Lead Opinion
Pamela Green appeals from the grant of summary judgment to Robert Wilson in this personal injury action against him individually and in his capacity as executor of the estate of his wife, Audie Wilson. In the action, Green alleged that she was injured while trying to get away from the Wilsons’ dog. Because there is evidence that Mrs. Wilson knew that the dog had the propensity to do the type of act that
Summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine issues of material fact remain and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. On appeal, we review a trial court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, construing the evidence and all inferences drawn from it in a light favorable to the nonmovant.
Stennette v. Miller,
So viewed, the evidence showed that at the time of the incident Green worked for a housecleaning company that provided cleaning services to the Wilsons, who owned a border collie named Nani. Normally, after arriving at the Wilsons’ house, the housecleaners would wait outside until Mrs. Wilson locked Nani in a room. When the housecleaners were ready to clean that room, Mrs. Wilson would move Nani, sometimes physically dragging the dog to another room as the dog lunged, barked, and growled at the housecleaners. After securing Nani in the other room, Mrs. Wilson would tell the house-cleaners that they were “safe.” Although Green testified that she did not see Nani behave viciously or aggressively, the other housecleaners testified that they were afraid of Nani.
On October 11, 2011, Green and a co-worker arrived at the Wilsons’ house in a cleaning company van. Unlike other times, on this occasion Nani was outside the house in a fenced enclosure, barking. Green got out of the van. Suddenly, Green’s co-worker saw Nani leap over the fence and run toward Green. The co-worker yelled a warning to Green, who quickly jumped inside the van and shut the door as Nani barked, growled, and jumped against the van door. In Green’s effort to escape the dog, she struck her arm against the van, sustaining an injury that required surgery.
Citing “principles of common law negligence,” Green has argued that the Wilsons were liable because they knew of Nani’s propensity to “chase people, or to act aggressively toward people so as to frighten them.” (She expressly does not seek to recover under OCGA § 51-2-7, which provides for liability of the owner or keeper of a vicious or dangerous animal for injuries caused by that animal.) Our law as to negligence claims against dog owners provides that
a dog owner will be liable for damages only if the owner has knowledge that the dog has the propensity to do the particular act . . . which caused injury to the complaining party.*633 Under this test, the plaintiff must show whether the dog had the propensity to do the act that caused the injury and, if so, whether the owner had knowledge of that propensity.
Wade v. American Nat. Ins. Co.,
The trial court granted summary judgment to Wilson on the ground that there was no evidence that Nani had the propensity to do the particular act that caused Green’s injury because Nani had never before chased anyone, inside or outside the house. The trial court correctly noted that “a dog’s aggressive or menacing behavior alone is not sufficient to place its owner on notice of a propensity’ to do a particular act. Wade,
have reason to know of [the animal’s] propensity to do harm of the type which it inflicts [,] this does not mean an incident involving the exact same conduct and the exact same injury must actually occur before the owner’s knowledge may be inferred, as long as there is an incident or incidents which would put a prudent man on notice to anticipate the event which occurred.
Torrance v. Brennan,
Green presented more than simply evidence of Nani’s aggressive or menacing behavior. She presented evidence that, on at least one occasion, a barking and growling Nani lunged at the housecleaners as Mrs. Wilson held the dog back. We find no meaningful distinction between this behavior and what happened on the day Green was injured. In both instances the dog’s acts could be construed as attempts to move toward a person in an aggressive manner. The evidence of the incident in which Nani, while restrained, lunged aggressively at a housecleaner raises a genuine issue of material fact as to whether a prudent person would anticipate that Nani would chase someone if unrestrained. Together with that evidence, Mrs. Wilson’s efforts to keep Nani away from the housecleaners also raises a fact question about her knowledge of the dog’s propensities. See
The dissent cites several cases in which we held that prior incidents, as a matter of law, did not show the defendant dog owner knew or should have known of the dog’s propensity to do the act that resulted in the plaintiff’s injury. In those cases, however, the dogs’ prior conduct was not as similar to the conduct that injured the plaintiff as is the case here. See, e.g., Kringle v. Elliott,
Because a fact question exists as to whether Nani had the propensity to do the act that caused Green’s injury and whether Mrs. Wilson had knowledge of that propensity, summary judgment was not appropriate. See Evans-Watson v. Reese,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Because there is no evidence in the record sufficient to infer that the owners of the dog, the Wilsons,
For Green to recover damages resulting from the injuries she sustained while running away from the Wilsons’ dog,
Green and her co-worker attempted to temper the impact of the foregoing (and rather damaging) deposition testimony in post-deposition affidavits. But the trial court had every right to disregard Green’s contradictory testimony under the Supreme Court of Georgia’s holding in Prophecy Corp. v. Charles Rossignol, Inc.
For all of the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
I am authorized to state that Judge Ray and Judge McMillian join in this dissent.
Notes
For the sake of simplicity, I will refer to Robert Wilson and the estate of Audie Wilson collectively as “the Wilsons.”
Although Green maintains that her claim for damages is based on common law principles of negligence, rather than OCGA § 51-2-7, this appears to be (as the majority recognizes) a distinction without a difference for purposes of my analysis. Indeed, as our Supreme Court recently noted, the General Assemblys amendment to OCGA § 51-2-7 in 1985 made clear — to the extent that there was any doubt — that the standard for liability under the statute is negligence, not strict liability. See Eshleman v. Key,
See Kringle v. Elliott,
See Durham,
See Kringle,
See Kringle,
During the co-worker’s deposition, the following exchange took place between Green’s co-worker and the Wilsons’ attorney:
Q. Dog ever threaten you in any manner?
A. No ... .
Q. And so you had never seen him act that way[,] had you?
A. No, never.
During Green’s deposition, the following exchange took place between Green and the Wilsons’ attorney:
Q. So I take it that you never had any problem with the dog in those [prior] instances [¿.e., when she cleaned the Wilsons’ home], at all?
A. No, because .. .
Q. Would that be fair?
A. That’s fair.
Q. Okay.
A. The only thing, the incident was he was outside that day ....
Q. Well, you never had — the dog... never chased you.... It didn’t happen at any time, did it?
A. No, it did not....
Q. [I]t’s true, is it not, Ms. Green, that the dog never appeared vicious to you until the date of this incident? Isn’t that correct?
A. Right, but that’s the only — that’s the only day because he was outside. Like I told you — if he was inside, that’s a different thing.
Q. Right, but... he had never appeared aggressive to you until that date [of the chasing incident]. Isn’t that correct?
A. Yes.
See Hamilton,
See Phiel,
Cf. Evans-Watson v. Reese,
