This appeal requires the Court to construe section 47-3-110 of the South Carolina Code (1987), the so-called dog bite statute. The narrow question before us is the meaning of the term “or” in section 47-3-110. The broader question requires us to discern the degree, if any, to which the Legislature retained the application of common law principles in section 47-3-110.
In construing the term “or” consistent with its common understanding as a disjunctive, we hold section 47-3-110 allows a plaintiff to pursue a statutory claim against the owner of the dog “or other person having the dog in his care or keeping.” Because of the plain language in this statute, we conclude that the Legislature intended to allow a claim against the owner of the dog when another person has the dog in his care or keeping. Moreover, in light of the trial court’s determination that statutory liability against a dog owner fundamentally rests on negligence concepts, we address the common law remnant retained in section 47-3-110. For the reasons set forth below, we reverse the grant of summary judgment to the Anderson County Sheriffs Office and remand for trial.
I.
Deputy Todd Caron of the Anderson County Sheriffs Office kenneled his police dog (Sleuber) at the Happistance Veterinary Clinic (clinic) in Townville, South Carolina, while he was on vacation. Sleuber had a recent history of multiple unpro
Harris pursued workers’ compensation benefits from her employer, the clinic. Harris subsequently filed this lawsuit against the sheriffs office, asserting claims under section 47-3-110 and negligence. Cross-motions for summary judgment were filed. The circuit court focused on the statutory claim and, with respect to a dog owner’s liability, read negligence principles into the statute. The circuit court reasoned that the sheriffs office was no longer in control of its police dog (and should not be held responsible) once care of the dog was relinquished to the clinic. In granting the sheriffs office summary judgment, the circuit court held that when a dog owner leaves his dog in the care of another, section 47-3-110 only permits a claim against the “other person having the dog in his care or keeping.” Harris appealed, and we granted Rule 204(b), SCACR, certification.
II.
Summary judgment is governed by Rule 56, SCRCP. Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Our review is plenary, however, for we are presented with a question of statutory interpretation. To
wn of Summerville v. City of N. Charleston,
III.
A.
We begin our analysis with this Court’s decision in
Hossenlopp v. Cannon,
The law of California provides that the owner of any dog which bites a person while such person is on or in a public place or is lawfully on or in a private place, including the property of the owner of such dog, is liable for such damages as may be suffered by the person bitten regardless of whether or not the dog previously had been vicious, regardless of the owner’s knowledge or lack of knowledge of any such viciousness, and regardless of whether or not the owner has been negligent in respect to the dog, provided, however, that if a person knowingly and voluntarily invites attack upon himself [herself], or if, when on the property of the dog owner, a person voluntarily, knowingly, and without reasonable necessity, exposes himself [herself] to the danger, the owner of the dog is not liable for the consequences.
Id.
at 372,
Hossenlopp represents the last time the Court addressed a dog bite case in a purely common law setting. The following year, 1986, the Legislature enacted section 47-3-110:
Whenever any person is bitten or otherwise attacked by a dog while the person is in a public place or is lawfully in a private place, including the property of the owner of the dog or other person having the dog in his care or keeping, the owner of the dog or other person having the dog in his care or keeping is liable for the damages suffered.... If a person provokes a dog into attacking him then the owner of the dog is not hable.
Section 47-3-110 was enacted in response to
Hossenlopp.
This transition from the common law to the statutory setting, of course, restricts our policy making role and concomitantly requires this Court to discern legislative intent. The juxtaposition of
Hossenlopp
to section 47-3-110 does, however, provide a strong frame of reference for ascertaining legislative
B.
“The cardinal rule of statutory construction is to ascertain and effectuate the intent of the [Legislature.”
Hodges v. Rainey,
In light of the remedial nature of the statute, and its plain language, we find the Legislature intended the word “or” in accordance with its common, disjunctive usage.
Brewer v. Brewer,
To construe the term “or” in an atypical manner, limiting the statutory claim of Harris to the clinic, would be inconsistent with the remedial and strict liability underpinnings of the statute. With the singular exception for the circumstance where the injured person provokes the attack, the Legislature has chosen to impose strict liability against dog owners and others having “the dog in [their] care or keeping.” § 47-3-110 (“[T]he owner of the dog or other person having the dog in his care or keeping is liable for the damages suffered.... ”).
Strict liability is a policy decision to impose liability regardless of fault. Relieving the dog owner of liability where the dog was in the care or keeping of another would be contrary to the statutory language and run counter to the manifest legislative intent of strict liability. Given the unambiguous
The use of the term “or” in section 47-3-110 does not mandate a forced selection for an injured party. With the one exception noted in the statute, the owner of the dog is subject to liability for injuries caused by his dog. Where the person is injured while the dog is in the care or keeping of someone who is not the dog’s owner, the injured party may pursue a statutory claim against the owner of the dog or the other person having the dog in his care or keeping.
C.
The dog owner posits two basic arguments to sustain the grant of summary judgment in its favor. First, we are asked to adopt the reasoning of the circuit court which overlaid negligence principles on section 47-3-110’s imposition of liability on a dog owner. The circuit court essentially found that the dog owner was no longer in control (and hence not at-fault) once the dog was left at the veterinary clinic. While the statute does implicate considerations of control with respect to the “other person having the dog in his care or keeping,” there is no such limitation with respect to the dog owner. Imposing a control requirement or other negligence principles by judicial fiat on the dog owner would impose requirements nowhere found in the statute. 1
D.
Because of the dog owner’s reliance on, and the trial court’s acceptance of, negligence principles to determine statutory liability against a dog owner, we address the limited interplay between section 47-3-110 and the common law. We broach this subject for the benefit of the bench and bar, as some adhere to the belief that section 47-3-110 liability against a dog owner incorporates negligence principles. This belief, while erroneous, is understandable in light of the statutorily imposed liability against those who undertake to provide the care or keeping of a dog.
The Legislature’s use of the phrase “care or keeping” clearly requires that the “other person” act in a manner which manifests an acceptance of responsibility for the care or keeping of the dog. To this degree, the Legislature retained the common law principle of duty in determining the liability of the “other person.” An example of this relationship be
Nesbitt involved an unprovoked attack by dogs on a child who was lawfully on private property. The property was owned by three persons, a mother and her two adult children, a son and a daughter. The mother owned the dogs, and she lived on the property with her son. The mother was liable under the statute simply as a result of owning the dogs. The added feature of owning the property and exercising control over the premises, in tandem with providing the care and keeping of the dogs, was a further basis on which to impose liability against the mother.
The son was liable under the statute as a property owner who exercised control over the premises. As concerns the statutory element of “care or keeping,” the son “lived with [his mother] at the time of the attack and ... tended [to] the dogs, taking them to the veterinarian, feeding them, and playing with them on occasion.”
Id.
at 446,
The daughter was the third property owner. She “had lived elsewhere for over five years.” The daughter “did not take care of the dogs ... [and she did] not exercise control over the premises.... ”
Id.
The
Nesbitt
court reversed a jury verdict against the daughter, noting that the “evidence precludes a finding that [she] owned the dogs or had them in her care or keeping.”
Id.
at 447,
Nesbitt,
thus, presents three scenarios under section 47-3-110 when the attack is unprovoked and the injured party is lawfully on the premises. First, the dog owner is strictly liable and common law principles are not implicated. Second, a property owner is liable when he exercises control over, and assumes responsibility for, the care and keeping of the dog. Third, a property owner is not liable under the statute when
E.
We recognize there remain unanswered questions concerning section 47-3-110. Merely by way of example, we can envision questions arising with regard to principles of indemnification and third party practice under Rule 14, SCRCP. We leave these questions for another day.
IV.
Construing the language of section 47-3-110, and discerning legislative intent, we hold that a person injured by a dog may pursue a claim against the owner of the dog when the injury occurs while the dog is in the care or keeping of another. The Legislature has made a policy decision to hold dog owners strictly liable when the dog bites or otherwise attacks a person who is lawfully on the premises, except when the injured person provoked the attack. The Legislature has further statutorily imposed liability on those who assume the care or keeping of a dog. The grant of summary judgment in favor of the Anderson County Sheriffs Office is reversed and the matter is remanded to the circuit court for trial.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. One rule of statutory construction allows the Court to deviate from a statute's plain language when the result would be so patently absurd that it is clear that the Legislature could not have intended such a result.
State ex rel. McLeod v. Montgomery,
. We do not suggest that the "other person” for section 47-3-110 purposes must always be a property owner. There may well be circumstances where a person (who is not the dog owner) has the care or keeping of a dog and property ownership is not relevant.
