Petitioners Gerald and Corliss Branch seek review of a Court of Appeals decision reversing the dismissal of a personal injury action brought against the Branches. This action arose out of an attack upon Respondent Clara Frobig by a Bengal tiger owned by a tenant on Petitioners’ rental property. We granted review and now reverse the Court of Appeals.
Facts
The Branches own a large piece of property in Bothell, Washington. In 1988, the Branches leased this property to Anne Gordon, owner of Animal Advocates, Inc., a business providing wild and domestic animals for demonstrations, film, and video projects. Among the animals to be kept on the premises was "Sultan”, a Bengal tiger. The Branches had some reservations about the wild animals Gordon intended to house and maintain that Gordon verbally agreed to:
*734 1. Purchase her own policy of liability insurance;
2. Keep a dart gun available;
3. Build appropriate cages;
4. Not do anything illegal;
5. Never permit the animals to be unrestrained out of the cages;
6. Not use the premises for business purposes;
7. Conduct no filming of the animals on the premises, nor permit any other commercial use of the animals on the premises; and most importantly,
8. Vacate the premises if the neighbors protested too much.
See Frobig v. Gordon,
In response to the citation, the Branches notified Gordon that she must either cease operating her commercial business or vacate. However, on July 8, prior to the expiration of the 10-day appeal period, Gordon began filming a commercial video for The Boeing Company on the premises. "Sultan”, the tiger, was part of the commercial and was unleashed during its .filming. Clara Frobig agreed to assist in the filming and was attacked by Sultan. Frobig was seriously injured as a result of the attack.
Frobig brought suit for damages against the Branches, Gordon, Boeing, Snohomish County, and the director of the *735 commercial. We are concerned here only with Frobig’s action against the Branches alleging negligence and strict liability. The trial court dismissed this action finding that, as landlords, the Branches had no liability. Frobig appealed and the Court of Appeals reversed and remanded for trial. In its decision, the court distinguished between the liability of a landlord for dog attacks on rented or leased premises and the liability for a tiger attack. See Fro-big, at 576-77.
Analysis
The rule in Washington is that the owner, keeper, or harborer of a dangerous or vicious animal is liable; the landlord of the owner, keeper, or harborer is not.
Clemmons v. Fidler,
As the Court of Appeals observed in
Clemmons,
this rule is consistent with the analogous law governing liability of landlords to third parties for defects on leased premises.
Clemmons,
at 37. A landlord owes no greater duty to the invitees or guests of his tenant than he owes to the tenant himself.
Regan v. Seattle,
(1) latent or hidden defects in the leasehold
(2) that existed at the commencement of the leasehold
(3) of which the landlord had actual knowledge
(4) and of which the landlord failed to inform the tenant.
*736
Younger v. United States,
These common law principles have statutory parallels in Washington. The Residential Landlord-Tenant Act of 1973, RCW 59.18.060, provides that a landlord has no duty to repair a defective condition caused by a tenant, and RCW 59.18.130(5) states that it is the tenant’s duty not to permit a nuisance on the rental premises.
While Washington courts have most often applied these principles of liability in cases dealing with a tenant’s vicious dog (though
Kimball
did involve a bull), other jurisdictions have applied similar principles in cases concerning wild animals.
See Theobald v. Grey Pub. Relations, Inc.,
We do not believe that a separate rule of law for cases involving wild animal attacks is necessary. Courts have long recognized that a vicious dog and a wild animal are equally dangerous, as the following observation from
Laverone v. Mangianti,
The Court of Appeals found that the landlords here might be liable for third party injuries because they knew their tenant would have a dangerous animal on the premises before they rented their property to her. This prior knowledge of the landlords, however, has no significance. Under Washington law, the landlords would not be liable to the tenant for the tiger’s attack so should not be liable to third parties for injuries inflicted by the animal. See Regan, at 504. The wild animals were Anne Gordon’s alone, and under Washington law liability resulting from the ownership and management of those animals rests with Anne Gordon alone.
We recognize that some courts have held a landlord liable for injuries inflicted by a tenant’s dangerous animal where the landlord knows of the potential danger and has some sort of control, either by virtue of provisions in the lease or previous dealings with the tenant, over the animal’s presence.
See
Veilleux, at 1012; 4 Stuart M. Speiser et al.,
American Law of Torts
§ 14:76, at 257-58 (1987). The principal case espousing this view is the opinion on which the
*738
Court of Appeals relies. In
Strunk v. Zoltanski,
at the inception of the lease when it is known that the tenant will keep a watch or guard dog, to take reasonable precautions for the protection of third persons, by provisions in the lease with respect to confinement or control of the dog or otherwise.
Strunk, at 577.
The dissenting opinion in Strunk observed that if the landlord’s liability were governed by principles of ordinary negligence, application of the above-imposed duty would result in a finding of no liability under the facts presented:
[B]oth at the time the landlord saw the dog and at the time of plaintiff’s injury, the dog had been tied up by the tenant. The landlord’s liability thus must rest not on a negligent failure to see that the dog was confined or controlled but on strict liability deriving from the simple fact that the landlord knew at the time of leasing that the tenant kept a dog with "vicious propensities[.]”
(Citation omitted.) Strunk, at 578-79 (Kaye, J., dissenting). The dissent found no basis for imposing strict liability, adding that "[liability should not be imposed upon one who has no control over the tort-feasor”. Strunk, at 579 (Kaye, J., dissenting). The dissent further noted that a landlord’s awareness of a dangerous condition existing when a tenant first takes possession should not create landlord liability when the tenant, who has the opportunity to protect others from the dangerous condition, fails to do so. Strunk, at 579 (Kaye, J., dissenting).
*739
The majority in
Strunk
relied principally on
Uccello v. Laudenslayer,
Even if we agreed with Uccello and Strunk and the analysis they represent, as applied here, there is no liability. As the Court of Appeals noted, Strunk requires a landlord with knowledge that dangerous activities may take place on rental premises "to take such precautions as lie within the control of the landlord reasonably to protect such third persons from the injuries to be foreseen if no such precautions are taken”. Strunk, at 575, cited in Frobig, at 575.
According to the Branches (and the Court of Appeals), the Branches leased to Gordon only after she agreed to (1) purchase her own policy of liability insurance; (2) keep a dart gun available; (3) build appropriate cages; (4) not do anything illegal; (5) never permit the animals to be unrestrained out of their cages; (6) not use the premises for business purposes; (7) conduct no filming of the animals on the premises, nor permit any other commercial use of the animals on the premises; and (8) vacate the premises if the neighbors protested too much. Frobig, at 572. Had Gordon adhered to these precautions, her tiger would not have injured Clara Frobig under the circumstances presented here. Frobig’s injuries occurred during the filming of a commercial, in direct contravention of the lease provisions. The tiger was also unre *740 strained during the filming at a time when Gordon possessed neither a dart gun nor liability insurance.
Further, the only dates provided in the record show that complaints about the animals were filed with Snohomish County between June 20, 1988, and July 7, 1988. The attack occurred July 8, 1988. Under Washington law, a lease for an indefinite time may be terminated by written notice of 20 days or more preceding the end of the month or the period when payment is due. RCW 59.18.200(1). Here, there were not 20 days between the first date of the complaints and the end of the month, nor even 20 days between the complaints and the July 8 tiger attack. While there is no copy of the lease in the record, it does not appear that the Branches had time to evict Gordon before Frobig was injured.
See Fernandez v. Marks,
The Branches did tell Anne Gordon to cease her commercial business or vacate on June 29,1988, which was soon after the first complaint was filed. This cease or vacate directive came after Snohomish County investigated the premises and found that Gordon’s operation of a business violated local zoning provisions. Had Gordon obeyed this order immediately, neither the filming of the commercial nor Frobig’s injuries would have occurred. However, Gordon had 30 days within which to cease or vacate and 10 days within which to appeal the order, and she chose to pursue her commercial activities during this period. The attack on Clara Frobig occurred before the appeal period expired. It is difficult to see how the Branches could have acted more expeditiously to evict Gordon, if that was indeed their duty as a result of the complaints made about her animals.
The issue of the Branches’ duty to Clara Frobig however, is not a question of fact, as the Court of Appeals found, nor is it a question of morality, as the court in Uccello suggests. Rather, the issue is a matter of law, and we conclude that landlords have no duty to protect third parties from a *741 tenant’s lawfully owned but dangerous animals. We therefore reverse the Court of Appeals and affirm the trial court’s grant of summary judgment dismissing Frobig’s claim against the Branches, the landlords in this case.
Andersen, C.J., and Utter, Brachtenbach, Dolliver, Durham, Smith, Guy, and Johnson, JJ., concur.
Notes
Two theories of liability exist at common law; a dog
owner
who knows of vicious propensities may be strictly liable and an
owner
without such knowledge may be negligent if he fails to reasonably prevent harm.
Beeler v. Hickman,
