In this dog-bite case, we are asked to decide whether plaintiffs claims of common-law liability and strict liability are precluded by the doctrine of parental immunity. Plaintiff appeals by leave granted from a circuit court order which
Defendants Thelen are the noncustodial father and stepmother of plaintiff. Plaintiff’s second amended complaint alleges that while sitting on a sofa during a scheduled weekend visitation with defendants, plaintiff, age six, was bitten on the face by a cocker spaniel which defendants had acquired earlier in the day and which had not been provoked into biting. Plaintiff filed a complaint against defendants in district court, alleging in Count i that defendants were strictly liable for her injuries under Michigan’s dog-bite statute, MCL 287.351; MSA 12.544. Counts n through v alleged defendants’ negligence and common-law liability for dog bites under Michigan’s Dog Law of 1919, MCL 287.288; MSA 12.539.
Defendants moved for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8), failure to state a claim, arguing that they were protected from all liability by the doctrine of parental immunity. The district court agreed that defendants were immune from common-law liability and granted summary dispositiоn on Counts ii through v. The district court concluded, however, that parental immunity would not bar plaintiff’s strict liability claim and denied defendants’ motion as to Count i. On appeal, the circuit court held that parental immunity barred both plaintiff’s common-law liability and strict liability claims.
The threshold question in the case is whether a stepparent of a minor child may assert the defense of parental immunity. In
Hush v Devilbiss Co,
We next consider whether parental immunity bars plaintiff’s common-law tort liability claims. In
Plumley v Klein,
A child may maintain a lawsuit against his parent for injuries suffered as a result of the alleged ordinary negligence of the parent. Like our sister states, however, we note two exceptions to this new rule of law: (1) where the alleged negligent act involves an exercise of reasonable parental authority over the child; and (2) where the alleged negligent act involves an exercise of reasonable parental discretion with respect to the provision of food, clothing, housing, medical and dental services, and other care. [Plumley, supra, p 8.]
Thus, in order to prevail on her common-law
This Court has interpreted
Plumley
several times. Panels in
Paige v Bing Construction Co,
We are nonetheless of the opinion that the doctrine of parental immunity does not bar a child’s cause of action based on strict liability of a dog оwner for injuries inflicted by that dog under MCL 287.351; MSA 12.544. The statute states in pertinent part:
The owner of any dogs which shall without provocation bite any person while such person is on оr in a public place, or lawfully on or in a private place, including the property of the owner of such dog, shall be liable for such damages as may be suffеred by the person bitten, regardless of the former viciousness of such dog or the owner’s knowledge of such viciousness.
The statute places absolute liability on the dog owner, except when the dog bites after having been provoked.
Nicholes v Lorenz,
Although there is no Michigan authority on the question whether parental immunity bars a suit based on the dog-bite statute,
Dower v Goldstein,
143 NJ Super 418;
We find the rationale of
Dower
persuasive. As in New Jersey, the courts of this state have moved towards abrogation of рarental immunity.
Plumley, supra.
Furthermore, it appears that in enacting a dog-bite statute which imposes strict liability on the owner, the Legislature intended "provocation” to be the only defense to a strict liability claim. Cf.
Nicholes, supra,
p 88. We therefore hold that parental immunity does not bar dog-bite suits based on MCL 287.351; MSA 12.544. In view of the Legislature’s determination that dog owners will be liable to persons injured while "lawfully on or in a private place, including the property of the owner of the dog,” we see no sound reason to deny
Affirmed in part and reversed in part.
Notes
But see
Grodin v Grodin,
We find the reasoning of
Grodin
and
Carey
flawed. By focusing on the
reasonableness
of the parents’ conduct, the analysis employed in those cases begs the question of whether the parent is entitled to immunity from tort liability. Both cases conclude that if a parent was negligent, he or she will not be immune from liability. The logical predicate to the immunity question, however, is an assumption that the defendant’s conduct was negligent, and hence unreasonable; the issue is whether the parent should be shielded from liаbility for that unreasonable conduct. To properly resolve that issue, the focus must be placed not on the reasonableness of the parent’s conduсt, but on the
type
of activity the parent was involved in at the time of the
