The appellee filed a claim against the appellant which alleged that the appellee sustained certain injuries when appellant’s dog caused her to be thrown to the ground.
The appellant filed a motion for summary judgment which was denied. It is from that order that the appellant filed this appeal. Held:
1. Appellee’s counsel states that this action was brought under Code § 105-110 which provides: "A person who owns or keeps a vicious or dangerous animal of any kind, and who, by careless management of the same, or by allowing the same to go at liberty, causes injury to another who does not, by his own act, provoke the injury, shall be liable in damages to the person so injured.”
The appellee stated in an affidavit that: "Affiant shows that the defendant allowed the dog to run at large in the neighborhood and knew that the dog was of a nature that posed a threat and hazard to the safety of persons in the neighborhood in that the dog on numerous occasions had chased other person or persons while the dog was at liberty ... Affiant believes that the dog was cared for by the defendant negligently and carelessly in the management of the dog and that he allowed the dog to go at liberty without restraint knowing the dog was of a dangerous nature and posed a threat and hazard to the safety of persons
The appellant’s affidavit stated in part that: "The plaintiff in the above case, was employed by him as a housekeeper; ... a small dog, which was given to and belonged to affiant’s children, was kept at his house at said address; the dog was known by the name of Corky; Corky had never bitten anyone to affiant’s knowledge; Corky had never shown any tendency to be vicious to affiant’s knowledge and was not vicious in anyway to affiant’s knowledge; affiant has never heard of Corky biting anyone or showing any tendency to be vicious; affiant has never known or heard of Corky attempting to attack anyone.”
The allegations of the petition and the evidence show no liability of the defendant nor any action by him which would constitute negligence.
Construing the evidence most strongly in the plaintiffs favor, the most that was shown was that the defendant allowed the dog to run at large in the neighborhood and that the defendant knew the dog had chased other people. Connell v. Bland,
The overruling of the appellant’s motion for a summary judgment was error.
Judgment reversed.
