Loretta M. Young and Parvin Young v. Robert N. Baugh and Bessie Baugh

870 F.2d 350
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 16, 1989
Docket88-1335
StatusPublished

This text of 870 F.2d 350 (Loretta M. Young and Parvin Young v. Robert N. Baugh and Bessie Baugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loretta M. Young and Parvin Young v. Robert N. Baugh and Bessie Baugh, 870 F.2d 350 (7th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

WILL, Senior District Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the district court in favor of the defendants following a bench trial. Loretta Young, plaintiff-appellant, alleged that she was injured by the defendants’ dog while on the defendants’ property. The district court concluded that Mrs. Young was a licensee and therefore that the defendants' duty was to refrain from willful and wanton conduct. According to the district court, the defendants’ conduct was not willful or wanton. We find that the correct standard of liability under Indiana law for the ownership and control of a dog is negligence. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for a determination of whether or not the defendants were in fact negligent, whether or not the plaintiff was contributorily negligent and damages. 1

BACKGROUND

Loretta Young was driving through Mar-tinsville, Indiana on November 12, 1983 when she decided to stop at the defendants’ home in an effort to sell them World Book Encyclopedias. Mrs. Young is a travelling *351 encyclopedia salesperson. She was uninvited by the defendants.

Robert and Bessie Baugh, defendants-ap-pellees, live in a rural section of Indiana. Their residence is three to four blocks from their nearest neighbor. When Mrs. Young approached the defendants’ home, Mrs. Baugh and her daughter Carolyn were there, as was their dog, an English shepherd named Lady which was eight or nine years old at that time. Mr. Baugh was not at home when Mrs. Young arrived and he did not testify at the trial.

Mrs. Young drove in the defendants’ driveway and parked her car at the side of the house. From her car, she observed the defendants’ dog approximately thirty feet away peering around the corner of the house. Mrs. Young testified that Lady did not bark and did not move when she looked at the dog and made eye contact.

Mrs. Young exited her car and approached the front steps of the defendants’ home. As she approached the first step leading to the front door, Mrs. Young was severely bitten by Lady. The dog then retreated to the back of the defendants’ home. Until she was bitten, Mrs. Young was not aware that Lady was approaching her. There were other vehicles in the driveway at the time which may have obstructed her view.

Mrs. Young cried out for help and was soon attended to by Mrs. Baugh who applied first aid to the wound inside their home. Mrs. Baugh testified that it took approximately thirty seconds for her to reach Mrs. Young after hearing Lady bark. Mrs. Baugh and her daughter had been inside the home at that time.

Mrs. Young went to a hospital later that day where she was bandaged. She used crutches for three months thereafter and continues to elevate her leg to relieve pain. She reduced her working hours and driving responsibilities, accepted a reduction in income, and was relocated to Arkansas where she now lives with her husband, Parvin Young, plaintiff-appellant. 2 Her doctor advised her that her scar was permanent and that she would live the rest of her life with pain in her leg/ankle area. She finds it necessary to take sleeping pills.

When Mrs. Baugh was cleaning the wound, she asked Mrs. Young if she had seen the “beware of dog” sign. Mrs. Young said no. Mrs. Baugh indicated that Lady had previously bitten Mrs. Baugh’s mother and the family’s minister (Reverend Frost). The “beware of dog” sign was placed on a utility pole in the defendants’ backyard after Mrs. Baugh’s mother was bitten but before Lady attacked the family’s minister. The minister needed hospital attention but had no complications. The bite to Reverend Frost drew blood but the bite to Mrs. Baugh’s mother apparently did not. The utility pole is sixty-one feet from the front corner of the house where Mrs. Young parked her car. No sign was placed in the front of the house.

The Baughs’ daughter testified that her boyfriend was “nipped” by the dog. The defendants were not told or aware of this incident. They claimed, however, that their daughter’s boyfriend’s pants were torn but that he was not bitten. They also discounted the severity of the two other previous incidents.

Mrs. Young testified that following her attack she walked back to her car but could not read the “beware of dog” sign from where her car was parked. Mrs. Baugh had to point it out to her. Mrs. Young testified that the sign appeared faded and weather-beaten.

Mrs. Baugh testified that crime was a problem in their neighborhood. Sometime earlier in 1983 the defendants’ backyard storage shed was broken into. Lady became more protective after this theft. The Baughs admittedly used Lady as their watchdog.

When someone was home, it was the Baughs’ general practice to let Lady roam about their property without a chain. No fence was ever used. After the defen *352 dants’ minister was attacked, Lady was chained for two weeks. No sign was placed in the front of their home. The local sheriff subsequently advised the Baughs to fence their yard, chain the dog or put it to sleep. The defendants declined all of these suggestions.

The Baughs would warn family and friends about their dog’s propensities when they visited. Expected and frequent visitors entered through the back door of the home, apparently to avoid Lady. If several people were visiting at one time, the Baughs sometimes chained Lady. When Lady barked, the Baughs usually hurried towards the back door to control Lady and see who was approaching their home. The Baughs’ daughter testified that Lady did not bark before attacking the minister. Mrs. Young testified that Lady did not bark before biting her. When non-family or friends were expected to come to their home, e.g., appliance service persons, Lady would be chained.

Prior to trial, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss Counts III and IV of the plaintiffs’ amended complaint under Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6). At that time, the case was before the Honorable William E. Steckler. The plaintiffs sought punitive damages in Counts III and IV. In an order dated March 20,1987, Judge Steckler granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss Counts III and IV. He concluded that “[d]og bite cases have traditionally been characterized as negligence cases.... In Indiana punitive damages cannot be awarded where the defendant’s actions are merely negligence.” District Court Order, March 20, 1987 at 3 (citations omitted). The plaintiffs’ complaint had alleged negligence only.

At the close of the evidence in the bench trial, Judge McKinney held that Loretta Young entered the defendants' property as a licensee and the defendants, as landowners, owed a duty to Mrs. Young not to act willfully or wantonly so as to cause her injury. Proving negligence was not enough. Gaboury v. Ireland Road Grace Brethren, Inc., 446 N.E.2d 1310, 1314-15 (Ind.1983). Under this standard, known as premises liability, the plaintiffs had to prove that the defendants either (1) committed a positive wrongful act, (2) acted willfully or wantonly, or (3) created a trap. Stewart v. Stewart,

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