Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman v. Randolph County Commission

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 2013
Docket12-1312
StatusPublished

This text of Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman v. Randolph County Commission (Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman v. Randolph County Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman v. Randolph County Commission, (W. Va. 2013).

Opinion

STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS

Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman, FILED October 18, 2013 Petitioners Below, Petitioners RORY L. PERRY II, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS vs) No. 12-1312 (Randolph County 12-C-61) OF WEST VIRGINIA

Randolph County Commission, Chris See, Randolph County Commissioner, Joyce Jones, Randolph County Commissioner, Mike Taylor, Randolph County Commissioner, Jim Cain, Randolph County Dog Warden, and PetSmart, Inc., PetSmart Charities, Inc., PetSmart Charities Rescue Waggin Program, Maria Kostakos, President of the Randolph County Humane Society, Inc., Randolph County Humane Society, Inc., Kelly Scheidegger, Manager of the Randolph County Human Society, Defendants Below, Respondents

MEMORANDUM DECISION Petitioners Verda and Charles Wiseman, by counsel J. Burton Hunter III, appeal four orders entered on October 1, 2012, by the Circuit Court of Randolph County in petitioner’s action for the alleged wrongful seizure and subsequent sale of their dog. The orders on appeal dismissed the Randolph County Commission and the individual Randolph County Commissioners (Chris See, Joyce Jones, and Mike Taylor), PetSmart, Inc., and PetSmart Charities, Inc.; and granted summary judgment in favor of the Randolph County Dog Warden Jim Cain and the Randolph County Humane Shelter, its President Maria Kostankos, and its Manager, Kelly Scheidegger. The County Commission and the individual Commissioners filed a response by counsel Peter G. Zurbuck and Robert C. Chenoweth. PetSmart, Inc. and PetSmart Charities, Inc. filed a response by counsel, R. Ford Francis. The Dog Warden filed a response by counsel, Peter G. Zurbuck and Robert C. Chenoweth. The Randolph County Humane Society, Inc., its President, and its Manager filed a response by counsel Thomas G. Steele. Petitioners filed a single reply to all four responses.

This Court has considered the parties’ briefs and the record on appeal. The facts and legal arguments are adequately presented, and the decisional process would not be significantly aided by oral argument. Upon consideration of the standard of review, the briefs, and the record presented, the Court finds no substantial question of law and no prejudicial error. For these reasons, a memorandum decision is appropriate under Rule 21 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.

1 Petitioners filed a complaint against respondents alleging that their nine-year-old, boxer- mix dog, “Nikki,” was wrongfully seized by the dog warden and taken to the Randolph County Humane Society’s shelter. Petitioners further allege that the dog warden prevented petitioners from retrieving the dog from the animal shelter by threatening them with misdemeanor charges and fines, and kept a neighbor and petitioners’ daughter from adopting the dog. Petitioners believe that the dog warden’s actions where in furtherance of a conspiracy to transport the dog to a more urban area where she could be sold for a profit.

Petitioners claim the following: Nikki was a treasured family pet who was well-groomed, gentle, obedient, spayed, and beloved by the petitioners’ three young grandchildren. On February 3, 2012, Nikki made her usual morning trip to the home of petitioners’ neighbors which was situated about a quarter mile from petitioners’ home. The neighbor would give Nikki treats each morning when she arrived on his porch. The dog warden seized Nikki from the neighbor’s porch over the neighbor’s protests and transported her to the Randolph County Humane Society’s shelter.

Within hours, petitioners went to the shelter to reclaim their dog. The dog warden gave them a hostile reception and told them that if they asked for the dog to be returned, they would be charged with three misdemeanors (failing to pay the dog tax, failing to obtain a rabies vaccine, and allowing the dog to run at large), arrested, and fined over $600. The dog warden made it clear that if petitioners did not ask for the dog to be returned, they would not be charged or fined.

The next day, February 4, 2012, petitioner’s neighbor attempted to adopt Nikki from the shelter. The dog warden told the neighbor that he could adopt the dog in three to four days. The neighbor returned three or four days later and was told by a shelter worker that he needed to talk to the dog warden. The neighbor called the dog warden from the shelter. The dog warden told the neighbor that he could not adopt the dog and that the dog would not be returning to the community. The neighbor claimed he heard Nikki barking while he was at the shelter.

Petitioners’ daughter then went to the shelter to adopt Nikki. She asked for a dog that met Nikki’s description. The shelter workers told her that no such dog was available. Petitioners’ daughter believed that the shelter workers lied to her and that Nikki was at the shelter and available for adoption.

Petitioners (1) claim that Nikki was wearing a collar and had received a rabies vaccine, (2) admit that they had not paid personal property taxes on the dog, and (3) estimate she had a monetary value of $500. Petitioners believe that dogs are taken from the State of West Virginia to geographical areas of greater economic prosperity, and then sold under the guise of rescuing an animal. In support of their conspiracy theory, petitioners cite to e-mails from a veterinarian who appears to be from Connecticut and from a retired prosecutor from Buffalo, New York. Petitioners’ counsel adds that, on two or more occasions, he inadvertently witnessed the transport of numerous dogs packed into vans while he was traveling out-of-state. Counsel claims that when his wife inquired about the dogs, she learned from the operators of the vans that the dogs were pets from West Virginia who were being transported to Connecticut and New York.

2 Respondents counter petitioners’ statement of the facts with the following: On February 3, 2012, the dog warden received a telephone complaint from an elderly man who claimed that two dogs were running at large—one of whom was Nikki, that Nikki had jumped on him and on his elderly wife, and then defecated in the couple’s yard. The complainant indicated that if the dog warden did not collect the dog, he would take care of the issue with his rifle. The dog warden found Nikki running at large, seized her on petitioner’s neighbor’s porch, and impounded her. The dog was not wearing a registration or rabies vaccine tag at the time she was seized.

The dog warden admits that petitioners came to the Humane Society’s shelter to retrieve their dog later that same day. The dog warden claims he told petitioners that (1) if they reclaimed the dog, they would be issued three citations which they could challenge in magistrate court by showing proof that they had paid personal property taxes on the dog and that she had received a rabies vaccination; (2) upon showing such proof, the magistrate would likely dismiss the registration and rabies citations, but the “running at large” citation would remain; and (3) the fine for all three citations would be $600. The dog warden told petitioners that he did not cite dog owners who did not claim their dogs from the shelter, generally because the owners were unknown. The dog warden claims that, in response, petitioner-husband told the warden to “keep the f---ing dog.”

Petitioners twice attempted to reclaim Nikki without paying the fines, through their neighbor and their daughter. The human society did not release the dog to either because it had a policy of not adopting a dog into the neighborhood from which it was seized. Petitioner did not redeem Nikki within the shelter’s five day hold period. Thereafter, Nikki was legally adopted.

Petitioners filed their complaint against respondents on March 19, 2012.

On April 11, 2012, the Humane Society, its president, and manager filed an answer.

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Verda B. Wiseman and Charles E. Wiseman v. Randolph County Commission, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verda-b-wiseman-and-charles-e-wiseman-v-randolph-c-wva-2013.