Davies v. Gphc, LLC

980 N.W.2d 251, 2022 S.D. 55
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 2022
Docket29688
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 980 N.W.2d 251 (Davies v. Gphc, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davies v. Gphc, LLC, 980 N.W.2d 251, 2022 S.D. 55 (S.D. 2022).

Opinion

#29688-a-MES 2022 S.D. 55

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

KEVIN DAVIES, Plaintiff and Appellant,

v.

GPHC, LLC, Defendant, Third-Party Plaintiff, and Appellee,

MICHELLE L. WILSON and JAY M. BLACK, Third-Party Defendants. ****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIFTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT BROWN COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE RICHARD A. SOMMERS Judge

DAVID J. KING KIRK D. RALLIS of King Law Firm, P.C. Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for plaintiff and appellant.

PAUL H. LINDE of Schaffer Law Office, Prof. LLC Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for defendant, third- party plaintiff, and appellee.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS JANUARY 10, 2022 OPINION FILED 09/14/22 #29688

SALTER, Justice

[¶1.] As he attempted to enter his apartment, Kevin Davies was bitten by a

dog owned by another tenant. Davies commenced this action against his landlord,

GPHC, LLC (GPHC), alleging general negligence and negligence per se. The circuit

court granted GPHC’s summary judgment motion, concluding that GPHC lacked

actual knowledge of the dog’s alleged dangerous propensities under a general

negligence theory and that GPHC was not the owner or keeper of the dog under the

relevant statute to support Davies’s negligence per se claim. Davies appeals. We

affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] Kevin Davies and Jay Black each leased separate apartments in a six-

unit apartment building in Aberdeen. Davies’s unit was located in the basement of

the apartment building. Black and his girlfriend, Michelle Wilson, lived in an

apartment located above Davies.

[¶3.] GPHC is a South Dakota limited liability company, which owns and

manages the apartment building where Davies and Black resided. Both Davies and

Black signed one-year lease agreements with GPHC, which contained identical

provisions prohibiting pets on the leased premises absent the express permission of

GPHC. The sole member of GPHC, Mark Rich, stated that he commonly allowed

residents to keep dogs in their apartments upon request.

[¶4.] Black owned a female Rottweiler named Tequila. Before moving into

the apartment, he informed Rich about the dog and asked to keep Tequila at the

apartment. Rich consented, and, according to Rich, Black negotiated with him to

-1- #29688

house Tequila in an unattached garage near the rear of the rental property due to

Black’s concerns about Tequila’s frequent barking.

[¶5.] Davies owned an American bulldog named Flek, which lived with

Davies inside his apartment—also with Rich’s consent. According to Davies,

Tequila once “went after” Flek when the two dogs crossed paths, though he did not

clarify whether the encounter actually resulted in a physical altercation between

the dogs. Beyond this incident, however, Davies stated that he had no negative

interactions with Tequila and had never complained to GPHC about Tequila’s

behavior.

[¶6.] After returning home from work on July 25, 2018, Davies parked near

the rear of the apartment building and walked toward the door of his basement

apartment. As Davies approached the door, he noticed Wilson standing in the

backyard near the parking lot, attending to Tequila, who was tethered to a nearby

tree. Davies stopped and spoke briefly with Wilson before continuing toward the

building. When he reached the sidewalk abutting the building, he noticed Tequila

approaching him from the yard. Davies attempted to edge closer to the building to

avoid Tequila, but when he realized Tequila’s leash would not prevent her from

reaching the sidewalk, he held out his right hand to prevent Tequila from jumping

on him. Without provocation, Tequila bit Davies’s outstretched hand.

[¶7.] The bite produced significant lacerations to Davies’s hand. He drove

himself to a local emergency facility where medical personnel determined Davies

would require corrective surgery, which was performed that evening. After being

notified of the injury by hospital staff, officers from the Aberdeen Police Department

-2- #29688

arrived at the emergency room and spoke with Davies, who told them that his

neighbors owned the dog that had bitten him.

[¶8.] The officers went to the apartment building to interview Black, who

was not home at the time. Wilson was present, however, and she admitted that

Tequila had inflicted the injuries to Davies’s hand. Wilson also reported that it was

her common practice to keep Tequila tied up in the backyard of the building when

the dog was not otherwise kenneled in the garage or inside their apartment. She

reported that the building’s residents regularly walked through the yard without

incident while Tequila was present. Wilson also claimed that Tequila had not

previously bitten anyone.

[¶9.] Black called one of the investigating officers later that evening to

discuss what had happened. He told the officer that he was unsure why Davies was

near Tequila while Black was not present and claimed he had advised Davies not to

come near the dog in the past. However, when the officer explained that Tequila’s

leash allowed her to reach the sidewalk where Davies was walking, Black told the

officer that he understood and stated that he accepted responsibility for the dog’s

actions.

[¶10.] For his part, Rich claimed he had no knowledge of Tequila’s

temperament prior to the attack on Davies. Though he was aware that Tequila was

a Rottweiler and of Black’s concerns about Tequila’s inclination to bark, Rich

explained that he had never met the dog and had never received any complaints

from Davies or other residents about Tequila’s behavior. In fact, Rich lives in

Phoenix, Arizona, and it is unclear whether he had visited the apartment building

-3- #29688

during the time Black kept Tequila in the garage. Rich testified in his deposition

that GPHC did not employ a property manager to look after the apartment building

in his absence. GPHC did, however, hire a local “handyman” to perform snow

removal and lawn care at the building, which appears to have been done on an as-

needed basis.

[¶11.] In October 2019, Davies commenced this civil action naming GPHC as

a defendant. The complaint alleged that, as a landlord, GPHC was negligent for

failing “to exercise ordinary care in the control, management, warning, and care of

[its] property.” The complaint further alleged that GPHC was negligent per se

based on a statute that makes owning or keeping a “vicious dog” a public nuisance.

See SDCL 40-34-13.

[¶12.] In its answer, GPHC denied all liability and asserted third-party

claims against Black and Wilson seeking indemnity and contribution in the event it

was found liable to Davies. Black was served with the third-party complaint, but he

has not filed an answer. Wilson could not be located for service.

[¶13.] In January 2021, GPHC moved for summary judgment and a hearing

on the motion was set for March 12. On March 3, Davies’s counsel submitted an

affidavit pursuant to SDCL 15-6-56(f) (Rule 56(f)), indicating his desire to depose

Black and Wilson prior to the circuit court’s ruling on the summary judgment

motion.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hamer v. Duffy, Cornerstone Poured Foundations, Inc.
2026 S.D. 4 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2026)
Trigger Energy Holdings v. Stevens
2025 S.D. 72 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2025)
Coyle v. McFarland
2025 S.D. 63 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2025)
Anderson Industries v. Thermal Intelligence
2025 S.D. 47 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2025)
Two Eagle v. Avel Ecare
2025 S.D. 3 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2025)
STROM TRUST v. SCS CARBON TRANSPORT, LLC
2024 S.D. 48 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2024)
Redlin Trust v. First Interstate Bank
2024 S.D. 5 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2024)
McGee v. Spencer Quarries, Inc.
2023 S.D. 66 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2023)
S.D. Dep't of Transportation v. Legacy Land Co.
2023 S.D. 58 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2023)
Nelson v. Estate of Campbell
2023 S.D. 14 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
980 N.W.2d 251, 2022 S.D. 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davies-v-gphc-llc-sd-2022.