Verrilli v. Damilowski

100 A.2d 462, 140 Conn. 358, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 247
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 22, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 100 A.2d 462 (Verrilli v. Damilowski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verrilli v. Damilowski, 100 A.2d 462, 140 Conn. 358, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 247 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Brown, C. J.

The plaintiff sued the defendant Walter DamilowsM and his wife for damages for personal injuries which resulted from being bitten by a dog alleged to have been owned and kept by the defendants. Upon his wife’s death the defendant Walter, as administrator of her estate, was substituted for her as defendant. The court rendered judgment for the plaintiff to recover of him individually $2000, and in favor of him as administrator. He has appealed from the judgment entered against him. We refer to him below as the defendant.

The gist of the complaint is that the defendant owned and kept a dog on his property in Bridgeport which is bounded in part by Orange Street and by Hollister Avenue; that on October 22, 1948, as the plaintiff was crossing the premises between these streets on a right of way which had been used by the publie for several years, the defendant’s dog attacked her, biting her in the left leg and causing serious injury, including a fracture of the knee, which resulted in expense for medical care and nursing and in incapacity to perform her domestic duties; and that “at the time of the attack by the dog, [she] was not teasing, tormenting or abusing said dog and was not engaged in the commission of a trespass or other tort.” Section 3404 of the General Statutes, in so far as it is relevant, provides: “If any dog does any damage to either the body or property of any person, the owner or keeper . , . shall be liable for such damage, except when such damage has been occa *360 sioned to the body ... of a person who, at the time sneh damage was sustained, was committing a trespass or other tort, or was teasing, tormenting or abusing such dog.”

It is to be noted that the complaint contains no allegation either of scienter upon the part of the defendant or of facts constituting negligence upon his part. Either of these could be an essential element in a common-law action to recover for injury done to a plaintiff by a defendant’s dog. 3 C.J.S. 1255. Both, however,- may be rendered immaterial by statute, and a statute may be operative in a ease of this nature to impose absolute liability under certain circumstances. 3 C.J.S. 1257. Such is the liability prescribed under § 3404, quoted above. Ingeneri v. Kluza, 129 Conn. 208, 209, 27 A.2d 124. As was pointed out in Granniss v. Weber, 107 Conn. 622, 625, 141 A. 877, in approving a quotation from Grissell v. Housatonic R. Co., 54 Conn. 447, 461, 9 A. 137, this statutory extension of common-law liability is only “a new application of an ancient common law principle, that where one of two innocent persons must suffer loss from an act done, it is just that it should fall on the one who caused the loss rather than upon the other who had no agency in producing it and could not by any means have avoided it.” Since the plaintiff’s complaint contains no allegation of either negligence or scienter on the part of the defendant and expressly negatives the commission of any trespass or tort or abuse of the dog on her own part, the cause of action alleged is unmistakably one under the statute and not under the common law. Leone v. Kelly, 77 Conn. 569, 570, 60 A. 136.

The question determinative of the appeal upon the issue of liability, therefore, is whether upon the *361 facts the court was warranted in its conclusion that the defendant is liable under § 3404. The material facts found by the court are not subject to correction and may be thus summarized: The defendant owned an unfenced piece of land extending from Hollister Avenue to Orange Street in Bridgeport which he used for the storage of equipment in connection with his trucking business. A clearly defined road or pathway twenty feet wide extended across the lot from street to street. The general public had utilized this pathway for years as a short cut between streets, and the plaintiff had so used it about once a week over a period of ten years, as the defendant well knew. The defendant kept his vicious dog fastened to a truck by a fifteen-foot chain which permitted it to go into the pathway. He did this to prevent pilferage of personal property on the lot and to discourage trespassing by the public. On October 22, 1948, the plaintiff, who was sixty-five years of age, while en route to visit her cousin walked onto the pathway on the defendant’s lot to use it for a short cut to Orange Street, as was her custom. The dog was concealed by one of the trucks so that the plaintiff neither saw it nor knew of its presence until it jumped on her, knocked her to the ground and bit her on the thigh and back. Neither by sign nor by word of mouth had the defendant ever forbidden the plaintiff to use the short cut or warned her of the presence of the dog. Upon these facts the court concluded that the plaintiff should not be precluded from recovering under § 3404, since the statutory expression “committing a trespass or other tort” did not apply to exclude her right of action.

For over 150 years the statutes of Connecticut have imposed upon the owners of dogs liability beyond that at common law for damage done by *362 them. See Woolf v. Chalker, 31 Conn. 121, 133. The earlier statutes by their terms prescribe absolute liability in such cases. Notwithstanding the lack of any exception such as now appears in § 3404, this court in deciding the case of Kelley v. Killourey, 81 Conn. 320, 70 A. 1031, stated that while the generality of the terms of the statute, when interpreted literally, furnished justification for the contention that it made the owner or keeper of a dog liable for all damage done by it under any circumstances to the body or property of any person, this was not the true intent and meaning of the statute. It was accordingly held that the statute did admit of exceptions, as was recognized in Woolf v. Chalker, supra, one of which was injury done by a dog in protecting his master’s premises “against the perpetration of a felony,” and another, injury by the dog to one wilfully provoking it by conduct which he knew or should have known was calculated to rouse a dog to defensive action by the use of its natural weapons of defense. After the Kelley decision in 1908, the legislature in 1911, with the purpose of making the statute conform to the above interpretation, amended it to include the exception denying recovery to a plaintiff who at the time he was injured by the dog “was committing a trespass or other tort.” Public Acts 1911, c. 121, § 5; Dorman v. Carlson, 106 Conn. 200, 202, 137 A. 749. Subsequently, in 1933, the statute was further amended by expressly providing that the exception should apply to one who at the time damage was sustained “was teasing, tormenting or abusing such dog.” Cum. Sup. 1933, §938b (Cum. Sup. 1935, § 1380c).

In Dorman v. Carlson, supra, in interpreting the meaning of the exception incorporated by the 1911 amendment, we used this language (p. 203): “The *363

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Bluebook (online)
100 A.2d 462, 140 Conn. 358, 1953 Conn. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verrilli-v-damilowski-conn-1953.