City of Garland v. White

368 S.W.2d 12, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2520
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 3, 1963
Docket3790
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 368 S.W.2d 12 (City of Garland v. White) 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
City of Garland v. White, 368 S.W.2d 12, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2520 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

COLLINGS, Justice.

Talmadge White and his mother, Mrs. Madie White, a feme sole, brought this suit against the City of Garland, a municipal corporation and Danny Flannigan, Bill Mize, and Barry Brewer, who were policemen in said city, seeking to recover for damages to their property and persons including physical pain and mental anguish. Plaintiffs alleged that Mrs. White owned a home in Garland and that her son, Tal-madge White, resided with her; that Tal-madge White owned a pedigreed, registered, three year old male boxer dog; that the named police officer defendants went on the property of plaintiffs without permission as trespassers, without notice or warning and in violation of an ordinance of the city of Garland wilfully and wantonly shot and killed Talmadge White’s boxer dog alleged to have been a household pet, and damaged Mrs. White’s house; that the shots fired by defendants came within three or four feet of where plaintiffs were sitting in their home. The defendants answered by general denial, and specifically alleged that plaintiffs’ large boxer dog was vicious and aggressive and had attempted to attack several residents of the city of Garland; that the defendant police officers were called about the situation and acted in line of their duty for the purpose of protecting the lives of the citizens of the city.

The court found that the city of Garland was as a matter of law not liable and sustained its motion for a summary judgment. The remaining portion of the case was tried before a jury which found that the reasonable cash value of the boxer dog prior to the time it was killed, was $300.00; that $200.00 *14 would compensate Talmadge White for physical pain and mental anguish suffered by him because of said action of defendant police officers; that plaintiffs wilfully permitted the dog to run at large on the occasion and that the failure of plaintiffs to have the dog confined to their premises was negligence and a proximate cause of the occurrence in question. The court granted plaintiffs’ motion to disregard the jury findings that they were guilty of negligence proximately causing such occurrence and entered judgment for Talmadge White for his damages in the sum of $500.00 and for Mrs. Madie White for $75.00, the stipulated damages to her house. Flannigan, Mize and Brewer have appealed.

The evidence shows that Talmadge White has lived in the City of Garland since 1948, with his mother, Mrs. Madie White, who had the house built in 1946 and has lived there since. White is a teacher at the W. W. Samuell High School in the City of Dallas, where he has taught for ten years. He was the owner of the three year old male boxer dog in question. The evidence shows that the dog was registered, pedigreed, and had been with White since it was eleven days old. The evidence indicated that the dog weighed anywhere from 48 to 70 pounds. White testified that the most the dog ever weighed was 48 pounds; that it had been raised in the White house by hand feeding on a bottle and was a pet. White and several witnesses testified that the dog had never shown any vicious tendencies; that it was a pet, was gentle and would never snarl or snap at anybody. However, there was testimony by other witnesses which indicated to the contrary.

On April 1, 1961, officer Mize received a call from Mrs. Vernon Poor at about 11:00 o’clock a. m. concerning the dog and the officer went to her house to investigate. Mrs. Poor testified that the dog came to her yard and charged at her three or four times; that she froze in her tracks; that the dog did not bite her and did not scratch her, and that the only thing he did was to charge at her so that his front feet hit hers and that the impact of the dog’s feet on hers bruised and discolored her foot. She showed the officer a large blue spot on her right ankle. She stated that there was nothing to have kept the dog from biting her if he had wanted to. She stated that she did not see a doctor and did not need medical attention. Officer Mize testified that he found the dog in the front yard of a house behind and to the east of the Poor residence; that some people were standing on the porch of the house but the dog was making no effort to go toward them. He further testified, however, that the dog thereafter made a lunge at two teen-agers and that he, Mize, jerked his squad car into low gear and drove the car between the dog and the teen-agers. Mize then called Officer Brewer, who met him at the police station and they made an effort to get the dog catcher’s equipment and to find the pound truck but were unable to find such equipment or the poundmaster. Mize and Brewer then went back to Belmont Street and again saw the dog. He was standing by a fence between two houses. The dog was not doing anything. He growled but did not charge at them. The defendant, officer Flannigan, then came to the vicinity in a separate police car. All three officers got out of their cars and approached the dog. According to their testimony the closest they came to the dog was between ten and twenty feet. They stated that the dog then made a lunge at Flannigan, but never got closer to Flannigan than about ten feet. At that time Flannigan drew his pistol and fired two shots at the dog. The dog ran about 4½ blocks to the home of plaintiffs and jumped in Talmadge White’s car which was in the driveway with all four doors open. There was no one in the vicinity at the time except officers Mize and Brewer who had followed the dog when it ran home after being shot at by Flannigan. Later several other persons did appear. Flannigan did not follow the dog but went to the home of a Mr. Carter arid borrowed a shotgun. After Flannigan had obtained the shotgun he was called on the radio by *15 officers Mize and Brewer, who told him where the dog was at that time. A few minutes later Flannigan arrived at the White home with the shotgun. Flannigan admitted that Mize and Brewer were waiting in front of the White home and that their purpose in waiting, as well as his purpose in coming with the shotgun, was to kill the dog. Flannigan stated that when he arrived at the White home the dog was in a car, was not growling or barking or doing any harm or damage to any one. Appellant police officers then got out of their squad cars and went on to the White property, advancing toward the dog. They did not attempt to inquire about the dog at the White home. The evidence shows that when appellants advanced toward the dog the dog got out of the car and ran into the White garage getting as far away from the officers as he could. The officers made no effort to pull down the overhead door on the garage or to catch the dog in any way. The evidence shows that the dog was standing in the garage on the step leading into the White house from the garage when appellant Flannigan fired two shots and killed it with the shotgun. The evidence is undisputed that at the time the shots were fired the dog was not making any motion to come toward either of the police officers or toward anyone else; that the dog had not barked or snarled at them from the time the officers got out of their cars until it was killed.

The evidence further shows that the shotgun blast, not only killed the dog, but made several small holes in the door which opened from the house into the garage. Appellees Talmadge White and his mother were having lunch at the time and sitting in the dining room of their home. The dining room juts off behind the garage and adjoins Mrs. White’s bedroom. The bedroom is directly behind the garage and the door from the garage into the house led into Mrs. White’s bedroom.

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Bluebook (online)
368 S.W.2d 12, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 2520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-garland-v-white-texapp-1963.