Marsh v. Snyder
This text of 113 So. 2d 5 (Marsh v. Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Annie E. MARSH
v.
Harry M. SNYDER.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Orleans.
*6 Rittenberg, Weinstein & Bronfin, Sylvan J. Steinberg, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellee.
Numa V. Bertel, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant and appellant.
REGAN, Judge.
Plaintiff, Annie E. Marsh, instituted this suit against the defendant, Harry M. Snyder, endeavoring to recover the sum of $995, representing damages for injuries which resulted from being bitten by the defendant's dog.
Defendant pleaded the exceptions of vagueness, no cause or right of action, and prescription, which were properly referred to the merits. He then answered, denying liability for any damages, asserting in defense of the suit that the dog was not known to have a vicious nature; in the alternative, the defendant pleaded the contributory negligence of the plaintiff.
From a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $350 the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.
On June 4, 1956, at about 9:30 a. m. the defendant was walking both of his dogs, a Dalmatian and an English setter, in the general vicinity of his home. The dogs were not restrained by leashes but were permitted to run, subject to the command of their master. The plaintiff, a domestic servant, was either in front or on the side of the home of her employer engaged in collecting the garbage cans and sweeping up some garbage that had been inadvertently spilled by the Department of Sanitation. While plaintiff was so occupied, the defendant accompanied by his dogs walked by the premises, and suddenly the Dalmatian bit or "nipped" the forearm of the plaintiff. The incident transpired within a split second and the defendant failed to observe what caused it to occur. In fact, both plaintiff and defendant were taken completely by surprise.
The plaintiff contends that the defendant either knew or should have known of the vicious propensities of this dog, and therefore he is liable for the injuries inflicted upon her.
Defendant on the other hand insists that the dog never manifested any vicious characteristics prior to this incident that he was, or should have been aware of, and that therefore the lower court erred in imposing liability upon him for the injuries incurred by the plaintiff when the court literally applied Article 2321 to the facts of this case.
The only question posed for our consideration is whether the defendant knew or should have known that the animal possessed vicious propensities prior to biting plaintiff.
At common law, the theory that the owner of a domestic animal did not have any property rights therein was perhaps the basis for escaping liability for damages caused by the animal.[1] Later the common law adopted the doctrine of scienter. Under this theory the defendant was liable in tort, if previous to the plaintiff's injury, he harbored an animal knowing it to *7 be vicious.[2] The jurisprudence emanating from a majority of American states has adopted the doctrine of scienter.[3]
The common law doctrine of scienter has been used by the civil courts in Louisiana only to the extent of establishing the fault or negligence of the owner of the animal.[4] The jurisprudence relative to the liability of the owner or harborer of a vicious dog which injures someone is predicated on Article 2321[5] of the Civil Code of 1870, LSA. In connection with the rationale thereof, the judges have applied Article 2315[6] providing for liability for fault and Article 2316[7] providing liability for negligence. A casual reading of the first line of Article 2321 reveals that it is couched in the most absolute terminology, to wit: "The owner of an animal is answerable for the damage he has caused." This edict would, of itself, lead one to believe that liability of the owner of the animal could be incurred without fault. However in construing Article 2321 together with Articles 2315 and 2316, the appellate courts of this state have read the requirement of fault or negligence into Article 2321.
This result, perhaps, was reached by reasoning that animals occupy two categories insofar as liability attaches to the owner or harborer of an animal which injures someone, that is, animals ferae naturae and animals mansuetae naturae. The first category embraces wild, undomesticated animals, such as bears, lions, tigers, wolves, buffaloes, and deer. These animals are considered to be inherently dangerous, and therefore anyone who owns or harbors such an animal does so at his peril.
Animals mansuetae naturae are animals which have been domesticated by man for centuries, such as horses, sheep, goats, cows, and dogs; and they have come to be regarded as inherently safe. However, if they should become vicious or have by their previous history manifested a vicious temperament then the owner or harborer thereof retains the animal at his peril.
The burden of proving freedom from fault is placed upon the owner or harborer of the animal in a majority of the cases decided by the appellate courts of this state.[8]
The evidence adduced herein on behalf of the defendant clearly reveals that he was very fond of dogs, having raised them most of his life and trained them to obey commands. The record likewise reflects that the defendant assumed the burden of establishing as a fact that he possessed no actual or constructive knowledge that this animal possessed any vicious propensities which might cause injury to anyone.
The defendant testified that the dog was of mild and docile disposition and had never manifested a temperament which would cause him to know or to reasonably assume that the animal would bite anyone. Three of his neighbors appeared on his behalf and in substance reiterated generally *8 and specifically the previous good characteristics of the animal.
In rebuttal of the foregoing testimony the record discloses that the plaintiff, in our opinion, made one serious effort to establish as a fact that the defendant knew or should have known of the previous manifestations of the animal's vicious propensities. On cross-examination, plaintiff's counsel asked him if "a complaint was made to you by Mr. Byrnes that your dog had bitten his child." The defendant unhesitatingly answered "yes," and in explanation thereof asserted that the father accompanied by the child visited his home and showed him a small scratch on her abdomen and then they related to him that she had been skating and had run into the dogs, that neither he nor Mr. Byrnes was sure whether the dog had bitten or scratched the child, and out of an abundance of caution a tetanus shot had been given to the child, and Byrnes requested the defendant to keep the dog under close observation for a period of about 10 days, which was done.
The plaintiff in order to impeach the testimony of the defendant and to substantiate the accusation that this child had been bitten by the defendant's dog, called as her witness Mrs. Byrnes, who without equivocation substantiated the defendant's explanation of the incident.
The whole tenor of the record reveals that neither Mr. nor Mrs. Byrnes nor the defendant attached any significance to this incident; that is, they did not regard it as reflecting a vicious characteristic of the dog.[9]
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113 So. 2d 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marsh-v-snyder-lactapp-1959.