Lydia Lira and Alfonso Lira v. Greater Houston German Shepherd Dog Rescue, Inc.

488 S.W.3d 300, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 562, 2016 WL 1267745, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 231
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 2016
DocketNO. 14-0964
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 488 S.W.3d 300 (Lydia Lira and Alfonso Lira v. Greater Houston German Shepherd Dog Rescue, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lydia Lira and Alfonso Lira v. Greater Houston German Shepherd Dog Rescue, Inc., 488 S.W.3d 300, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 562, 2016 WL 1267745, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 231 (Tex. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM

In this case we consider- whether the trial court properly, enjoined a dog rescue *302 organization to return a dog to its original owners. We hold that the trial court’s judgment was correct.

Alfonso and Lydia. Lira are siblings. They owned a German Shepherd named Monte Carlo. Alfonso purchased Monte for $2,500, and spent another $10,000 on training. Monte was living at Lydia’s home in Houston while Alfonso was working in San Antonio. The Liras had raised Monte from a puppy and had owned him as a family pet for seven years. On January 1, 2013, Monte escaped from Lydia’s property through an open garage door. Lydia searched for him, posting signs in the neighborhood offering a reward, and making inquiries on several websites. She frequently checked a website, Pet Harbor, where missing dogs are posted. She thought she recognized Monte in two postings, but upon visiting two animal control facilities she found the dogs were not Monte.

Meanwhile, the City of Houston’s animal control department, known as BARC (for Bureau of Animal Regulation and Care), picked up Monte on January 2. He was running at large and had no identifying tags or microchip. BARC listed him on Pet Harbor as a Belgian Malinois, and provided a photograph, but Lydia had been searching for him under the German Shepherd listing. BARC had also incorrectly designated Monte an “owner surrender.”

At BARC, Monte tested “weak positive” for heartworms. The Liras claim they were giving Monte heartworm pills, but there was testimony that this treatment was ineffective for adult worms. A BARC witness testified that a dog testing positive for heartworms is not considered healthy and therefore cannot be sold to the public.

BARC scheduled Monte to be euthan-ized on January 7. On January 5, BARC sent a request to local dog rescue organizations to see if any would accept Monte. On January 6, Greater Houston German Shepherd Dog - Rescue (GHGSDR) responded. On January 7, BARC gave Monte to a GHGSDR volunteer, Cindy Milstead. Milstead agreed to foster the dog.

On January 9, Lydia saw a message on a lost and found website stating that-her dog might be at BARC. Lydia went to BARC and identified Monte from a photograph. BARC told Lydia that Monte had been transferred to GHGSDR. Lydia contacted Milstead that day and asked for Monte’s return. Milstead refused. The Liras and their attorney made additional requests for Monte’s return, and offered to reimburse GHGSDR for all of its expenses, but GHGSDR refused to return Monte.

The Liras sued GHGSDR, asserting a claim for conversion and other claims. They sought a declaratory judgment that they were the owners of Monte, and an injunction ordering, his, return. After a bench trial the trial court sided with the Liras, The trial court rendered a judgment that included a permanent injunction ■ directing GHGSDR to return Monte to the Liras. The trial court did not award actual damages or attorney’s fees; the Liras do not complain of this result.' The trial court did' award costs to' the Liras. GHGSDR appealed.

The court of appeals reversed, concluding that the Liras had lost their right to recover possession of Monte from GHGSDR. 447 S.W.3d 365, 368. In their petition for review, the Liras ask that the trial court’s judgment be reinstated.

We áddress the propriety of the trial court’s injunction. GHGSDR does not dispute that, prior to the unfortunate events described above, Monte belonged to the Liras. Nothing in the record suggests the Liras abandoned their pet. Lydia dili *303 gently searched for Monte until he was found, and the Liras then immediately requested. his return. GHGSDR cites no common-law authority, nor can we find any, holding that dog owners’ property rights are lost because their dog escapes and cannot be located for a. few days. Under the common law, one who finds lost property cannot retain it against a claim by the. property’s true owner. State v. $281,4-20.00 in United. States Currency, 312 S.W.3d 547, 553 (Tex.2010).

We therefore turn to whether opér-ation of City ordinances divested the Liras of their ownership, as GHGSDR contends. Assuming that the ordinances comport with due process and other requirements of Texas and federal law, and that cities possess police power to enact ordinances that -sometimes divest ah owner of property rights in his dog, nothing in Houston’s ordinances did so in this case.

Section 826.033 of the Texas Health and Safety Code provides that, as part of a rabies control program, a municipality may adopt ordinances providing that “each stray dog or cat be impounded for a period set by ordinance or rule” and that “a humane disposition be made of each unclaimed stray dog or cat on the expiration of the required impoundment period.”

The City has adopted ordinances concerning stray dogs, found in chapter 6 of the Houston Code of Ordinances. We discuss those in effect at the time of the events in issue, Article IV, section 6-102 provided:

(a) It shall be.the duty of the animal control officers to take up and take
(b).... Dogs wearing a city license tag ... shall be held in designated pens for
the owner for six days from the date the owner was notified by telephone or notice was mailed to the owner. On the seventh day following such notice, the animal may be offered for adoption or euthanized at the discretion of the director.

Article V, section 6-137 provided:

(a) The person entitled to the possession of any animal delivered to the animal control center shall be entitled to have the animal delivered to him at the animal control center upon presentation of satisfactory evidence of ownership ... and payment of the applicable charges and fees....
(b) It shall be the duty of the officer in charge of the.animal control center to offer for sale any and all healthy animals impounded under the terms, of section 6-102 and not redeemed within three days.... The person entitled to the possession of any animal shall be entitled to redeem the same upon paying the purchaser double the amount paid by him for such animal and his reasonable ¿xpenses for keeping the same. Any animal not so redeemed within 30 days from the date of the sale shall become the absolute property of the purchaser.
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(d) The owners of all animals impounded in the animal, control center, shall be required to redeem the same as provided for in subsection (a) hereof and shall not be permitted to purchase such animal in lieu of paying the redemption fee.
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(g) ... [T]he release of the.animal shall be conditioned upon an owner’s execution of a written agreement that he will have the animal sterilized....
. charge of all dogs found to be running at large ...

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488 S.W.3d 300, 59 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 562, 2016 WL 1267745, 2016 Tex. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lydia-lira-and-alfonso-lira-v-greater-houston-german-shepherd-dog-rescue-tex-2016.