A divided Maryland Court of Appeals has made a new law today. In Tracey v. Solesky, the court ruled that in dog bite cases involving a pit bull or cross-bred pit bull mix; it is no longer necessary to prove that the dog in particular or pit bulls in general are dangerous. Is this a win for plaintiffs’ lawyers? Is it an anti-dog opinion? Will it lead to changes in homeowners’ policies throughout Maryland? With apologies to Steven L. Miles, let’s talk about it. (August 21, 2012 Update: Incredibly, the court has reversed itself on a key portion of this opinion.)
Solesky Case Facts
This case involves a pit bull named Clifford who lived in East Towson, just two blocks from York Road and the Towson University campus. While a big fellow like Clifford the Big Red Dog, this Clifford was a bit more viperous. One day, Clifford attacked
The boy and his parents sued the owners of the pit bull that mauled him and the owners’ landlords. The owners of the dog went into bankruptcy and received a discharge of their debt. The only defendant standing was the landlord (Although the Long & Foster lease executed allowed Clifford’s owners to keep an “American Bulldog Terrier” on a property that did not have a fence.).
Court’s Opinion
It was not entirely clear from the facts, but the case was taken from the jury at the close of the evidence (I think the better play, in this case, would have been to let the jury give its verdict and then rule on the motion so, after all of that work, you would have a verdict if the appellate court’s disagreed, which is what we have now.).
The majority opinion, written by “retired” Judge Dale R. Cathell, painstakingly set for the available facts (including a lot of judicial notice type stuff) that pit bulls are dangerous and looked at other jurisdictions who have acknowledged that these dogs are basically inherently dangerous. This is not the usual “this was the law all along – you guys just didn’t know it?” appellate opinion. A new law has been made that creates strict liability for pit bulls in dog bite cases. This new law is prospective and applies to this case and causes of action accruing after today.
What Does It All Mean?
So what does it all mean? I think this is a win for Maryland lawyers handling pit bull dog bite cases and their clients. It makes bringing pit bull dog bite cases a lot easier. Establishing propensity in dog bite cases can be an impossible task – the defendants usually have all the evidence and are not giving it up so easily. There is a fear that Maryland homeowners’ policies will be changed to exclude pit bulls, but I don’t see that happening for a lot of reasons. Insurance companies loathe to change policy language – P.G. County has had this law for years with no reaction from insurers. Mortgage companies would also balk because it will leave their loans exposed.
I think ultimately the law should probably be even more simple. Dog owners should be responsible for injuries caused when their dogs bit someone. Pitbull or Yorkshire Terrier. Someone has to “pay” for the injuries. Wouldn’t it make sense for someone not to be the innocent victim?
Commentary
This is not a good opinion for pit bulls themselves. I love dogs and I love pit bulls like any other dog. That’s not a throwaway line. I mean it. But pit bulls are like that scorpion and the frog story: they are who they are (notwithstanding your “My Dog Sparky Was Half Pit, and He Was the Sweetest Dog You Have Ever Seen” story). You cannot blame the pit bull or any dog. If a dog bit me, the last “person” I would blame would be the dog. Aggressive dogs will be aggressive dogs. It is in their blood. [I revise that opinion here.]
My view? I’ve seen estimates that as many as 6 million dogs are put to sleep killed each year. It is just awful. Should we really be breeding more pit bulls just so their owners can feel more like tough guys? Pit bulls should be spayed or neutered and we should move on with the dogs we have too many of already, ones that can live in harmony with other animals and humans.
One other point about the question of how this opinion affects dogs. This case is not a litmus test on who loves dogs the most, or who cares the most for injured children. There was a 4-3 opinion in this case for a reason: people can have different views of what is the best law for people, dogs, and justice. The majority opinion is not anti-dog, and the dissent is not anti-victim. You would never know it in this partisan world we live in now where everyone who does not agree with us is an idiot or worse. But people with equally good intentions can disagree which is the situation I think we have here.
There is one other maddening thing about this case that the court did not address. The defendant had two good lawyers. State Farm’s in-house counsel was involved in the case, as was Budow and Noble, who I suspect also represented State Farm (they seem to do a lot of Erie work, too). Anyway, State Farm (I assume) successfully fought to have the defendant excused from discovery for health reasons based on a vague “To Whom It May Concern” letter from her doctor. Yet the defendant could perfectly go grocery shopping with her daughter, prepare her own meals, and take care of her own dogs. Worse still, she coincidentally gained strength before trial, attending trial every day sitting next to her State Farm lawyers.
Assuming these were the facts (I got them from plaintiffs’ brief), this is maddening to me. People dying – literally dying – from cancer or from asbestos exposure, are forced to give 25 hours of deposition testimony, but a defendant can send in an “I’m not feeling so well” note from a doctor and she is excused from discovery? The plaintiffs’ lawyers must have been apoplectic when she sat down at the trial table on the first day of trial.
Speaking of plaintiffs’ lawyers, plaintiffs were represented by Ober, Kaler who seems to handle more plaintiffs’ cases of late. I think Ober, Kaler is doing this work on the DL. I can’t imagine their corporate clients would be excited to hear they are taking on big corporations and insurance companies. But they apparently did a great job in this case. So thanks for making good law. Now please exit the back door and quit crowding my space.
My post focused on the majority opinion but the dissent is very well written and includes some very good rhetorical questions hard to answer.
- Dog bite claim statistics
- Will strict liability for pit bulls cost Maryland $174 million a year?
- The Maryland Court of Special Appeals opinion in Tracey v. Solesky (the intermediate appellate court opinion)