Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield v. Stewart

1978 OK 55, 577 P.2d 1295, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 377
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 18, 1978
DocketNo. 48770
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1978 OK 55 (Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield v. Stewart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield ex rel. Whitefield v. Stewart, 1978 OK 55, 577 P.2d 1295, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 377 (Okla. 1978).

Opinion

BARNES, Justice:

Appellee, Larry M. Stewart, brings this appeal seeking certiorari to review an opinion of the Court of Appeals, Division No. 2. By order of this Court dated February 14, 1977, we granted certiorari.

The pertinent facts are as hereinafter related. Appellee owned a full-grown Humbolt or woolly monkey, named Stockely. On June 27,1974, six-year-old Kimberly Sue Whitefield, hereinafter referred to as Appellant Kimberly, who resided two doors from Appellee and his wife in a Del City, Oklahoma, residential neighborhood, was allegedly bitten by Appellee’s monkey.

In the eight years Appellee owned Stockely, he was kept in their home and had played with over one hundred children without biting anyone. There was one incident five years before when Appellee’s son was scratched while playing with the pet.

On the day of the accident in question, Appellee had chained Stockely to the top of a three-foot chain link fence which divided his yard from that of his new neighbor-to-be, Mrs. Helen Walker. On this day, Mrs. Walker was doing some general cleaning prior to moving into the house and met Appellee at the fence. She testified that Appellee told her the monkey was a little sulky and had been in a bad humor, but she played with him without incident. Appellant Kimberly was not present at that time.

After the visit with Mrs. Walker, Appel-lee chained the monkey to the center of the fence so he could not climb over and crossed the yard to water his garden. Thereafter, a scream was heard and Kimberly was seen heading toward Mrs. Walker’s door.

Appellant Kimberly claimed the monkey bit her and brought suit by and through her father, Don R. Whitefield, as next friend, against Appellee for injuries sustained. The petition contained a second cause of action pleaded by Kimberly’s father for the recovery of medical expenses he had incurred. Suit was filed based upon two theories: (1) liability for keeping a monkey of a vicious nature and disposition, and (2) negligence for failing to keep the monkey properly restrained. Appellee denied these allegations.

There was evidence that Appellant Kimberly had teased the monkey, swung a stick at him, and had thrown gravel and grass at him on several occasions, including an incident three or four days before the alleged bite. The record reflects Appellant Kimberly had been told to stay away from the monkey and not to tease him.

[1297]*1297Appellee’s wife, Helen Stewart, testified that approximately two weeks prior to the alleged bite, she observed the monkey chained to the fence and saw Appellant Kimberly kicking at the fence and running her foot along the fence. She said the monkey backed off and was hollering, and she told Kimberly to go home as she did not want the monkey, teased or hurt. Her testimony also reflects another incident in which several children, including Appellant Kimberly, were yelling, hollering, and teasing the monkey. She stated that after this the monkey would back off when he saw children unless he knew them.

Appellant Kimberly testified she was given permission by Mrs. Walker to play with her puppy and watch the monkey from the Walker’s yard, but was told not to tease the monkey. Kimberly stated she did not tease the monkey, but that suddenly he jumped up on the fence, grabbed her arm and bit her. At the trial, Kimberly testified she did not have her fingers inside the chain link fence; her deposition was otherwise.

Appellant Don Whitefield’s trial testimony also conflicts with that of his deposition. His deposition testimony reflects the monkey pulled his daughter over the fence. At trial he testified this was not his deposition statement, that Kimberly was pulled into the fence, and then said he was uncertain what occurred because he was not present.

Expert witnesses on primate behavior testified that the woolly monkey belongs to a class of new world monkeys which are very popular pets, but that they were not domesticated because domestication is a genetic problem. One expert witness said that from the references she had read woolly monkeys made good pets. She did indicate that in her opinion an eight-year-old woolly monkey could have been entirely friendly with infants and young children and members of the family up to the time of this incident, but that hormone changes begin to occur about that age; that he could be friendly to an adult female and without provocation bite a young child. She stated this is the reason primates go to the zoo as they approach adulthood. Another expert witness testified that books he read indicate the woolly monkey is gentle and trusting and can be tamed, and added that, based on the evidence he heard and what he had read, there would be a very low probability that a tame woolly monkey would bite.

At the close of the evidence, the Appellant moved for a directed verdict and requested two instructions, citing City of Tonkawa v. Danielson, 166 Okl. 241, 27 P.2d 348 (1933); Congress & Empire Spring Co. v. Edgar, 99 U.S. 645, 25 L.Ed. 487 (1879), as authority. Appellee agreed with the substance of these requests, which were incorporated into the Trial Court’s Instruction No. 4:

“If the owner should, by reason of observation or past experience, have knowledge that a human being might aggravate and provoke the monkey into dangerous action, then the owner has the duty of exercising reasonable care, commensurate with the danger, to prevent the monkey from attacking such human being, provided that the owner has observed the actions of the monkey and the human being, sufficiently to convince a person of ordinary prudence that the monkey might attack that person.”

From a judgment on a jury verdict for Defendant-Appellee Stewart, an appeal was taken by Appellants complaining of instructional and evidentiary errors. The Court of Appeals, Division No. 2, reversed and remanded for a new trial, holding that the facts admitted by Appellee established his liability for Appellant’s injury and that Appellant’s motion for a directed verdict as to such liability should have been sustained, leaving only the matter of damages to the jury.

Appellee!s Petition for Certiorari and brief in support rely on City of Tonkawa v. Danielson, supra. For many years animals were divided into two classes; wild and tame. The owner of such animal was strictly liable for any damages done by a wild animal. Early text writers discouraged this approach. City of Tonkawa v. Danielson, supra, quoted with apparent ap[1298]*1298proval the language found in 3 Corpus Juris at page 87, which divided animals into five classes, not two:

“For the purpose of determining the rules of law applicable to cases involving injuries committed by animals, they may be divided in five general classes, namely: (1) Animals ferae naturae, of known savage and vicious nature, as bears, lions, tigers; (2) animals ferae naturae which generally may be domesticated or tamed as to lose their native ferocity, as bees, monkeys, etc.; (3) domestic animals which are known by their owner or keeper to be vicious; (4) domestic animals not known by their owner or keeper to be vicious, and (5) domestic herbivorous animals prone to wander and consume crops, grass and herbage.”

We further quoted in City of Tonkawa, supra, also with apparent approval, the following language from Congress & Empire Spring Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
1978 OK 55, 577 P.2d 1295, 1978 Okla. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitefield-ex-rel-whitefield-ex-rel-whitefield-v-stewart-okla-1978.