84 N.Y.S. 60 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
This action is brought to recover damages for personal injuries, the plaintiff, a girl of sixteen years, alleging that she was bitten by a dog owned or harbored by Francis X. Donoghue. While it appears to ns that the identity of the dog, as well as other features of the evidence, is characterized by vagueness, we should be disposed to affirm the judgment were it not for an error in the charge of the learned court. There was some evidence that a dog, perhaps the same dog which is alleged to have bitten the plaintiff, had bitten two other persons prior to the time that the plaintiff was injured, and a case was presented for the jury to determine whether the defendant had notice of the vicious tendencies of the dog. In submitting the case to the jury,- however, the learned court, after presuming what had not been proven, that the attack was made in a public highway, said: “ If this dog was running at large on the public highway when this girl was bitten, providing you so find, it does away with the necessity of proving actual knowledge of the vicious tendency and disposition of the dog, for he is chargeable with the vicious tendency and disposition of the dog, if the dog is running at large on the public highway.” This is undoubtedly the rule applied to wild animals, such as bears, wolves, panthers, lions, etc.; animals which are by nature wild and vicious, but no authority which we have been able to discover holds that domestic animals, such as horses, dogs, oxen, etc., are presumed to be vicious and, therefore, dangerous to the community when upon the public highways. The rule is stated in Quilty v. Battie (135 N. Y. 201, 204, citing Addison on Torts [D. & B. ed.], 230), that “ as soon as such an animal is known to be mischievous it is the duty of the person whose premises it frequents to send it away or cause it to be destroyed,” and that a “ vicious domestic animal, if permitted to run at large, is a nuisance, and a person who knowingly keeps or harbors it, and thus affords it a place of refuge and protection, is liable for the maintenance of a nuisance, and for all the damages directly resulting from it.” But it is nowhere suggested that a dog running at
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Jenks and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.