Catherine M. WARD, Appellant,
v.
Maureen YOUNG, Individually, Terry Alan Swindle, Individually, Jose Miret, Individually, Luisa Miret, Individually, and Christina Miret, Individually, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
Bruce A. Walkley, of Walkley, Stuart & Macy, P.A., and James W. Clark, Tampa, for appellant.
Kenneth L. Olsen, of Miller and Olsen, Tampa, for appellees Mirets.
FRANK, Judge.
The appellant, Ward, was bitten by a dog owned by Young and Swindle, occupants of property Young leased from the Mirets. The trial court terminated Ward's action against the Mirets by granting a motion for summary judgment. Ward appealed and we reverse.
During Young's tenancy, she experienced a burglary resulting in the loss of personal property. Because of anxiety stemming from the break-in, Young wanted a dog and her boyfriend, Swindle, gave her a pit bull. It appears that the Mirets' cousin, Marra, who collected the rents, knew of the dog's presence on the property, but it is disputed that he approved having it there. In any event, Ward was attacked and severely injured by the dog when passing in proximity to the point where the dog's reach was limited by a chain restraining it. Signs were posted on the property warning of the dog's presence.
Our supreme court's recent decision in Noble v. Yorke,
The record discloses that Marra knew of the dog's presence on the property and the purpose for which it was procured to guard Young from intruders and to protect her against a repeat burglary. In this setting, two questions emerge, i.e., did Marra occupy the status of an agent acting on behalf of the Mirets, and, if so, is his knowledge of the dog's presence at the premises and its propensities imputable to the Mirets. Another question, wholly unanswered in the record, is whether the biting occurred on or beyond the Mirets property. See Anderson v. Walthal,
SCHOONOVER, A.C.J., and BOARDMAN, EDWARD F. (Ret.), J., concur.
