on the bar, and went to strike at him. I tried to climb across the bar, but by the time I got to her King had done his damage. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
177 P.2d 51, 78 Cal. App. 2d 37, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffington-v-nicholson-calctapp-1947.