delivered the opinion of the court:
The question raised by this appeal is whether the owner of a horse is strictly liable under the Animal Control Act (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 8, par. 366) for injury to a hired horseshoer, who without provocation is kicked by the animal.
The plaintiff has been a licensed horseshoer since 1972 and has been actively engaged in the business of shoeing horses either on a full or part-time basis since that date. He travels to various farms or stables at the request of the owners of the horses and shoes or trims their horses for compensation on a per horse basis. He furnishes all the necessary equipment and personally performs all the labor.
At the request of the defendant, plaintiff visited the defendant’s farm on August 13, 1977, and it was agreed that he would either trim or shoe from eight to 10 of defendant’s horses and be paid for each horse shod or trimmed. Plaintiff trimmed the hooves of approximately seven to eight horses. After completing that work plaintiff shod one other horse. He then proceeded to shoe defendant’s stallion, “Ike,” which he had trimmed but had not shod on prior occasions. After the plaintiff had completed placing the shoes on three of Ike’s hooves and had a fourth shoe nailed on, the plaintiff reached down to lift the remaining hoof off the ground in order to clench the nails which had been used to attach the shoe to the horse’s hoof.
Plaintiff was holding the left rear hoof of the horse along the inside of his knee when Ike kicked or jerked the hoof the plaintiff was holding, causing it to come in contact with the plaintiff’s knee thereby injuring it.
Plaintiff brought the action against the defendant under the Animal Control Act; defendant filed an answer which denied the allegations and also raised the affirmative defense that defendant had assumed the risk of the injury pursuant to the employment contract entered into between the parties. The defense was dismissed on plaintiff’s motion. At trial, the court refused to give instructions pertaining to the affirmative defense tendered by the defendant. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff assessing his damages at $32,000, from which the defendant has appealed.
Section 16 of the Animal Control Act states:
“If a dog or other animal, without provocation, attacks or injures any person who is peaceably conducting himself in any place where he may lawfully be, the owner of such dog or other animal is liable in damages to such person for the full amount of the injury sustained.” Ill. Rev. Stat. 1977, ch. 8, par. 366.
The question of “provocation” under the statute was submitted to the jury. The finding that the plaintiff did not provoke the animal is not against the manifest weight of the evidence. There is also no question but that plaintiff was lawfully and peaceably on the premises.
Plaintiff argues that the language of the statute is absolute except for the defenses set forth in its language. He argues that the legislature clearly intended to abolish any other defense. The essential question is whether the statute admits of any common law defense supported by the evidence.
We approach the question of the legislative intent with reference to various rules of statutory construction. Where literal enforcement of the statute will result in great injustice which was not contemplated, we will construe the statute to give effect to what must have been reasonably intended by the legislature. (McQueen v. Erickson (1978),
It is true that the express language of the statute appears to be absolute. If one does not provoke the animal and is peaceably and lawfully on the premises the owner is liable for all damages proximately caused by his animal. Nevertheless, the statute has been held not to apply in several situations where the plaintiff has brought himself within its express terms. In Bailey v. Bly (1967),
We cannot conclude that the legislature when it amended the so . called “dog bite statute” to include other animals intended to abolish all common law defenses other than provocation by one peacefully and lawfully on the premises. It should be noted that provocation is an extremely limited defense, particularly when framed in the circumstances of this case. Provocation is not normally thought of in relation to acts which are performed on animals in furtherance of their normal care when performed in an acceptable and gentle manner. That care may involve sufficient discomfort to the animal that occasionally, even under the best of circumstances, it will cause injury.
Moreover, there is no social policy which would support holding the owner strictly liable against the class of persons such as this plaintiff. Licensed horseshoers as a class are trained to handle horses and may be reasonably presumed to know their normal propensities and to protect themselves against them. Plaintiff’s own testimony in this case indicates that getting kicked is a “normal” risk for a horseshoer, and that this had happened to him personally on a number of occasions.
To preclude a common law defense such as assumption of risks would, in practical effect, impose strict liability without a factual and reasonable basis “other than as a pure penalty for [horse] ownership.” (Bailey v. Bly (1967),
In an employment setting it has been stated that the defense of assumption of risk may be interposed “where the risk was so obvious that an ordinarily prudent person under the circumstances would have observed and appreciated it.” (Johnson v. Scandrett (1938),
We therefore reverse the judgment. In so doing we have given consideration to the question of whether the case should be remanded for a new trial. Generally, assumption of risk is a jury question. (See Stone v. Guthrie (1957),
Reversed.
UNVERZAGT and VAN DEUSEN, JJ„ concur.
