West v. Municipality of Anchorage

174 P.3d 224, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2007 WL 4465077
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2007
DocketS-12164
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 174 P.3d 224 (West v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. Municipality of Anchorage, 174 P.3d 224, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2007 WL 4465077 (Ala. 2007).

Opinions

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A dog bit or pawed a seven-week-old baby, causing several scratches along the baby's face and forehead. After an investigation, an Anchorage animal control enforcement officer concluded that the dog should be classified as a "level three" animal, defined by the city code as one that, "while under restraint, inflicts an aggressive bite or causes any physical injury to any human." An administrative hearing officer upheld this classification, as did the superior court. The dog's owner appeals. Because the hearing officer applied the correct burden of proof and properly interpreted the evidence, and because the decision is supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

On April 14, 2008, Kandi Treseott was visiting Knight's Auto Radio store in Anchorage and speaking with Jeffrey Knight, the store's owner and operator, while Treseott's seven-week old baby, Ethan, lay in a carrier by her feet. The baby was covered by a blanket when Ronald West entered the store with his black and white malamute dog, Gummie, on a long leash. Upon entering the store, Gummie approached the baby. What happened next is in dispute, though undeniably it resulted in several scratches to the baby's face.

According to Treseott, Gummie inserted his head under the blanket and grasped the baby's head in his mouth. Knight testified that he did not have a clear view of the baby and did not observe what Gummie did before walking away with the baby's blanket in his teeth. West, who was further from the baby, testified that Gummie never bit the baby but merely pushed his paw under the blanket [226]*226and rubbed his paw on the baby's face enough to cause the scratches.

There was conflicting testimony as to the baby's reaction. Trescott stated that the baby cried and continued erying for several minutes until she quieted him down by carrying him around the store. West's affidavit, filed two days after the incident, indicates that he heard the baby ery. An animal control report also indicates that Knight initially told animal control that the baby had cried. However, at the administrative hearing West (and Knight) denied that the baby cried and testified that the baby was merely in shock.

After receiving Gummie's rabies tag information, Treseott, joined by the baby's father, took the baby to see Dr. Martin Beals. Beals's report described the marks on the baby's head as "[sleveral superficial red whelp-like seratch marks on [the] right cheek and one longer one on the [left] cheek." He also reported very superficial serapes on the forehead with mild redness and wrote, "[nlo puncture wounds or deep bruising or tenderness noted."

B. Proceedings

Treseott called animal control to report the incident on April 14, 2003, the day the incident happened, and gave a written statement to Animal Control Officer Richard Gamble. Later that day Animal Control Enforcement Supervisor Richard Novy spoke with West by telephone and informed him of the need for Gummie to be quarantined. Gummic was quarantined for ten days beginning April 15. Novy continued to investigate the incident and on April 21 classified Gummie as a "level three" animal.

Anchorage Municipal Code (AMC) 17.40.020(A)(8) states: "Level three behavior is established if an animal, while under restraint, inflicts an aggressive bite or causes any physical injury to any human." This classification has a number of consequences, including an increase in the yearly licensing fee, requirements that warning signs be posted on the owner's property, and requirements that the dog be securely enclosed at all times or, when off the owner's property, on a leash six feet or shorter and muzzled.1,2

West appealed to an administrative hearing officer. After multiple continuances, a final hearing was held on April 27, 2004. On May 25, 2004, the Administrative Hearing Officer, Timothy Middleton, issued a ruling finding that Gummie warranted level three classification. Middleton specified that animal control bore the burden to prove the basis of the classification by a preponderance of the evidence, a burden which he found that it had met.

West appealed to the superior court, which dismissed the case for failure to prosecute when West did not timely file a brief and did not move the court to accept a late-filed brief. The superior court, apparently without the benefit of any briefing from West, also found that substantial evidence supported the hearing officer's decision.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

Where the superior court is acting as an intermediate court of appeals, we directly review the agency decision.3 Questions of fact are reviewed for substantial evidence.4 Questions of law involving agency expertise are reviewed using the reasonable basis test 5 because "where an agency interprets its own regulation ... a deferential standard of review properly recognizes that the ageney is best able to discern its intent in [227]*227promulgating the regulation at issue.6 We apply our independent judgment to issues of law not involving agency expertise.7

"Whether the trial court used the appropriate burden of persuasion 'presents a question of law to which this court applies its independent judgment, adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in view of precedent, reason and policy.' "8

Finally, we review the superior court's decision to dismiss for failure to prosecute for abuse of discretion.9

IV. DISCUSSION

We conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion in its procedural handling of this case, but decline to rest affirmance on West's failure to prosecute. Because the hearing officer's decision is correct on the law and supported by substantial evidence, we affirm.

A. The Hearing Officer Applied the Correct Standard of Proof.

West argues that decisions under the animal control ordinance of the Municipality of Anchorage should utilize the "beyond a reasonable doubt" standard of proof instead of the "preponderance of the evidence" test that the hearing officer used in this case. West asserts that beyond a reasonable doubt is the proper standard because of the "remedial or criminal" nature of the actions under the animal control ordinance, and the "remedial penalties" that resulted from the level three classification.10 In so doing he mistakenly conflates the meaning of remedial and criminal ordinances.

West cites State v. Von Thiele,11 a Washington case which determined that where a statute is remedial rather than criminal in nature, the state's burden of proof is preponderance of the evidence. In that case, Von Thiele was charged with illegal hunting and was forced to pay restitution.12 West misreads the court's discussion on this matter as distinguishing "criminal or remedial" statutes on the one hand and "civil" on the other.

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West v. Municipality of Anchorage
174 P.3d 224 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
174 P.3d 224, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 175, 2007 WL 4465077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaska-2007.