OPINION
This is an appeal from the granting of a summary judgment. At issue is the liabili *426 ty of the landlord for personal injuries caused by a tenant’s animals.
We consider the facts and the inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to appellant.
Partin v. Olney,
Margaret Skinner owned two parcels of land. She lived on one and leased the adjacent parcel to Bud Wellington on a month-to-month basis. The Bradys lived on the other side of Wellington. The property leased to Wellington was enclosed by a chain link fence.
Skinner gave Wellington permission to keep two mules on the lot. One was named “Martin Luther” and the other was named “King”. The latter acted like a mule. He was ornery. Basically he did not like anybody and would put his ears back and shy away whenever anyone got close to him. On the other hand, Martin Luther acted more like a horse than a mule. He was playful and friendly. The mules were docile and neither mule had ever kicked, bitten or tried to injure anyone. They were no more dangerous than any other mules, and King, like all mules, was not to be trusted because mules are unpredictable.
One day Arthur Brady, Jr., who was at the time four years old, got kicked by one of the mules and was seriously injured. No one knows which mule kicked him.
Appellants rely on
Uccello v. Laudenslayer,
Since neither mule had ever attacked, injured or kicked anyone, it is sheer speculation on appellants’ part when they assert that the boy was probably kicked by King. Aside from this speculation, this case differs from Uccello because there was no showing of any dangerous propensities on the part of the mules.
Appellants also assert that Skinner should be liable under the doctrine of attractive nuisance. Appellants have cited no cases which hold that this doctrine applies to animals. In the case of
Rolen v. Maryland Casualty Company,
Affirmed.
Notes
. On the issue of the landlord’s liability to third persons for injury resulting from an attack by a dangerous or vicious animal kept by a tenant, see Annot.
