In this appeal plaintiff raises the single issue of whether the trial court correctly granted a directed verdict to defendants because plaintiff failed to make a showing that defendants had any prior knowledge, actual or constructive, that their horse had any dangerous or vicious propensities. The Court of Appeals held that the directed verdict was properly granted because plaintiff failed to produce any evidence that defendants had knowledge of the horse’s vicious propensities or evidence that a reasonable person would have had such knowledge. We conclude that under the facts of this case, making a showing that defendants had actual or constructive knowledge that their horse had vicious propensities is not necessary for plaintiff to prove defendants’ negligence, and thus the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motion for directed verdict.
Matthew Jonathan (Jimmy) Bowen, the son of plaintiff Janice Williams, was injured on 28 May 1983 when a horse owned by defendants, Thomas E. and Peggy J. Tysinger, kicked Jimmy in the head causing him to stay in the hospital overnight for observation of a possible concussion and causing permanent dental injury. Plaintiff instituted this action seeking recovery of Jimmy’s medical expenses which were incurred as a result of this accident.
Plaintiff, her husband, and her two sons, Jimmy and Daniel Bowen, went to defendants’ house on the afternoon of 28 May 1983. At the time of this incident, Jimmy was nine years old, and Daniel was eleven years old. Mr. Tysinger owned a sawmill which was located a few miles from his house, and he had his office for this lumber business at his house. Plaintiff and her husband had ordered some lumber from Mr. Tysinger, and they went to his house that afternoon to find out if the lumber was ready. When they arrived, the two boys were told to wait in the car, and plaintiff and her husband went to the house to talk with the Tysingers, who were both sitting on the front porch of the house. The four adults sat on the porch and talked for about ten minutes, and then Mr. Tysinger told Mr. Williams, plaintiff’s husband, that he wanted to show him a new gun. Realizing that they were going to stay at least for a few more minutes, plaintiff called to her sons and told them that they could get out of the car and wait with her on the porch.
As the two boys reached the porch, Mr. Tysinger suggested that the boys go around to the pasture in the back of the house *57 and play with the horse and cow which he kept there. In her testimony at trial, plaintiff related the following exchange:
And Mr. Tysinger told the boys that he had a horse and cow in the backyard, and he told me to let them go out and play with it. And I asked him, I said, “The boys have never been around any wild animals.” They’d never been around any animals. I said, “Are you sure.” And Mrs. Tysinger said that her children, her grandchildren had been raised up around the horse and cow, and that it would not hurt anyone. Well, as they was standing, fixing to go into the livingroom, which was — when you open up the door you went into the livingroom — .
I turned around and I asked Jock again, I said, “Are you sure.” I said “Because they have never been around no animals.” and He sid (sic), “Yes.” So, the boys proceeded to go into he (sic) backyard —
Later in her testimony, plaintiff stated, “I asked him [Mr. Tysinger] three times if he was sure.” In further response to questioning, plaintiff replied, “Each time he told me, he assured me one hundred percent that the animal would not hurt nobody. Not just my children, but nobody.”
The boys went to the pasture, and a few minutes later, Daniel, the older boy, called his mother to hurry to the pasture because Jimmy, the younger boy, had been hurt. When plaintiff reached the pasture, she found Jimmy lying on his back in the field.
Daniel testified that when he and his brother reached the pasture, they began petting the forehead of the horse and feeding it some grass. The horse walked away from the fence, and Jimmy crawled under the fence to pet the horse some more. Daniel also crossed the fence and noticed that the horse looked like it was going to run. The horse stood on its front legs and kicked Jimmy. Daniel testified that Jimmy landed on his back some three feet back from where he had been standing when the horse kicked him.
Plaintiff also testified that after the rescue workers arrived and as they attended Jimmy, the horse came charging up to the rescue workers. According to plaintiff, the horse got on its back legs and was standing over the workers as they attended her son there in the pasture. At that time, Mr. Tysinger came across the fence into the pasture and tried to get the horse away from *58 the workers. Plaintiff testified that the horse then tried to kick Mr. Tysinger and that he called to Ms. Tysinger who came into the pasture and moved the horse into a nearby barn.
After plaintiff presented her evidence, the trial court granted defendants’ motion for directed verdict. Plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals which found no error in the trial court’s grant of defendants’ motion for directed verdict.
Williams v. Tysinger,
Plaintiff’s action does not fit into the “keeping a dangerous animal” niche that the majority confines it to. The main thrust of the complaint, her evidence, and her argument here is that defendants were negligent in inviting and encouraging inexperienced children to go into the horse lot by themselves and play with the animal.”
Id.
at 441-42,
When reviewing a trial court’s grant of directed verdict, the court must review all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, which in the present case is plaintiff.
Thames v. Teer Co.,
Defendants contend that the Court of Appeals was correct that the directed verdict was appropriate because plaintiff presented no evidence that defendants knew or should have known that the horse had vicious or dangerous propensities and that in order for plaintiff to recover she must present this evidence. The real issue
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is whether plaintiff under the facts of this case has to make a showing of the dangerous propensities of the horse and the owner’s knowledge of these propensities in order to recover. The “knowledge by the owner of the vicious propensities of his horse is not always essential to a recovery in an action for injuries alleged to have been caused by the owner’s negligence.”
Lloyd v. Bowen,
Griner
provides us with a history of the law concerning actions involving the dangerous propensity rule.
See Griner,
Lloyd v. Bowen
involved a situation where the owner of a horse had tied the horse to the dead limb of a tree.
Lloyd,
As with
Lloyd,
the question of defendants’ negligence in the present case does not depend upon defendants’ knowledge of the
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horse’s vicious or dangerous propensities, and it was not necessary that such evidence be presented. The gravamen of this action is not the wrongful keeping of a vicious animal; rather the gravamen is the encouraging of two young children to play with a horse after being warned by the children’s mother that they had no familiarity with horses or any other large animals. As
Griner
concluded, defendants, as the owners of the horse, are “chargeable with knowledge of the general propensities” of the horse.
Griner,
Defendants also claim that they are not responsible for the injury and resulting damages because plaintiff, the boys’ mother, was on the premises when Jimmy was injured and that she is responsible for the care, supervision and safety of her children. This issue properly goes to the question of contributory negligence which defendants raised as a matter of defense in their answer. The issue of contributory negligence is usually a question for the jury.
Lamm v. Bissette Realty, Inc.,
For the reasons stated above, the decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the trial court’s grant of directed verdict for defendants is reversed, and this case is remanded to the Court *61 of Appeals for remand to the trial court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
