336 F.2d 950 | D.C. Cir. | 1964
Lead Opinion
This appellant suffered injuries on July 14, 1962 when he was bitten by a police dog i-unning at large. The dog admittedly belonged to the District of Columbia .and was used by the Metropolitan Police in performance of police duties. In the District Court judgment was entered for the appellee upon its claim that the District of Columbia was then engaged in the performance of a governmental function. We do not acquiesce in the disposition of .appellant’s claim.
It is undisputed that on the evening of July 14, 1962, a Metropolitan Police sergeant assigned to the “Canine Corps” received a radio report that a housebreaking was in progress at 15th and K Streets, N. W. Upon arrival at that location officers were informed that the suspected housebreaker was running through an alley. The sergeant, according to his affidavit, saw the fugitive “who did not respond to my order to stop. Thereupon I released the police dog, Tara, to arrest the fugitive.” We may not doubt that the police officer thought the dog might “arrest” the fugitive, but he did not do so.
Instead, the dog turned upon the appellant and bit him in the right arm and the lower part of the right leg. The appellant, an employee of a local newspaper, had been seated on a step outside his place of employment. The District’s answer admitted he “was leisurely and properly sitting down and eating his lunch at the time.” After the dog’s attack upon the appellant, the sergeant’s affidavit states, he “then recovered control of the dog. I requested Mr. Harbin remain where he was while I continxxed the chase * * *.
The appellant’s complaint had alleged that the District was the owner of the police dog, Tara, “especially trained to attack certain human beings in and upon the public streets * * * and was, therefore, known or should have been known * * * to be of a vicious nature and disposition.” The complaint may be read further to allege that the officer had negligently failed to control the dog which was not then on a leash or under any form of restraint. The dog when suddenly attacking the appellant had “responded to a command given by” the officer at a time when the appellant was lawfully seated and eating his lunch.
The appellee in its answer had admitted that it had trained the police dog, Tara, “for the purpose of detecting, preventing and arresting crime” and that the appellant had been bitten by that dog. It was urged in defense that the District’s operation of the Metropolitan Police Department is a governmental function controlled by the doctrine of sovereign immunity.
The District points to our opinion in Urow v. District of Columbia,
But there are other sections of the Code which seem not to have been considered. For example, D.C.Code, § 47-2005 (1961) provides that any person owning a dog “shall be liable in a civil action for any damage done by said dog to the full amount of the injury inflicted.” Again, D.C.Code, § 1-902 (1961)’ authorizes the Commissioners to settle’ claims whether at law or in equity asserted against the District of Columbia. whenever the cause of action
“(a) Arises out of the negligence or wrongful act, either of commission or omission, of any officer or employee of the District of Columbia for whose negligence or acts the District of Columbia, if a private individual, would be liable prima facie' to respond in damages, irrespective-of whether such negligence occurred or such acts were done in the performance of a municipal, or a governmental function of said District * * -x-_ (Emphasis added.)
“(b) Arises out of the existence of facts and circumstances which place the claim * * * within the * * * principles of law * * *. [announced in our decided cases.]”
Clearly the Commissioners had ample authority to compromise this claim by an innocent citizen who was attacked by an unleashed, unmuzzled dog. Tara had been commanded to “arrest” a human being in an alley where the appellant con-cededly had a right to be, quietly seated, and eating his lunch. The dog had been released and was out of control.
Obviously, a “private individual” could have been liable to the appellant both because of D.C.Code, § 47-2005, supra, and the rule at common law.
Rather the District here was the proprietor of a dog. The appellant sought to prove that the animal was inherently dangerous to the public since it was unchecked, without direction and beyond control. No doubt, the District would contend that a trained police dog may be .a valuable asset to the police in their endeavor to protect the public and to apprehend fugitives. The District for its own benefit had adopted means, purely private in nature, for the accomplishment of a particular result. There was a duty upon the District to control these means, a duty which finds “its source in special circumstances”
We are satisfied that summary judgment should not have been granted.
Reversed.
. Other officers meanwhile arrested the culprit who was later convicted of housebreaking.
. 114 U.S.App.D.C. 350, 351, 316 F.2d 351, 352, cert. denied, 375 U.S. 826, 84 S.Ct. 69, 11 L.Ed.2d 59 (1963).
. D.C.Code, §§ 1-921 to 1-920 (1901), 74 Stat. 519. And see Capital Transit Company v. District of Columbia, 96 U.S.App.D.C. 199, 202, 225 F.2d 38, 41 (1955).
. The sergeant’s affidavit speaks of a complicating factor in that a police cruiser bad overtaken the running dog and then swerved. Whatever its previous training, the dog then “turned in apparent confusion,” and attacked the seated appellant.
. In Scharfeld v. Richardson, 76 U.S.App.D.C. 378, 133 F.2d 340, 145 A.L.R. 980 (1942), we held that an owner might recover damages from the owner of another dog after the latter had attacked and destroyed the plaintiff’s dog.
. Moreover we have not been shown that the Commissioners have issued any regulation governing the use by police officers of police dogs. See D.C.Code, § 1-224 >(1961) which authorizes the Commissioners to promulgate regulations: “Seventh. To regulate the keeping and running at large of dogs * * * ” and § 226 which additionally authorizes such regulations in aid of § 224 as the Commissioners deem necessary for the protection of lives and limbs of all persons in the District.
. Best v. District of Columbia, 291 U.S. 411, 419, 54 S.Ct. 487, 78 L.Ed. 882 (1934).
. Ilid.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring: Whatever the liability of the District of Columbia for acts of its human agents, who are presumably subject to ultimate control by the President and the Congress, I think that the theory of sovereign immunity should not be applied to harms caused by non-human agencies that are inherently dangerous to life, limb and property when left unchecked and uncontrolled. The District must at least be liable, if not as an employer for the acts of an employee, as a proprietor and user, for the evil caused by an inherently dangerously instrumentality. While the sovereign immunity doctrine has little to commend it in any respect, the public ordinarily has at least the small comfort of knowing that human agents usually possess the will and the capacity to act reasonably and to conduct themselves accordingly. Police dogs, however, having little or no volition or ability to reason, present the continuous risk to the public of being unresponsive to the conditioning process, or responding, as here, in an unforeseen manner to an unforeseen stimulus. It is arguable that trained dogs are a considerable asset to the police force in protecting the public and apprehending fugitives. But they may turn out to be a nuisance and even a