In most cases, a dog can make a house a home. One of the few downsides to owning a dog is the potential for liability if your dog bites a person.
Who Let the Dogs Out?
The case involved three housemates and three dogs. While the dogs belonged to one of the housemates, the other two would feed them, clean up after them, and let them outside if the owner wasn’t home.
One day in 2006, the dogs escaped the backyard and attacked a four-year-old boy and his grandfather who were walking by. Fortunately, they were able to escape the dogs, but not before the boy suffered partially amputated ears. He required plastic surgery to heal his wounds.
The boy and his mother sued all three housemates, claiming they knew the dogs had “vicious, dangerous propensities,” and were therefore liable for the attack. An appellate judge agreed, finding that liability can exist in cases where the defendant “owned, possessed, harbored, or exercised dominion and control over the dog.”
No Safe Harbor
While the judge did not specifically define “harboring” when it comes to pet care, he did say that making a dog a part of a home and taking part in its care could constitute harboring. This potentially makes everyone who regularly cares for the dog legally liable if the dog bites, attacks, or otherwise causes injury to someone else.
Although this decision might seem like a stretch, courts have found pet sitters liable for injuries caused by the pets in their care. Especially in the cases where the caretakers knew the animal had vicious propensities. In this case, at least one of the housemates admitted he was aware that one of the dogs killed a neighbor’s pet rabbit.
Related Resources:
- Have an injury claim? Get your claim reviewed for free. (Consumer Injury)
- Dog Bite / Animal Attacks (FindLaw’s Injured)
- What if my Child is Bitten by a Dog? Can I Sue? (FindLaw’s Injured)
- Dog Bites: What to Do Before You Sue (FindLaw’s Injured)
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