Smith v. Royer

183 P. 660, 181 Cal. 165, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 337
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 4943.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 183 P. 660 (Smith v. Royer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Royer, 183 P. 660, 181 Cal. 165, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 337 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from an order vacating and setting aside the judgment and granting a new trial.

Action was brought by the plaintiff in the superior court of Orange County against the defendants to recover damages *167 for personal injuries sustained as a result of an attack by two vicious dogs alleged to have been harbored and kept by the defendants, ivho, it is further alleged, knew of the vicious characteristics of the dogs and that they were accustomed to bite people. The complaint prayed for damages in the sum of $2,550. The case was tried by jury and a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was rendered in the sum of seven -hundred dollars. Judgment was entered on the verdict with costs to the plaintiff amounting to $36.65.

On January 20, 1914, the plaintiff, a man seventy years of age, while riding his bicycle along the sidewalk in front of the 1 ‘Royer Place” in the city of Anaheim, was attacked by two dogs, a St. Bernard and a bull tender, which rushed out from the Royer place. The St. Bernard sprang upon the plaintiff and barked at him in a threatening manner, while the smaller dog, the bull terrier, seized the plaintiff by the calf of his right leg, tearing his clothes and inflicting a painful wound. Following the attack the plaintiff was confined to his home for a period of three weeks suffering from the wound in his leg and from a severe nervous shock. The plaintiff was not able to walk without experiencing pain from the bite for more than three months, and he testified at the trial, more than two years after the injury, that he was still suffering somewhat from the nervous shock.

No reason was assigned for ordering a new trial, but it was stated that it was ‘‘not on the ground that the jury violated the instructions of the court.” However, in their notice of motion to vacate and set aside the judgment and for a new trial the defendants set out the following statutory grounds: 1. Newly discovered evidence material to the defendants, which they could not with reasonable diligence have discovered and produced at the trial; 2. Excessive damages appearing to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice; 3. Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict; 4. That such verdict is against law; 5. Misconduct of the jury; 6. Errors in law occurring at the trial and excepted to by the defendants.

The record discloses that the defendants, in arguing the motion, urged but two points; 1. Excessive damages, and, 2. Insufficiency of the evidence. The arguments of the defendants in their brief on appeal are also confined to these two points.

*168 1. The defendants contend that the “evidence was either conflicting upon material issues, or there was no evidence to support certain material issues necessary for the plaintiff to prove.” In this connection the defendants point out that the evidence shows that there were two St. Bernard dogs on the place, one belonging to the defendant, J. O. Royer, the other to his son-in-law, Walter Olmstead, so that the St. Bernard which attacked the plaintiff may or may not have belonged to the defendant, J. O. Royer, while the other, the bull terrier, was owned by Max Royer, the adult son of the defendants. Hence, they argue that since it. was admitted by the plaintiff that it was the bull terrier alone which did the biting, they are not responsible for the damage done by this dog because he did not belong to them. In other words, the position of the defendants is that before liability can be established in such a case one of the things which must be proved is that the defendant is the owner of the dog. [1] The contention ignores the element of damage which may have been caused by the St. Bernard, but, even assuming that the legal injury is to be limited to the damage caused by the bull terrier, and that the ownership of the bull terrier was in the son of the defendants, the fact of ownership would be immaterial, and we must presume in the absence of such a specification in the order that the new trial was not granted upon that ground. This would also be true as to the ownership of the St. Bernard, which by its barking and threatening manner, it was alleged, contributed to the injury. The rule of decision in this and ■ other jurisdictions is against the contention of the defendants. [2] It has been held in similar cases that in order to recover damages it is necessary to prove: 1. That the dog bit the plaintiff; 2. That the dog was vicious and accustomed to bite people; 3. That this fact was knowh to the defendant; 4. That the dog was harbored or kept by the defendant. The question of ownership is not an issue in such cases. (Wilkinson v. Parrott, 32 Cal. 102; Strouse v. Leipf, 101 Ala. 433, [46 Am. St. Rep. 122, 14 South. 667, 23 L. R. A. 622, and cases there cited].) Hence, any insufficiency in the evidence to establish the ownership of the dogs was not material, and could not properly have been made the basis of an order granting the new trial.

. But the defendants go a step further and cite the record that Max Royer testified that he owned the property where *169 these dogs were kept—that it was his home. From this it is argued that he alone would be responsible for the injury, since it was his dog, kept on his premises, which did the biting. Max Royer did testify that he owned the place where the dogs were kept and that it was his home, but he also testified that it was the home of his mother and father; that his father had deeded to him, in 1910, the part of the property upon which the house stood, and that the title had been in his name since that time; that his brother-in-law, Walter Olmstead, was the manager or foreman of the ranch known as the Royer place, twenty acres of which belonged to the Anaheim Investment Company; that he himself did not run the ranch or in any way exercise control over it, but that Mr. Olmstead took his orders from J. O. Royer, defendant herein; and that at the time the plaintiff was attacked by the dogs he, Max Royer, was away at school. Therefore, the con. tention of the defendants that there was a conflict or an insufficiency in the evidence to establish the fact that the defendants kept and harbored the dogs is without foundation. [3] It has been held that if the head of a family, having possession and control of a house or premises, suffers or permits an animal to be kept on the premises, he may be regarded as the keeper. (3 Corpus Juris, 106.)

The defendants further urge that there is no evidence establishing or tending to establish the fact that the dogs which attacked the plaintiff on January 20, 1914, were the same dogs which other witnesses had testified were kept on the Royer place and which dogs were of a vicious nature. There is no merit in this contention. It was established by the testimony of witnesses Max Royer, J. L. Thompson and the plaintiff that certain dogs answering to the description of the ones which caused the injury to the plaintiff had been on the ranch for two or three years prior to January 20, 1914. This evidence stands uncontradicted.

~ The defendants further contend that there is no evidence that the deféndant, J. 0. Royer, ever had any knowledge of the vicious character of any of the dogs.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 660, 181 Cal. 165, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-royer-cal-1919.