As a result of a bite by a pit bull terrier named Tiny, ten year old Killian Nutt (plaintiff) filed a multiple count complaint
Background. The summary judgment record here was developed largely through deposition testimony. “We recite the material facts in the light most favorable to [the plaintiff], as the nonmoving party.” Lyons v. Nutt,
Earlier in the summer of 2005, Grace Morrell, another tenant at the premises, also had an encounter with a pit bull owned by Keane. While unloading groceries from her vehicle, Morrell watched in fear as the pit bull ran toward her. The dog stopped short of Morrell and then returned to Keane, who was watching from a few feet away. Spooked by the event, Morrell reported the incident to James Florio, the defendants’ son, and chastised Keane for not keeping his dog on a leash. Although Morrell testified that the dog that charged her was not the same dog that bit the plaintiff, there was other evidence that Keane had only one pit bull.
There was testimony from Emil Florio that he did not allow tenants to have any pets without his approval and that he had not approved Tiny. He also testified that seven or eight years earlier Lawrence Nutt had kept dogs at the premises and Florio made him get rid of them. Nutt also testified that Florio made him get rid of dogs he owned at the premises. Hamblett testified that she and Nutt received a letter from the landlord in 1997 stating that no dogs were allowed on the premises and as a result, she and Nutt got rid of their two dogs.
Finally, Ann Campobasso, inspector of animals in Waltham for six years, testified that the pit bull was the breed of dog that was involved in more human biting cases than any other breed.
In count 4, alleging negligence against the defendants, the plaintiff claimed that the defendants “allowed [Tiny] to roam unrestrained in and around the Premises”; that “as owners and landlords of the Premises, [they] had a duty to keep their tenants, in this case the plaintiff[], free from an unreasonable risk of harm”; and that “[b]y allowing Keane, a tenant, to keep on the Premises the very aggressive pit bull terrier dog ... in the
Discussion. A. Standard of review. “The standard of review of a grant of summary judgment is whether, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, all material facts have been established and the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Nelson v. Salem State College,
Generally, courts do not resolve negligence claims through summary judgment because the question of negligence is usually a fact determination for the jury. See Solimene v. B. Grauel & Co., KG,
B. Negligence claim. We are concerned here with the potential liability of the defendants, who were the owners of the property where Tiny lived, but were not the owners or keepers of Tiny. Thus, this is not a case governed by the strict liability “Dog-Bite statute,” G. L. c. 140, § 155, under which “the owner or keeper of a dog is liable ... for injury resulting from an act of the dog without proof. . . that its owners or keeper was negligent
Under the common-law principles applicable here, the plaintiff cannot recover from the defendants without evidence that they knew or reasonably should have known that the dog had dangerous propensities.
While the defendants may not be held strictly liable by virtue of Tiny’s breed, knowledge of that breed and its propensities may properly be a factor to be considered in determining whether the defendants were negligent under common-law principles. At issue, then, is whether Tiny had dangerous propensities, whether the defendants knew or should have known about them, and, if so, what actions by the defendants would have been reasonable, in light of their duty as landlords “to protect tenants from reasonably foreseeable risks of harm.” Or v. Edwards,
So ordered.
Notes
The complaint also listed the plaintiff’s two siblings, Shannan Nutt and
The plaintiff did not appeal from the dismissal of the two counts against Keane, who is not a party to this appeal.
The parties also described Tiny’s behavior as “humping” the children’s legs.
The plaintiff does not argue that we should pronounce a rule that pit bull terriers are inherently dangerous by virtue of their breed, thereby in effect creating a new cause of action by imposing strict liability upon owners of properties where they are kept. We thus do not address such an argument, and in any event, the decision to create “a species-specific standard of care” is likely one for the Legislature. See Ferrara v. Marra,
There appears to be no dispute among the parties here that Tiny is a pit bull. We note, however, that the term may describe any number of breeds. See American Dog Owners Assn. v. Lynn,
Regarding the pit bull, Justice Cowin observed in concurrence that “the fact that the dog is in the home and is of a breed known to be dangerous, either in the officers’ own experience or through common knowledge, should be sufficient” for a “no-knock” warrant to issue. Santiago, supra at 579.
In Audette, the plaintiff argued that the defendant’s agent knew of the police dog’s vicious "propensities because the agent trained the dog to apprehend suspects. Audette, supra at 736. We ruled that the simple fact that the dog was trained for police work, without more, was not enough to establish that the defendant knew of the dog’s dangerous propensities. Id. at 737.
Courts in other jurisdictions have reversed summary judgments in favor of landlords where, as here, there was a genuine issue of material fact as to a landlord’s knowledge of the dog’s alleged dangerous propensities. For example, as noted above, see Ferrara v. Marra,
