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NOTICE This opinion is subject to further editing and
modification. The final version will
appear in the bound volume of the official reports. |
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No.
93-1918
STATE OF WISCONSIN : IN SUPREME COURT
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Cheryl Armstrong, Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner, Samaritan Health Plan Insurance Corporation, Plaintiff, v. Milwaukee Mutual Insurance Company, John J. Mack and Ann Mack, Defendants-Appellants. |
FILED JUNE 26, 1996 Marilyn L. Graves Clerk
of Supreme Court Madison,
WI |
REVIEW of a decision of the Court of
Appeals. Affirmed.
JANINE
P. GESKE, J. John Mack, Ann Mack and
Milwaukee Mutual Insurance (the Macks) seek review of a published decision, Armstrong
v. Milwaukee Mutual Insurance Co., 191 Wis. 2d 562, 530 N.W.2d 12 (Ct.
App. 1995), in which the court of appeals reversed the judgment entered in
Milwaukee Circuit Court awarding Cheryl Armstrong damages for injuries
resulting from a dog bite she incurred while employed at a dog kennel. We conclude that a person who is employed to
care for a dog within his or her custody and control is a "keeper" of
that dog within the statutory definition contained in Wis. Stat. § 174.001(5).[1] We further hold that, in a case such as this
where a keeper is injured by the dog and there is no evidence of negligence on
the part of the legal owners, a keeper may not recover damages from the legal
owners of the dog under the strict liability statute, Wis. Stat. § 174.02(1).[2] Therefore, we affirm the decision of the
court of appeals.
FACTS
On
January 7, 1991, John and Ann Mack went on vacation. As they had done previously, the Macks left their Siberian Husky,
Mandy, to be boarded and cared for at the Thistlerose Kennels
(Thistlerose). As before, they paid a
fee for this service. At that time,
Cheryl Armstrong (Armstrong) had worked for about a year at the kennels, which
are owned by Eleanor Jolly.[3] Armstrong worked part-time at Thistlerose as
a general handyperson (cutting trees, fixing kennels, etc.) in addition to
performing various duties in relation to caring for the dogs.
The
facility has 60 indoor heated kennels, each of which opens onto an outdoor
exercise run. At trial, Armstrong
testified that the routine for caring for the dogs was the same no matter what
shift one worked: letting each dog out into the outside run, cleaning the
kennel, changing the water, and returning the dog to its kennel. On the evening of January 9, 1991, Armstrong
released Mandy into the outdoor run, changed the water and cleaned the interior
kennel. She was bitten while trying to
get Mandy to go back inside. The bite
itself was not severe but became infected, necessitating hospitalization and
several surgeries.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Cheryl
Armstrong filed a complaint against the Macks and their insurer Milwaukee
Mutual Insurance Company, alleging that, as Mandy's owners, the Macks were
liable for Armstrong's damages on the grounds of common-law negligence and
strict liability pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 174.02(1)(a). The Macks denied any negligence on their
part and affirmatively responded that Armstrong's own negligence contributed in
whole or in part to her injuries. The
circuit court denied the Macks' motion for summary judgment. The case proceeded to trial solely on the
strict liability claim as Armstrong conceded that there was no issue concerning
the Macks' conduct. The jury returned a
verdict finding that Armstrong had been negligent but not causally so and the
court entered judgment in Armstrong's favor in the amount of $81,444.67. Following unsuccessful post-verdict motions,
the Macks filed an appeal.
The
court of appeals reversed the judgment entered by the circuit court based on
its conclusion that summary judgment for the defendants had been erroneously
denied. The court of appeals held that
strict liability under § 174.02 can be shared between the legal owner of a dog
and the keeper when the dog is placed in a kennel.[4] Therefore, the court reasoned that the Macks
were potentially jointly liable for injuries caused by their dog. However, the court concluded that, because
Armstrong failed to present any evidence that the Macks had prior notice of
Mandy's "vicious tendencies," there was no genuine issue of material
fact and therefore summary judgment should have been granted.[5]
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The
issues in this case have evolved as the claim has proceeded through the
courts. At this juncture, the critical
questions are: (1) whether an employee of a boarding kennel whose duties include
caring for dogs is a "keeper" and therefore "owner" under §
174.001(5) and, if so, (2) may such a keeper who is injured while he or she is
exercising control over the dog hold the legal owner, against whom no
negligence is alleged, strictly liable under § 174.02?[6] Resolution of this appeal therefore requires
this court to interpret a statute as it applies to a set of facts. This presents a question of law which we
approach de novo without deference to the circuit court or the court of appeals. Wyss v. Albee, 193 Wis. 2d 101,
109, 532 N.W.2d 444 (1995).
WHO IS A "KEEPER" OF A DOG?
Pursuant
to Wis. Stat. § 174.001(5) an "[o]wner includes any person who owns,
harbors or keeps a dog." Although
the issues before us today are ones of first impression, this court and the
Wisconsin court of appeals have had previous occasion to address the definition
of "who . . . keeps a dog" as that phrase is used in the
statute. We note that, since their inception,
Wisconsin laws governing liability for damage caused by dogs have defined
"owners" as including those who keep dogs. § 2, ch. 383, Laws of 1852.
In
Hagenau v. Millard, 182 Wis. 544, 195 N.W. 718 (1923), this court held
as a matter of law that the defendant, who owned a building in which he operated
a hotel and restaurant, was not a keeper of the dogs owned by his sister-in-law
who lived on the premises and worked in the restaurant. We held that a keeper is one who harbors and
protects a dog, who treats it as living at his or her house and undertakes to
control the animal. Hagenau, 182
Wis. at 547. The casual presence of
dogs will not suffice to transform a person into a keeper; there must be
evidence that the person has "furnished them with shelter, protection, or
food, or that they exercised control over the dogs." Id., at 547-48.
This
court addressed not only the definition of keeper in Janssen v. Voss,
189 Wis. 222, 207 N.W. 279 (1926), but also the relationship of keepers and
legal owners. The issue in Janssen
was whether the mother of the fourteen year-old dog owner "was a keeper of
the dog at the time of the injury."
Janssen, 189 Wis. at 223.
The circumstances surrounding the injury were that the mother had to
leave town to attend a funeral and arranged for the dog to be placed at a dog hospital
during her absence. Despite explicit
instructions from his mother to leave the dog at the hospital, her son took the
dog from the hospital and tied it in the yard of the family's home where he was
staying. Id. at 224. We concluded that when the owner-son took
physical custody and possession of the dog, he became the legal keeper of the
dog, thereby relieving his mother of any responsibility for the dog's conduct
under the strict liability statute. Id.
at 225. We stated that,
A
keeper is defined as one "who keeps, one who watches, guards, etc.; one
having custody." It is apparent
that the keeper of a dog may or may not be the owner of the dog. Where the keeper is not the owner, it may be
assumed, as a general proposition, that the dominion or authority of the keeper
over the dog is a limited one, subject to be terminated at any time by the
owner. . . . The moment [the owner
removes the dog from the custody of the keeper], the dual authority
theretofore exercised over the dog by the owner and the keeper is merged in the
owner, and at that very moment the keeper's rights and responsibilities
concerning the dog are at an end. Id.
at 224 (citations omitted, emphasis added).
We
held, in Koetting v. Conroy, 223 Wis. 550, 270 N.W. 625 (1936), that,
although not the legal owner of the animal, a person who allows a dog to be
kept at his dwelling and even feeds it from his table is a keeper and thereby
subject to liability for the dog's conduct under Wis. Stat. § 174.02. Koetting, 223 Wis. at 552. Further, this court noted that, "[o]ne
purpose of the statute is to protect domestic animals [and persons] from injury
by dogs by whomsoever the dogs are kept or harbored, and to make a person
who keeps or harbors a dog responsible for all injuries inflicted by it . .
. ." Id. at 555 (emphasis
added).
The
court of appeals addressed the issue of who is a keeper in Pattermann v.
Pattermann, 173 Wis. 2d 143, 496 N.W.2d 613 (Ct. App. 1992). There, the court held that a mother who
merely allowed her adult son to bring his dog into her home for one half-hour
while packing for a family trip was not a keeper or harborer of the dog. Pattermann, 173 Wis. 2d at
150-51. The "transient
invasion" by the dog was insufficient to bring the mother within the
confines of Wis. Stat. § 174.001(5), according to the court, because there was
no evidence that the dog lived on the premises, or was fed or in any way cared
for by Mrs. Pattermann. Id.
Upon
review of these cases we conclude that several factors are critical in
determining who is a keeper and therefore an owner within the confines of
chapter 174; the person in question must exercise some measure of custody, care
or control over the dog. See Hagenau,
182 Wis. at 547-48 (exercise control over, or furnish with shelter, protection
or food); Janssen, 189 Wis. at 224 (has custody, dominance or
authority over); Koetting, 223 Wis. at 552 (keep at dwelling and feed);
and Pattermann, 173 Wis. 2d at 150 (feed, care for, give
shelter). Further, it is clear that a
person's status as keeper can change over time, with the focal point being the
time of the injury. The Macks
affirmatively relinquished physical custody and entrusted their dog to the
employees at Thistlerose for the purpose of providing her with care. Armstrong was employed to perform certain
duties which included letting the dog out to exercise, cleaning its pen, and
supplying it with water.[7] She was in the process of caring for and (at
least attempting to) exercise control over Mandy at the time she was
bitten. We conclude that Armstrong was
a "keeper," and thus by statute an "owner," of the Macks'
dog.
APPLICABILITY OF WIS. STAT. § 174.02
WHEN PLAINTIFF IS A KEEPER
We
hold that when the legal owners of a dog are not negligent and are not
exercising control over their dog, a person acting in the capacity as the dog's
keeper cannot collect damages under Wis. Stat. § 174.02. Armstrong argues that whether or not she is
a keeper is irrelevant to this case.
Under the argument advanced by Armstrong, a keeper would be liable under
Wis. Stat. § 174.02 only when a third party non-owner was injured. However, a legal owner would be liable to
all injured parties, including other statutory owners such as a keeper.
We
reject this position. There is no
evidence that the legislature intended to treat keepers or harborers
differently than legal owners. We
conclude that the purpose of the statute is to protect those people who are not
in a position to control the dog, and not to protect those persons who are
statutorily defined as owners. An owner
injured while in control of the dog may not use the statute to hold another
owner liable.[8]
The
weight of extrajurisdictional authority provides persuasive support for our
conclusion. The court of appeals of
Ohio faced a very similar factual scenario in Khamis v. Everson, 623
N.E.2d 683 (Ohio Ct. App. 1993). There,
the plaintiff was working as a volunteer at his friend's boarding kennels. The plaintiff was bitten while trying to get
a dog to return to its cage after he had changed the water and hay in the cage
and left fresh food for the dog. Khamis,
623 N.E.2d at 684. Although the
plaintiff did not contest his status as a keeper, he argued that the legal
owner of the dog was liable for the damages under Ohio's absolute liability
statute.[9]
The court disagreed, concluding that,
the
legislature intended to protect those people who are not in a position to
control the dog. In contrast, we
believe the legislature did not intend to protect those persons (the owner,
keeper or harborer of the dog) who have, by the terms of the statute, an
absolute duty to control the animal. Id.
at 687.
In
Minnesota, the court of appeals addressed this issue in a case involving an
employee in a veterinary who was bitten as she attempted to move a dog out of
the kennel area. Tschida v. Berdusco,
462 N.W.2d 410 (Minn. Ct. App. 1990).
The court noted that their statute[10]
was designed to compensate third-party plaintiffs and could "be analyzed
as not creating strict liability for a two party action involving people who
both meet the statutory definition of owner." Tschida, 462 N.W.2d at 411. Because the veterinarian and the plaintiff had possession and
control of the dog and plaintiff was assisting in caring for the dog at the
time of her injury, the court held that she fell within the statutory
definition of keeper. Id. at
412. And ultimately, the court held
that "where there is no negligence by the legal owner, we further
interpret the statute to exclude liability of the legal owner to the second
party owner [keeper or harborer] for damages from being attacked or injured by
the dog." Id. at
412-13.
Similarly,
the court of appeals in Illinois ruled that a dog groomer who had accepted the
responsibility of controlling a dog could not subsequently "maintain a
cause of action for injuries resulting from her own failure to control the
animal" under the Illinois Animal Control Act.[11] Wilcoxen v. Paige, 528 N.E.2d 1104,
1106 (Ill. Ct. App. 1988). A person who
voluntarily steps into a position of control over an animal comes within the
statutory definition of "owner" and cannot maintain an action against
the dog's legal owners for injuries they might suffer. Id.
In
contrast, we find the cases upon which Armstrong relies unpersuasive. True, the kennel employee in Wipperfurth
v. Huie, 654 So.2d 116, 118 (Fla. 1995), was found not to be an
"owner," but the statute in effect at the time of the injury only
referred to liability of an "owner" and, unlike our own statute, did
not define owner as including those who keep or harbor dogs. Further, as the Florida Supreme Court noted
in Wipperfurth, the accident had occurred prior to passage of a new
statutory provision which now defines an owner as "any person, firm,
corporation, or organization possessing, harboring, keeping, or having control
or custody of an animal . . ."
Florida Stat. § 767.11(7). Id.
at 118, n.4.
In
Collins v. Kenealy, 492 N.W.2d 679, 682 (Iowa 1992), the Iowa Supreme
Court held that delivery of a dog to a temporary custodian was not sufficient
to bring that person within the statutory definition of "owner" as
one "who keeps or harbors."
However, we find Collins both factually and statutorily
dissimilar and therefore not persuasive.
The plaintiff dog groomer only had custody of the animal for a short
period of time for the limited purpose of grooming and provided none of the
sustenance or shelter associated with the definition of keeper developed under
Wisconsin case law. Additionally, the
court based its decision on "long established interpretations" by the
Iowa courts of the state's strict liability statute which, unlike Wis. Stat. §
174.02, does not even allow contributory negligence as a defense. Collins, 492 N.W.2d at 682.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that the statute imposes
liability on anyone who owns, keeps or harbors a dog who injures a third
party. However, a non-negligent owner
cannot be held liable under Wis. Stat. § 174.02 to another owner who is
injured while the latter is exercising control over the dog. Therefore, given the circumstances in this
case, we hold that a keeper such as Cheryl Armstrong, employed to take care of
a dog and who is exercising control over the dog at the time of injury, cannot
invoke the protections of Wis. Stat. § 174.02 to hold the non-negligent legal owners,
the Macks, liable. The court of appeals
correctly concluded that summary judgment was appropriate since there were no
material issues of fact or law to be decided and, thus, we affirm.
By
the Court.—The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
WILLIAM
A. BABLITCH, J. (Dissenting). The majority concludes that a part-time
employee of a dog kennel whose only duties with respect to the dog were letting
the dog out of the kennel in order to clean the kennel and giving the dog water
is a "keeper" of the dog and therefore not entitled to the benefits
of the strict liability statute. I
conclude that a keeper of the dog within the meaning of the statute is one who
cares for it the way an owner would, including providing it with shelter, care
and sustenance. Given the very limited
nature of Cheryl Armstrong's duties with respect to the dog, I must
respectfully dissent with the majority's conclusion.
Black's
Law Dictionary 868 (6th ed. 1990) defines a "keeper of dog" as
"[a] harborer of a dog. Any
person, other than owner, harboring or having in his possession any dog. One who, either with or without owner's
permission, undertakes to manage, control, or care for it as dog owners in
general are accustomed to do." To
"harbor" is: "To afford
lodging to, to shelter, or to give a refuge to." Id. at 717 (citations omitted).
In
Hagenau v. Millard, 182 Wis. 544 (1924), this court addressed the same
issue that we address in the present case:
what is a "keeper of dogs?"
We determined that whether or not a person is a keeper depends upon the
peculiar facts and circumstances of each individual case. Id. at 547. We further reasoned that:
To be a keeper of a dog one must harbor the
animal, and the word "harbor" in its meaning signifies protection;
and it has been held that the keeper is one who treats the dog as living at his
house and who undertakes to control his action; "but the casual presence
of an animal, or his presence if not so treated, does not constitute him such
owner or keeper."
Id. at 547 (citations omitted). In Hagenau, the court held that the
defendants were not keepers of the dog because there was no evidence that
"they furnished them with shelter, protection, or food, or that they
exercised control over the dogs." Id.
at 548. There was also no showing that
"these dogs were so attached to Millard and his wife [the defendants] as
to follow them upon the public streets or highways, or that the dogs were the
constant companions of the Millards . . . ." Id. at 549. See
also Janssen v. Voss, 189 Wis. 222, 207 N.W. 279 (1926); Koetting
v. Conroy, 223 Wis. 550, 552, 270 N.W. 625 (1937) (concluding that
defendant was a keeper when the dog lived in his house and was fed from his
table).
More recently, in Pattermann v. Pattermann,
173 Wis. 2d 143, 149-50, 496 N.W.2d 613 (Ct. App. 1992), the defendant allowed
her son to place his dog in the side entryway of her home while she and several
other family members prepared to depart for a family reunion. A short time later, the dog leapt up and bit
the face of the plaintiff, the fiancee of another of the defendant's sons. The circuit court dismissed the plaintiff's
actions, finding that the defendant was not a keeper or harborer of the
dog. In affirming, the court of appeals
held that the conduct of the defendant in "[m]erely directing where the
dog was to be placed for such a short time does not establish the custodial
relationship necessary for a keeper."
Id. at 150. The court
stated:
Here, Mandy was temporarily in Sallie's
home with Scott's family for about a half-hour before the accident
occurred. The dog did not live there,
and there is no evidence that Sallie fed or cared for the dog in any way.
The word
"harbor" by its meaning signifies protection. Hagenau, 182 Wis. at 547, 195 N.W. at
719. "Harboring a dog" means
something more than a meal of mercy to a stray dog or the casual presence of a
dog on someone's premises. Harboring
means to afford lodging, to shelter or to give refuge to a dog.
Id. at 150-51. The court of appeals found that a "strict construction"
of the word harbor suggested that "Mandy's transient invasion of Sallie's
home while the family finished preparations for their trip" was
insufficient to trigger the statute.
Like
Pattermann, the facts of the present case do not support a finding that
Armstrong is a keeper of the Macks' dog.
Armstrong described her functions at Thistlerose as performing general
maintenance work, including cutting trees, laying cement, fixing dog kennels
and rebuilding dog houses. In addition
to being a handy person, Armstrong helped clean the dog runs at night. The only testimony elicited by the Macks as
to her specific job duties was that she was a part-time employee working a
couple of hours at night and every other weekend. When asked by her attorney what her functions were at
Thistlerose, Armstrong described her duties as follows:
To do various chores with the dogs,
sometimes doing a shift on weekends.
When there wasn't help available I'd fill in on weekends. I do night chores mostly, work by myself,
and I did general maintenance from cutting down 50-foot pine trees to laying
cement to fixing dog kennels to rebuilding dog houses.
Armstrong also described how she cleaned
the kennels at Thistlerose:
Well, if you were going to clean the inside
kennels, you'd let the dogs out and you dump out the water, and you could clean
it two ways. You could clean up
whatever mess was in there, you could clean it with a pressure cleaner, or you
could clean it with a bucket and water and soap. You squeegee it dry, you let the dog back in, and then you do the
same thing to the outside.
Armstrong's
only involvement with the dogs was to move them in and out of the kennels and
outdoor runs so that she could clean their pens. In order to perform these job duties, Armstrong would call the
dogs in from the outdoor runs, and, if calling failed, she would use treats to
lure them inside. Although calling
their names and using treats usually worked, on rare occasions, if a dog
refused to come in, she was instructed to enter the outside run with a board in
front of her to coax the dog through the opening. There is no evidence
presented that Armstrong had any voice in decisions regarding the care or
custody of kennel dogs. Armstrong
lacked any significant dog-related responsibilities, such as feeding, grooming,
or exercising the dogs. Like the
defendant's conduct in Pattermann, Armstrong's sole conduct with regard
to the dogs at the kennel consisted of merely moving the dogs from their pens
to an outdoor run and back again so she could clean up "messes" in
the pens.
A
keeper of a dog within the meaning of the statute is one who cares for it the
way an owner would, treating it as living in his or her household, and
providing it with shelter, care and sustenance. Here, there is no evidence in the record that Armstrong, as a
part-time employee of a kennel, did any of that.
Based
upon a careful reading of the record in this case, I conclude that Armstrong is
not a "keeper" of the Macks' dog within the meaning of Wis. Stat. §
172.01(5). Therefore, I would hold the
Macks strictly liable to Armstrong under the statute, subject to comparative
negligence. Accordingly, I would not
reach the other issues presented.
I
am authorized to state that Chief Justice Roland B. Day and Justice Ann Walsh
Bradley join in this dissent.
SUPREME COURT OF WISCONSIN
Case No.: 93-1918
Complete Title
of Case: Cheryl Armstrong,
Plaintiff-Respondent-Petitioner,
Samaritan Health Plan Insurance
Corporation,
Plaintiff,
v.
Milwaukee Mutual Insurance Company, John J.
Mack and Ann Mack,
Defendants-Appellants.
_______________________________________
ON REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF
APPEALS
Reported at: 191 Wis. 2d 562, 530 N.W.2d 12
(Ct. App. 1995)
PUBLISHED
Opinion Filed: June 26, 1996
Submitted on Briefs:
Oral Argument: April 29, 1996
Source of APPEAL
COURT: Circuit
COUNTY: Milwaukee
JUDGE: MICHAEL J. SKWIERAWSKI
JUSTICES:
Concurred:
Dissented: BABLITCH, J., dissents (Opinion filed)
DAY, C.J. and BRADLEY, J., join in dissent
Not Participating:
ATTORNEYS: For the plaintiff-respondent-petitioner
there were briefs by Victor C. Harding, Edward E. Robinson and
Warshafsky, Rotter, Tarnoff, Reinhardt & Bloch, S.C., Milwaukee and
oral argument by Victor C. Harding.
For the defendants-appellants there was a
brief by Joseph M. Fasi, II, Susan R. Tyndall and Hinshaw &
Culbertson, Milwaukee and oral argument by Susan R. Tyndall.
[1] Wisconsin Stat. § 174.001(5) reads:
"'Owner' includes any person who
owns, harbors or keeps a dog."
[2] Wisconsin Stat. § 174.02(1) reads:
"Liability for injury. (a) Without
notice. Subject to s. 895.045
[contributory negligence], the owner of a dog is liable for the full amount of
damages caused by the dog injuring or causing injury to a person, domestic
animal or property."
[3] The Macks initially sought to implead
Eleanor Jolly as a third-party defendant.
In a motion for summary judgment on this claim, Jolly pointed out that,
by statute, Wisconsin's Worker's Compensation Act provides the exclusive remedy
for injuries suffered by employees during the course of their employment. See Wis. Stat. § 102.03. This court has consistently held that
third-party tortfeasors cannot sustain a claim for contribution from an
employer. See Mulder v.
Acme-Cleveland Corp., 95 Wis. 2d 173, 177, 290 N.W.2d 276 (1980). The Macks subsequently moved to dismiss
their claim against Jolly.
The
record indicates that, although there were more than three employees at
Thistlerose, Jolly did not have worker's compensation insurance. However, the department of administration
must compensate any qualifying employee even if his or her employer was
uninsured at the time of the injury. See
Wis. Stat. § 102.81. Although both
parties agree that Jolly is a keeper as defined by the statute, because she is
not a party to this action and there are no legal issues which concern her, we
will not address her involvement further.
[4] The court of appeals indicated that it was
undisputed that, as an employee/agent of Thistlerose, Armstrong, was, like her
employer, a keeper. However, in
arguments to this court Armstrong's counsel vigorously denied that such an
"understanding" had been reached.
The court of appeals apparently based its finding that the issue was
undisputed on the following statement made by Armstrong's counsel in opposition
to the Macks' request that the statutory definition of "owner" be
read to the jury:
I don't object
to the reading of the strict liability.
I just -- Again, I don't see the
point of getting into them talking about owners or keepers or harborers. That's, again, a legal issue. And there's no fact dispute between [defense
counsel] and myself on this. I mean,
I'll stipulate to many of then [sic] things he's saying, you know, for purposes
of his appeal.
We do not find it necessary to resolve the
parties' dispute as to "who said what and what it meant when they said
it" because we hold as a matter of law that Armstrong was a keeper in this
situation.
[5] As the court of appeals concluded, judgment
in favor of the Macks would have been proper at the stage of summary judgment.
Although Armstrong initially alleged negligence, the court of appeals properly
found that no legally admissible evidence had been submitted in support of that
claim, and subsequently, Armstrong conceded that there was no issue as to
negligent conduct by the Macks.
[6] Armstrong argued to this court that the
Macks had "waived" the issue of whether Armstrong was a keeper. On the contrary, the record demonstrates
that the Macks considered Armstrong's status as keeper central to their theory
of defense. At pre-trial arguments,
defense counsel clearly laid out for the circuit court its position that,
"Miss Armstrong, as an employee of the kennel, was an agent of the kennel
and that under the definition in the Wisconsin Statutes she in fact was the owner
of the dog . . . ."
[7] The fact that Armstrong performed other
duties such as general maintenance work begs the question of how the law should
characterize those activities even she described as "tak[ing] care of . .
. dogs." Further, it unnecessarily
distracts from the critical fact that she was engaged in her duties of caring
for the dog at the time that the injury occurred. What Armstrong did in the other hours of the day, paid or unpaid,
at Thistlerose or elsewhere, is irrelevant.
Section 174.001(5) defines an "owner" as "any person who
owns, harbors or keeps a dog."
This statute is rendered meaningless if one who, in the course of their
employment, exercises control over and provides care for a dog is not found to
be that dog's keeper.
[8] Of course, when there is negligence, there
is nothing in this opinion which should be interpreted to prevent a keeper from
pursuing a common-law negligence claim against another owner.
[9] The relevant statute reads, in pertinent
part:
"The owner, keeper, or harborer of a
dog is liable in damages for any injury, death, or loss to person or property
that is caused by the dog, . . ."
Ohio Rev. Code § 955.28(B).
[10] Minnesota Stat. § 347.22 provides:
"If a dog, without provocation,
attacks or injures any person who is acting peaceably in any place where the
person may lawfully be, the owner of the dog is liable in damages to the person
so attacked or injured to the full amount of the injury sustained. The term 'owner' includes any person
harboring or keeping a dog but the owner shall be primarily liable. The term 'dog' includes both male and female
of the canine species."
[11] Illinois Rev. Stat. ch. 8, par. 366
provides:
"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."
Illinois Rev.
Stat. ch. 8, par. 352.16 states:
"'Owner' means any person having a right of
property in a dog or other animal, or who keeps or harbors a dog or other
animal, or who has it in his care, or acts as its custodian, or who knowingly
permits a dog or other domestic animal to remain on or about any premise
occupied by him."
Armstrong
attempts to distinguish this case on the basis that the Wilcoxen court
stated that Illinois courts have rejected a strict liability interpretation of
the above statutes. Wilcoxen v.
Paige, 528 N.E.2d 1104 (Ill. Ct. App. 1988). However, the caveats that prevent this statute from being one of
strict liability (if the dog is provoked or the plaintiff is not peaceably and
lawfully in the place where the injury occurs) could be analogized to
limitations on strict liability in the Wisconsin statute under those
circumstances where contributory negligence exists.