Plaintiffs sued defendant, Joan Nolan, for personal injuries allegedly sustained by minor plaintiff, Joseph Mathes, as a result of being mauled by defendant’s tenant’s dog. The court entered a summary judgment for the defendant and plaintiffs appeal. We affirm.
The tenant, David Wear, owned an Alaskan Malamute named Yukon. Allegedly, the dog lunged over the fence and pulled the minor plaintiff onto the rental premises inflicting permanent injuries. Defendant, Joan Nolan, was the owner of the property. Much of the material before the court on the motion for summary judgment involved the level of knowledge defendant had concerning the presence of Yukon on the property and the extent to which Yukon gave the appearance of a propensity for viciousness. Defendant did not reside on the premises leased.
Plaintiffs raised no challenge to the sufficiency of the motion for summary judgment in the court below. On appeal they assert that the motion does not comply with Rule 74.04(c)(1) and that because of such failure we are required to reverse the summary judgment. The motion is not in technical compliance with the Rule, although the noncompliance is minor.
Missouri appellate courts have addressed the question of non-compliance with Rule 74.04(c) on several occasions. The answers have not necessarily been consistent. In a situation where no objection was raised in the trial court we held that the non-movant’s
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failure to challenge the particularity of a pleading at the trial level, including a motion for summary judgment, results in a waiver of the objection.
RJF International Corporation v. B.F. Goodrich Company,
In
Mercantile Bank of Sikeston v. Moore,
In
Plank v. Union Electric Company,
The following facts are undisputed and decisive of the motion for summary judgment. Yukon is owned by David Wear and is physically kept at Wear’s residence which he
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rents from defendant. Defendant does not reside on the premises, and does not own Yukon. The injury occurred on the rental premises. The Missouri rule, and that followed in most jurisdictions was stated in
Duren v. Kunkel,
A possessor of a domestic animal that he knows or has reason to know has dangerous propensities abnormal to its class is subject to liability for harm done by the animal to another, although he has exercised the utmost care to prevent it from doing harm. Restatement (Second) of Torts, § 509(1) (1977).
In
Barnett v. Rowlette,
Sections 509 and 514 of the Restatement deal with strict liability. Section 518 deals with liability for injury by an animal arising from negligence. It requires that the person held to be hable “possesses or harbors” the animal. Defendant has no liability under that section.
Plaintiffs urge that in
Garrett v. Overland Garage & Parts Inc.,
Judgment affirmed.
