Showing posts with label blue heeler. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blue heeler. Show all posts

Friday, December 1, 2017

Texas: Five dogs which attacked a killed Erin McCleskey have been ordered to be euthanized

TEXAS -- A Travis County jury has decided the fate of five dogs who brutally attacked and killed a woman in 2016.

Tuesday, the jury deliberated and came to the decision that all six dogs did indeed contribute to the death of Erin Mccleskey and have been ordered to be euthanized (with the exception of the sixth dog, which had already died a few months back).

  
 

The owner of the dogs will have 30 days to decide if he will appeal the verdict before county can in fact put the dogs down.

Earlier Tuesday,  the owner of the dogs and an expert on dog attacks gave emotional and conflicting testimony in court.

The owner of the dogs, Terry Swanson, testified Tuesday that he believes only one dog attacked and killed Erin Mcccleskey last year.

 
 

Swanson and his attorney Eric Torberson, Tuesday, CLAIMED to the jury that a Labrador mix was responsible because she was protecting her litter of puppies.

To address the single dog theory, prosecutors brought in James Crosby, an expert in dog attacks.

“I find the maternal instinct to have been very unlikely because the puppies are older, they were in the round pen.  There’s no evidence that Ms. McCleskey was in the puppy pen or interacting with the puppies at all,” said Crosby.


There were six dogs on the property when Mccleskey went to the house on Fay Road to serve legal papers.

Travis County deputy medical examiner Kendall Crowns testified that he found 455 puncture wounds on McCleskey's body. He told the jury that a [fatal] attack by one dog will typically leave about 150 marks. 

Both Crowns and Crosby concluded that its highly unlikely Mccleskey was chased down and mauled by only one dog.


“My opinion based on the evidence is that all of the dog’s present participated to one level or another in the bites and the attack to Ms. McCleskey that led to her death,” said Crosby.

DOES ERIC TORBERSON WANT TO EXPLAIN THIS???

REPEAT OFFENDERS. POLICE IGNORED COMPLAINTS

Gonzalo Grimaldo, the owner of a parking lot next to the Swansons’ property, said the dogs got loose a few months ago and attacked his dog. He called the attack frightening and said he called 911, but said nobody responded to his report.


Another neighbor, Christi Sparks, said her family has had constant problems with dogs running loose in the neighborhood since they moved there in 2005. 

*  *  *  *  *  *

Since the attack in Manor, the dogs have been locked away at the animal shelter. Legal maneuvering has prevented authorities from putting them all down.

Ending their lives, according to Crosby is the reasonable decision. Even if there is no way for the jury to know if one or more dogs did not take part in the attack.

 
 

“We can’t be sure that those dogs will or will not severely injure another person and I’m not willing to take the chance,” said Crosby.

A vet from the shelter, Dr. Rachael Hays, testified that since the animals arrived at the facility none of the dogs have shown aggression.

Most dogs won't once they've been removed from their property and are in a new environment with unfamiliar smells, people, dogs, etc. Their demeanor changes to more of a timid, cautious state rather than overt aggression.

The jury started deliberations shortly before 4:00 p.m.

VIDEO CLIP #1: 


VIDEO CLIP #2: 


(FOX7 - Nov 28, 2017)

Earlier:

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Texas: Hearing underway to determine if dogs that killed Erin McCleskey will be euthanized

TEXAS -- A Travis County jury will decide the fate of six dogs ordered to be put down after a brutal attack that killed a woman in 2016.

A trial to appeal that order began Monday afternoon at the Travis County courthouse.

Process server Erin McCleskey attempted to serve a citation to a homeowner in Northeast Travis County in June of 2016, but, before she left the property, she was mauled to death by a group of dogs on the property.


 

There is no question in anyone's mind that McCleskey died because she was attacked by dogs at a home on Fay Street in Manor. What is being debated in court is whether all six dogs on the property should be euthanized.

The dogs were taken after McCleskey's body was found in the yard. One week later, Justice of the Peace Herb Evans ordered the dogs to be put down.
             
Attorney Eric Torberson, who is representing the dog's owner, appealed that decision.


             
Monday, ERIC TORBERSON told the jury that putting down all six dogs is wrong because it is unclear which dogs actually participated in the attack.

ERIC TORBERSON also argued one of the dogs recently had puppies and was likely being protective of her young, spurring a violent response.

             
The mother dog since died while undergoing a medical procedure.

The State said the four Labrador-Pyrenees mixes and two Husky-Australian Cattle Dog mixes attacked as a pack, puncturing McCleskey's skin more than 455 times.
             
 
 
 

During the hearing, officers with the Travis County Sheriff’s Office testified that while processing the scene, they noticed aggressive behavior in at least three of the dogs.

An animal control officer said the canines had very little human interaction and it is likely they all played at least a minor role in the attack against McCleskey.


The night she died, McCleskey entered the property to serve a citation. She walked through a gate, past a no trespassing sign to do so. That’s another reason the defense claimed the dogs were being protective.

Would a girl selling Girl Scout cookies ignore a "No Trespassing" sign in order to get to the front door to sell cookies? Would Jehovah's Witnesses ignore it to get to the front door to ring the doorbell? Was the sign even visible or was it in an obscure place, hidden by leaves?

REPEAT OFFENDERS. POLICE IGNORED COMPLAINTS

Gonzalo Grimaldo, the owner of a parking lot next to the Swansons’ property, said the dogs got loose a few months ago and attacked his dog. He called the attack frightening and said he called 911, but said nobody responded to his report.


Another neighbor, Christi Sparks, said her family has had constant problems with dogs running loose in the neighborhood since they moved there in 2005. 


 

The trial will continue Tuesday at 9 a.m.

VIDEO NEWS CLIP:


(FOX7 - Nov 27, 2017)

Earlier:

Sunday, June 11, 2017

(April 2017) Texas: Paula Turner and Tim Turner let their Blue Heeler terrorize their neighborhood for years. Why the neighbors put up with it, I don't know. Appeals court reaffirmed judgment of more than $700,000 to their dog's latest victim

TEXAS -- Although this decision is from March, I just came across it and I think it's worth a read.

I am absolutely astounded that this dog was able to terrorize the neighborhood for so long. 

This being Texas, you assume firearms are issued to Texans at birth and that they're competent and self-assured in using them. Why didn't someone shoot this dog after the first attack, the second, the third? Did anyone bother to call Animal Control? Were they living in some remote area that didn't have Animal Control? 

These are questions that go unanswered, but I can only think that because the dog is a Blue Heeler it was tolerated. On the other hand, the fact is that it's a smaller dog not known for causing deaths and amputations of victims' limbs so maybe it was this final attack by the Blue Heeler, which was the most damaging, that finally got something done about it? 

Reading through this really long opinion (I edited most of it out, click the link below and you can see it in its entirety), I am shocked that one incident after another occurred without this dog being shot dead. 


In The Court of Appeals
Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana
No. 06-16-00046-CV
PAULA KAYE TURNER AND TIMOTHY RAY TURNER, Appellants
V.
JENNIFER DUGGIN, Appellee
On Appeal from the 415th District Court
Parker County, Texas
Trial Court No. CV14-1551

O P I N I O N
Oscar was an eleven-year-old Blue Heeler mix canine owned by Timothy Ray Turner and his wife, Paula Kaye Turner. While the Turners were away on vacation, Oscar escaped their yard through a gate inadvertently left open by Paula’s teenage daughter, Makayela Fuller, and bit passerby Jennifer Duggin, causing her significant and irreparable injury.

Duggins brought suit wherein she alleged that the Turners were negligent in the supervision and confinement of the dog (including negligent entrustment of that responsibility to a child), in exercising ordinary care by allowing the dog to escape the Turners’ property, and in training the dog to be vicious and to attack people. They alleged that the Turners knew or should have known of the vicious propensities of the dog and were guilty of such gross negligence that they were strictly liable for the damages occasioned to Duggin by the attack.

After hearing evidence that Oscar had bitten several other people and regularly escaped the Turner’s yard, the jury found by clear and convincing evidence
that the Turners had been grossly negligent. The jury awarded a total of $570,000.00 in compensatory damages, $75,000.00 in exemplary damages against Timothy, and $50,000.00 in exemplary damages against Paula.

After overruling the Turners’ motion for new trial and motion for remittitur, the trial court entered a final judgment in accord with the jury’s verdict, adding an
award of $5,731.51 in prejudgment interest, for a total award of $700,731.51 to Duggin.

On appeal, the Turners question whether the evidence was legally and factually sufficient to support (1) the jury’s award of $350,000.00 for a line item that included both future pain and suffering and future mental anguish, (2) the jury’s finding of gross negligence, and (3) both the award of and the amount of the award of exemplary damages.

Because we find the evidence legally and factually sufficient to support all of the jury’s findings, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

II. The Evidence at Trial
A. Oscar’s General Character and Training
Timothy adopted Oscar while he was married to his former wife, Stacey Santibanez.

Santibanez testified that Timothy trained Oscar “to bite on command” by using her son, Jason, and his daughter, Elizabeth, as the subjects of the attack. She informed the jury that even though Timothy had attempted to train Oscar to only put his mouth on people on command without actually biting them, Oscar would bite the children “every time” he attempted to train him in that fashion.

According to Santibanez, the children believed that Oscar was vicious and did not want to participate in training the dog. She testified that Elizabeth still had scars from a puncture wound created by Oscar’s bite. Yet, except for the one instance involving Elizabeth, Santibanez denied that Oscar drew blood when he bit the children.

Santibanez described Oscar as a threat to people he did not know. She testified that she was forced to instruct guests to stay away from Oscar because she was concerned for their safety.

According to Santibanez, even Paula said Oscar should have been put down a long time ago because of his tendency to bite people.

Cheryl Collins, the sixty-five year-old woman who lived across the street from the Turners, described Oscar as a mean alpha male animal. Collins testified that the Turners regularly allowed Oscar and their other two dogs to roam the neighborhood and that the dogs’ demeanor caused her to be afraid for her safety and that of her husband because the dogs had previously acted as if they were going to attack her. Collins and her husband were so afraid of Oscar that they each regularly carried a gun while going to their own mailbox.

According to Collins, for several weeks before the incident, Oscar and another dog would come to their yard daily with their heads down and their ears pinned back as they growled, showed their teeth, and dug at her fence in an attempt to attack her four small dogs.

James Kendall Harrison, who also lived next door to the Turners, testified that he was not surprised to hear of Oscar’s attack on Duggin. He testified that the Turners’ dogs were vicious and that they made him afraid because they seemed as if they wanted to attack. Harrison said that he became nervous when the dogs escaped the Turners’ yard, mostly fearing for the safety of his
three children, believing that the dogs were a threat to the safety of the entire community.

Harrison’s wife, Krystal, also testified that the Turners’ dogs would come to her yard three or four times a week. Krystal was afraid for her children’s safety because the dogs would bark, growl, and would “have evil in their eyes.”
Krystal also believed that the dogs stood ready to attack.

Caleb Toles, a friend of Paula’s children, Makayela Fuller and Dustin Fuller, testified that Oscar was vicious toward strangers and had bitten his wife, Jenna Toles. Caleb told the jury that he believed that he had also come close to getting bitten by Oscar, but that Oscar obeyed a command from Timothy to not attack. Caleb and Jenna both testified that they heard Timothy bragging about having trained Oscar to assist him in bar fights.

Elizabeth denied that Oscar had been trained to attack, stated that she did not hate Oscar, and claimed that she was only nipped by Oscar twice during horseplay with her brother. Elizabeth clarified that she did not bleed when Oscar nipped her and stated that she had no scars from the incident.

[The Turnes' teenage daughter] Makayela Fuller testified that Oscar caught her pant leg once when she was play-fighting with Dustin. Although she heard that Oscar had bitten others and had attacked a man named Cole Thomason, Makayela testified CLAIMED that Oscar was not dangerous and was a nice dog.

Paula Turner also described the dog as “laid back and easy going” and testified that she had never heard him growl. Timothy Turner denied that he trained the dog to attack to assist him in bar fights.

Instead, he explained CLAIMED that he used Oscar to “herd” the children and denied that Oscar had ever bitten Jason. Timothy testified that because he was not concerned about other people’s safety around Oscar and (even though he was aware that the dog had bitten Duggin), he would not mind leaving the gate open for Oscar in the future.

B. Prior Incidents Involving Oscar
The jury heard that Oscar had bitten several non-family members prior to his attack on Duggin, including Jenna, Thomason, Kelly Wilfong, and Geno Santibanez.

Jenna testified that Oscar was aggressive towards strangers. She testified that the first time she was around Oscar, she was reaching for the Turners’ door when Oscar lunged towards her and sank his teeth into her skin.

Jenna’s grandmother, Gaile Comeau, and Caleb both testified that Jenna still had a scar from the deep puncture wound. Comeau testified that Paula was made aware of the wound inflicted by Oscar, being the person who cleaned the wound.

It was also undisputed that Oscar had attacked Thomason. Santibanez described Thomason as an elderly man who was bitten when he was walking on the road of an RV park in New Braunfels. Timothy testified that Oscar bit Thomason because Thomason was walking just outside the front door of an RV owned by Timothy. Oscar was quarantined by Comal County as a result of the attack and was released to Timothy after seven days in quarantine.

Paula Turner and Timothy Turner also admitted that Oscar had likewise bitten Paula’s friend, Wilfong, on or about October 29, 2013. Paula testified that Wilfong required medical treatment as a result of the wound created by Oscar and that Oscar was once again quarantined as a result of the attack.

According to Paula Turner, Wilfong was returning the Turners’ other two dogs to the Turners’ backyard (from which they had escaped) when Oscar bit her.

Santibanez testified that Oscar had attacked and bitten her friend’s children as they were getting out of a car and that he had twice bitten her husband, Geno Santibanez (who is a longtime friend of Timothy Turner). On one occasion, Santibanez said that Oscar bit Geno on the leg when he was helping to take out the trash.

On the second occasion, Santibanez said that Geno was in the Fast Lane Bar when Oscar was present. Geno reached to pet Oscar and was bitten on his arm even though Timothy had not directed Oscar to attack, this bite being sufficiently serious to cause him to bleed.

Timothy admitted that Oscar bit someone in a bar once. However, when asked about the incident involving Geno, Timothy claimed that Geno had bitten Oscar prior to the attack.

According to Santibanez, Geno bit Oscar only after the incident to teach him a lesson. Elizabeth also testified that she heard that Oscar bit Geno first.

There was also testimony that Oscar had bitten family members. According to Caleb, Timothy became intoxicated a few times and would sometimes sic the dog on Dustin. Caleb testified that Oscar ripped through Dustin’s jeans on one occasion, drawing blood.

According to Jenna, Oscar had also bitten Makayela when she intervened in the dog’s attack of her boyfriend. Jenna testified that Oscar could potentially be a threat to a stranger if he was left outside.

C. The Neighbors Complain About Oscar to the Turners
According to Jenna, both Makayela and Caleb informed Paula that the neighbors were complaining about Oscar. Other evidence at trial demonstrated that the Turners were aware of the neighbors’ complaints.

Collins testified that Oscar was in her yard every day for several weeks before Duggin was bitten, regardless of whether the Turners’ gate was open or closed. Collins stated that her husband called Paula to inform her of their dogs’ behavior and that Paula’s response was simply, “[O]h, the kids probably left the gate open again.”

According to Collins, when she offered to show Paula the hole in the fence from which the dogs were escaping, Paula declined the offer as if she did not seem to care. Collins testified that she did not stress the issue further because she did not think Paula would act. Collins based this belief on the fact that she had informed Paula about the issue many previous times, but the dogs returned every day.

Collins testified that she was so frustrated at the continued presence of the Turners’ unfriendly dogs in her yard that she expended $16,000.00 to construct a fence to keep them out.

Harrison testified that he saw the Turners’ dogs outside the Turners’ yard “at least every other day” for “at least a week or two” prior to the incident involving Duggin. On two separate occasions, the dogs had gotten into Harrison’s cow pasture. Harrison testified that he ran the dogs back into the hole in the Turners’ fence after the dogs mauled the nose of a sick cow. 

According to Harrison, his uncle, Ralph Walker, had spoken to Paula about the hole in the fence that allowed the dogs to escape. Nevertheless, Harrison testified that he continued to see the dogs outside of the Turners’ property “[p]retty regularly.” Krystal also testified that the dogs would escape the
fence, which was occasionally left open.

Because Caleb was often at the Turners’ home, he testified that he overheard the Turners’ expressions of frustration about the dogs escaping the fence. Caleb even assisted Dustin in placing dirt in a hole the dogs had created. He testified that the Turners were certainly aware of their neighbors’ complaints. Makayela also testified that she knew of the neighbors’ complaints and
confirmed that the dogs had escaped from an open gate “just prior” to the incident involving Duggin.

Paula confirmed that she was aware that the dogs had dug underneath the fence in order to escape the backyard and labeled one of the dogs as the digger. Although she claimed that Collins never called her, she testified that other neighbors (the Coles) complained to her about the dogs running around loose in the neighborhood. Paula testified that she made repairs to the fence
because there was a potential for the dogs to escape, but admitted that she did not build an electric fence, use shock collars, chain the dogs, or keep them in an escape-proof enclosure.

Timothy denied any knowledge that Oscar was escaping the fence. He said that he did not make any repairs to the fence because he relied on Paula to take care of the situation.

At trial, when asked, “You don’t think that [Oscar] had any dangerous propensities to people that it didn’t know, do you,” Paula Turner responded, “I never said that. He protects us.”

Although Paula admitted that Oscar had bitten people, she justified the matter by claiming that Oscar had only bitten people on their property.

In spite of the incident involving Thomason and Geno, Paula told the jury that she was unaware of anyone accusing Oscar of getting off of the property and
biting anyone except for the incident when Duggin had been bitten. Paula denied any claim that the dogs were terrorizing the neighborhood.

D. Oscar Bites Duggin
On June 3, 2014, the day Oscar bit Duggin, [Paula Turner and Tim Turner's teenage daughter] Makayela Turner testified that although she knew Oscar had bitten people before, she left the gate open because she was “frazzled” in her hurry to attend a church function celebrating her upcoming graduation. This oversight provided the opportunity for Oscar to escape the Turners’ enclosure and bite Duggin as she was walking with her friend and neighbor, Roxanne Raymond.

Raymond recalled the incident, stating, “We were talking and just all of a sudden these three dogs come running at us, barking and growling, and literally surrounded us.”

Raymond testified that although neither she nor Duggin said or did anything to provoke the dogs, Oscar sank his teeth into Duggin’s leg and then ran back to the Turners’ yard with the other dogs in tow.

Duggin testified that Oscar bit into her calf and left a puncture wound so deep that she felt she could stick her thumb through it.

Raymond examined Duggin’s bleeding leg and noticed tissue protruding from a very deep wound, one which caused her leg to swell immediately. Raymond, who is a nurse, was concerned about the injury and believed Duggin needed to go to the emergency room for medical treatment.

Duggin testified that she could not walk due to the excruciating pain and the amount of blood squirting out from the wound. She took several photographs of her bloody calf, which the jury saw, and went to the emergency room.

Paula Turner testified that Collins called her on the telephone to inform her that Oscar had bitten Duggin. Duggin also spoke to Paula, who was away on vacation at the time, but stated that one of her children must have left the gate open.

According to Duggin, the Turners initially agreed to pay her medical bills, but later recanted the offer and hung up on her during a telephone conversation in which Paula clarified they did not have the money to pay Duggin’s medical bills.

Duggin testified that she continued to see the Turners’ dogs roaming outside the Turners’ fence even after she had been bitten.

Raymond testified that she also saw the dogs outside of the Turners’ yard on several occasions prior to Oscar’s attack on Duggin. In describing the demeanor of the Turners’ dogs, Raymond said that they snarled and acted like they would attack even when they were enclosed by the Turners’ fence.

E. Evidence of Duggin’s Injuries
Duggin did not recover as expected after she was released from the emergency room. She testified that the puncture wound was not healing and that the pain and swelling were not alleviated by the medication given to her so she returned to Dr. David L. Reeve several weeks after she had been bitten. After noticing swelling, tenderness, and veins on her calf that were “bulging out,”

Reeve was concerned that Duggin may have a blood clot and referred her to surgeon Scott Walker. Dr. Walker informed Duggin that she had sustained damage to her veins, which compromised her circulatory system and caused necrosis in the calf. Dr. Walker explained that he became alarmed when Duggin was still having difficulty walking three months after Oscar’s bite. 

Duggin testified that she underwent one out-patient procedure and one vascular ablation surgery, during which she was required to remain awake, even though anesthesia was not administered. The surgery remedied the damaged veins, but other blood vessels began to bulge in an effort to re-route blood that was pooling at her foot and was not circulating properly.

After visiting five doctors in the span of two years, Duggin was told that there was no more medically viable treatment that could assist her.

At trial, Walker explained to the jury that Duggin (who was forty-two years old when Oscar bit her) suffered what proved to be a persistent life-long problem as a result of Oscar’s bite. He informed the jury that the pain and swelling of her leg as a result of walking or standing would remain constantly, would not likely improve, but could possibly get worse as Duggin aged.

Dr. Walker testified that there was no cure for Duggin and that her condition could also lead to future infection and ulceration of the skin. Dr. Walker explained that someone with Duggin’s medical condition could reasonably experience emotional distress as a result of the life-long injury.

F. The Effect of Duggin’s Injuries on Her Life
Duggin testified that she deals with pain every day and that her entire family has experienced strain as a result of her injuries. She described the means by which the injuries she sustained in Oscar’s attack had impacted her in her roles as a special education teacher, a serious competitive equestrian, and a mother to her children, Tye (a fourteen-year-old boy) and Kensie (a
nine-year-old girl).

Duggin testified that her job as a special education teacher is emotionally and physically strenuous. In order to effectively perform her job, she is required to sit on the floor with the children and to walk with them if they have a breakdown. Duggin testified that she goes up and down stairs with the class, stands and walks while teaching, and described herself as always on the
move while at work.

Duggin’s mother, Jane Trierweiler, who is also a teacher at Duggin’s school,
testified that she regularly sees her daughter elevate and massage her leg during the lunch hour as a result of swelling.

Justin Brown, who has trained and shown horses for twenty-one years, testified that Duggin grew up in the horse industry and has won many competitive awards. The jury viewed photographs of Duggin demonstrating that she had loved horses since she was a child, had shown horses at
competitions, and had been a competing equestrian for her entire life. Duggin testified that she had won a number of national and world titles in equestrian competition. She had been offered a full scholarship to the University of Florida due to her equestrian skills and hoped to pass on her success to her children.

Duggin testified that before the incident, she rode horses with her children three to five times per week and that her children had carried on her love of and success in equestrian competitions. Duggin testified that not only did her leg injury prevent her from riding or showing horses, it also barred her from the endeavors of the family in the raising and showing of swine and sheep. Duggin displayed awards she had won at prior livestock shows, but testified that as a result of injuries sustained in the dog’s attack, she was unable to shear sheep and exercise or clip pigs in preparation for the most recent livestock show.

Dr. Walker confirmed that it would be painful for Duggin to ride horses and Brown, Trierweiler, and Raymond all confirmed that Duggin was unable to do so. Brown, who was still training Kensie, testified that he personally witnessed how deeply the injury had emotionally affected Duggin, bringing her to tears.

Duggin testified that before she was bitten by the dog, she (in addition to riding horses) was on a swimming and diving team and regularly used her treadmill at home. She also practiced sports with Tye and Kensie, who both played basketball and softball. Raymond testified that before the dog bite, Duggin and her husband often walked around the neighborhood together but
that Duggin’s pain from the injury now prohibited her from doing so.

Duggin and Trierweiler both testified that Duggin could no longer play with her children.

Duggin explained that the pain of her leg was so severe that she was now forced to become sedentary, that she had no option but to elevate her leg when she got home, and that she had gained weight as a result of her forced inactivity. Duggin indicated that she experienced no relief from the throbbing pain in her leg and that the disfigurement to her leg occasioned by the dog bite
(including bulging veins) distressed her.

Duggin lifted her pant leg for the jury to see the veins and scars, which she described as ugly, and she revealed it had caused her to refrain from wearing
shorts. Because she was concerned about her leg’s physical appearance, Duggin visited a plastic surgeon, who told her that plastic surgery would not alleviate the situation.

Duggin’s husband, Tim Duggin, testified that the whole family had been affected by Duggin’s injuries and that he had heard his wife crying in the shower at times. He said that Duggin took more breaks at school due to leg pain and that she could no longer use the treadmill or be with their animals because she had to rest and ice her leg every day.

Duggin testified that if Tim
accidentally bumped her leg at night while they were in bed, the resulting pain caused her to lose sleep. Tim and Duggin both testified that they were concerned about future health problems which could be caused as a result of the injury.

III. Award for Future Physical Pain and Mental Anguish Is Supported by the Evidence
The jury was given a single blank to determine what amount, if any, would fairly and reasonably compensate Duggin for future physical pain and mental anguish. The jury answered with a figure of $350,000.00.

The Turners argue that this award must be overturned because there was no evidence that Duggin would suffer mental anguish in the future. We apply the same standards of review to legal and factual sufficiency challenges to the evidence supporting a jury’s damage award as we do to legal and factual sufficiency challenges on a jury’s liability findings.

See Gen. Motors Corp. v. Burry, 203 S.W.3d 514, 549 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth 2006, pet. denied).

Since the Turners lodged no objection to the lack of segregation in the jury charge of the mental anguish damages from the question pertaining to physical pain damages, we cannot now differentiate between the award of one kind of damage from the other.

Here, there is no real dispute that Duggin established the existence of physical pain. The question is whether the jury awarded too much for the combined line item of future physical pain and mental anguish.

The nature, duration, and severity of Duggin’s injuries and their impact on her life were well established by the record and a reiteration of those things already described would be redundant.

“Texas has authorized recovery of mental anguish damages in virtually all personal injury actions.”

Based on the nature, severity, and duration of Duggin’s injuries and due to the testimony of the medical personnel, the jury was free to determine that the mental anguish suffered by Duggin in the past would not subside in the future.

Thus, on the record presented here, we find that the evidence was both legally and factually sufficient to establish that Duggin would suffer mental anguish in the future.


IV. Sufficient Evidence Supports the Jury’s Gross Negligence Finding
Because (1) Oscar was a vicious dog and (2) the Turners failed to contain him, (3) even though they knew he had bitten others, and (4) was escaping from their yard, we conclude that the jury’s finding of gross negligence was supported by clear and convincing evidence and was not contrary to the great
weight and preponderance of the evidence.

Timothy has additional culpability because the evidence shows that he encouraged the viciousness of the dog by training him or encouraging him to bite humans.

Given the jury’s finding that the Turners knew of Oscar’s vicious propensities, a
reasonable jury could determine, by clear and convincing evidence, that failing to ensure that the dog was secured in the yard by chaining or enclosing him (especially when the Turners were out of town) posed a likelihood of serious injury to others, even when viewed objectively from Turners’ standpoint.

A jury could certainly reasonably conclude that Paula and Timothy were both
negligent in entrusting the monitoring of the vicious animal to a mere child—who eventually left open the gate, allowing the animal to roam free in the neighborhood. Thus, the evidence supports the objective component of gross negligence.

...the evidence shows (1) that Timothy encouraged the vicious propensity
of the dog for his own benefit and (2) that the Turners knew about the peril of their vicious dog escaping and biting others, but did not care.

VI. Conclusion
We affirm the trial court’s judgment. 

(Justia.com - March 31, 2017)

Earlier:

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Oklahoma: Purcell police officer Kyle Glasgow, reeking of alcohol and slurring his words, falls off his motorcycle, shoots his neighbor's dog then drives home, gets his patrol car and returns to speak with officers who don't make him do a field sobriety test

OKLAHOMA -- Kyle Glasgow, a Purcell police officer has been charged after he allegedly shot a dog with his service weapon, leaving a family pet bloodied and injured.

“It caught this leg, and hopefully if I can keep the infection out of his joint, he won’t lose his paw,” the dog’s owner told KFOR in Oct. 2016.

  
 

Champion sustained a gunshot wound on his foot, where he was allegedly shot by Purcell Police Officer Richard Kyle Glasgow.

“They said that he fell over on his motorcycle and that he had shot my dog, Champion,” the dog’s owner said.

Glasgow lives nearby and has been known to complain about the dog running out into the road, but witnesses say that wasn’t this case this time.

“He fell over and then he took his gun and then shot twice,” Champion’s owner said.

Officers arrived and while speaking to the dog owners, Glasgow pulls up in his police-issued unmarked black Dodge Charger.

Clearly this was an effort to gain favor with the deputies on-scene.




A sheriff’s report states Officer Glasgow had slurred speech and deputies could smell a strong odor of alcohol.

It also stated the officer used his police issued gun to fire one shot into the ground and another shot at Champion.

Deputies believe Glasgow was intoxicated.

“They heard two shots and then the dog yelped,” the owner said.

SPECIAL TREATMENT FOR OFFICER KYLE GLASGOW

According to the report, the officer was not arrested. Nor does it appear that he was given a field sobriety test on-scene after the deputies had probable cause to believe that he was impaired from alcohol and had been observed driving.

Instead, the deputies called their supervisors at the McClain County Sheriff’s Office who then called the Purcell Police Department. The Purcell Police Department sent Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore out to the scene.

When he arrived, one of the deputies told Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore that HE BELIEVED GLASGOW WAS INTOXICATED, according to the report. 


Again, no one made Glasgow do a field sobriety test. Instead, someone from the Purcell Police Department was called to come and get his unmarked police car AND INTOXICATED OFFICER KYLE GLASGOW was driven home.

Instead of being arrested for DWI, Purcell Police
Officer Kyle Glasgow was driven home by his boss

Later, after all the incriminating evidence related to the DWI (and shooting his police-issued gun while intoxicated) was eliminated from the equation, the Oklahoma State Bureau of Investigation was called to investigate the shooting of the dog.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is why Officer Kyle Glasgow was ONLY charged with one count of reckless conduct with a firearm.  And why Officer Kyle Glasgow wasn't immediately fired.


Think about all the things Glasgow did that are being swept under the rug by the Purcell Police Department and the McClain County Sheriff’s Office is this:
  1. Glasgow was drunk while riding on his motorcycle.
  2. Glasgow had his police-issued weapon on him while driving drunk.
  3. Glasgow discharged his police-issued service weapon while drunk.
  4. Glasgow got back on his bike and drove while intoxicated back to his house.
  5. Glasgow got into his police-issued, unmarked patrol car and drove - while intoxicated - back to the scene in an attempt to sway favor with the responding deputies. 
  6. On top of being intoxicated and driving his police-issued vehicle, he was also still carrying his police-issued service weapon.
  7. Despite the deputies noting that he was clearly reeking of alcohol, slurring his speech and intoxicated, they failed to do a standard field sobriety test on him.
  8. When Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore arrived, the McClain County Sheriff’s Office deputy informed him that he believed Glasgow to be intoxicated. Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore neither instructed the deputies to conduct a field sobriety test nor did he instruct Glasgow to submit to one. 
  9. Instead, Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore made arrangements for Glasgow to be driven home and for someone else to retrieve the unmarked police car. Ask yourself? If he was too drunk to drive the police car back to his house, why wasn't he arrested for DWI? If Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore wants to say that Glasgow was NOT intoxicated, that the McClain County Sheriff’s Office deputy was wrong in his belief that Glasgow was intoxicated, why didn't they let Glasgow drive the unmarked police vehicle back home? You can't have it both ways.
  10. When they took his vehicle, was his service weapon taken as well? Again, if Glasgow were too drunk to drive, why was he allowed to retain his service weapon?
  11. Why hasn't Glasgow been fired? He broke numerous laws as well as numerous General Orders. 
I'm a big supporter of our military and police. Yes, there are times that dogs are shot and it's clear that the officer was defending himself/herself. However, what upsets me so much about this whole case is that this isn't even about whether or not the dog was doing something that warranted it being shot. This is all about corruption with the Purcell Police Department and the McClain County Sheriff’s Office.


If you were Glasgow's neighbors and you observed all this special treatment for Glasgow, would you have any faith in your local sheriff's office? If you were standing out there after your dog had been shot by Kyle Glasgow and he shows up in front of the deputies in his unmarked police vehicle and is staggering around, slurring his words and reeking of alcohol, wouldn't you have expected for him to be arrested and taken to jail? Wouldn't you be absolutely livid to see them treat him like a VIP's son and take him home to sober up, instead of taking him to jail?

Would you feel that your neighbor Kyle Glasgow has just been emboldened into thinking he can do whatever he wants and get away with it? Would you be worried about retaliation and harassment from him and other members of the Purcell Police Department?

If I were them, I would certainly be worried.

 

COMMENTS POSTED ON KFOR's WEBSITE:

TR Cardiac Tony Swinney - As far as Glasgow’s current employment status, a Purcell PD spokesperson said that is a personnel matter that he is not at liberty to discuss.

NOTICE THE WORD "PERSONNEL", NOT "PERSONAL". That means it concerns an employee matter, not a privacy of the cop matter. The department can't comment because it could impair the investigation.

My question is this, he admitted to leaving the scene of an accident, he was carrying a service weapon while under the influence, he drove a motor vehicle not once, but twice while under the influence AND ONE OF THOSE TIMES WAS A CITY-OWNED VEHICLE! If he exhibited signs of being under the influence, why was he not tested at the scene?

John Cooksey - If he laid his bike over , how did escape physical injury? Was there damage to the bike? If allegations were made that the dog caused an accident, officers should have investigated further, and on his bike or in a police unit, if he was impaired , or the officer on scene smelled alcohol, tests should have been given , if he was dui, he should have been arrested. They dropped the ball on this , hope OSBI can help rectify this unjust action.


Donna Trustnoone Clevenger - If it had been a regular civilian And they smelled of Alcohol while driving they would have been taken to jail for DUI And he was driving a unmarked cop car ??? Guess it's ok for the ones who are supposed to serve and protect us !!! SMH

Bryan Stapp -Police aren't out there to protect and serve you. They are out there to uphold the law. You should read the article again. He was driving a motorcycle and laid it over when the dog ran out in front of him. He then showed up in the unmarked car.

Donna Trustnoone Clevenger - Bryan Stapp First of all Yes They Are and it even says it on the POLICE CAR. And Regardless he was still driving a POLICE CAR while smelling of Alcohol. And should have been taken to jail.

William Shelton - Bryan Stapp, so you're justifying what this cretin did? Why does that not surprise me?

Gregory Standforth - The OSBI won't find that the officer did anything wrong. Cops _always_ cover for cops. The cop could have shot the dog and the homeowner and the OSBI would find "reasonable cause" for the shooting. In this case the bully wears a badge and a gun and he'll be allowed to continue as long as he chooses. When those who are charged with keeping the peace become the aggressors we truly have a police state.

Ken Stet - Personal matter, what a bunch of crap. The police are so bold they continue to thumb their nose at the public. Make some time between the incident and when they will come back with the officer did no wrong doing. Enough is enough. The people need to start investigating especially if the officer in charge starts saying crap like i wont comment its a personal matter.

Donna Barnes Newsom - I come from very pro law enforcement family and background. I don't condone nor appreciate stupid and/or bad cops. Our law officers have a tough enough time without idiots like this!


(KFOR - March 28, 2017)

Earlier:

Friday, October 14, 2016

Oklahoma: Purcell police officer Kyle Glasgow accused of driving drunk then shooting neighbor's dog. Instead of arresting him for DWI, Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore drives him home.

OKLAHOMA -- A Purcell police officer is under investigation by the OSBI after a dog was reportedly shot in McClain County late Saturday night.

There are allegations alcohol was involved in the incident.

According to the incident report, deputies were dispatched to the 23000 block of Reece Lake Road where witnesses said a man later identified as 37-year-old Richard Kyle Glasgow (he goes by his middle name), who works for the Purcell Police Department, fell off his motorcycle while driving by the property.



The report states shortly after, the witnesses heard two gunshots that sounded like they came from the street. The witnesses said their dog then ran to their back barn with what appeared to be a gunshot wound to its left leg.

They called the police and responding deputies soon arrived.

The report goes on to say a black, unmarked Purcell Police Department-issued Dodge Charger pulled up to the scene and Glasgow got out of the driver seat.

“Glasgow stated to me he had his service weapon on him,” the deputy wrote.

 
 

Then the deputy said the victim and witness pointed at Glasgow as he continued approaching and stated he was the person that shot the dog.

“At that time everybody involved began to get hostile and I notified my dispatch that I needed another unit to come out here and help with crowd control,” the deputy added.


Glasgow told the deputy the dog ran out into the street toward his motorcycle, so he laid his bike on its side. According to the report, Glasgow stated he then fired a warning shot into the ground and then fired a shot at the dog, striking it in the left leg. Glasgow told deputies he shot the dog with his Purcell Police Department service weapon. Glasgow said he drove his motorcycle home and returned to the scene in his patrol car, the report states.

“While talking to Glasgow I could smell a strong odor of an alcoholic beverage coming from his person, and could hear slurred speech as he spoke,” the deputy wrote.


The report states supervisors were contacted with the McClain County Sheriff’s Office and the Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Bobby Elmore arrived to conduct an internal investigation on Glasgow. The deputy told Assistant Chief Elmore he believed Glasgow was intoxicated, according to the report.

SPECIAL TREATMENT FOR OFFICER KYLE GLASGOW

Instead of being given a field sobriety test on-scene, deputies from the McClain County Sheriff's Office released seemingly-impaired driver Officer Glasgow over to his boss, Purcell Police Department Assistant Police Chief Elmore, who also reportedly took possession of Officer Glasgow’s patrol car, the report states.


Glasgow reported a previous incident with the dog while riding his motorcycle in the same area – stating the dog “ran out into the street almost causing him to wreck his motorcycle with his child on the back of it.”

Glasgow said he told the landowner “she needed to keep her dog put up or he would shoot it.”

Nice house for a police officer's salary

Friday afternoon, the landowner Sherry Reece said she believed he mistook Champion for the neighbor’s German Shepherd.

“He told me that two German Shepherds were running out toward him on his motorcycle and he had his child with him and he had to swerve and he almost fell over with his child,” she explained. “I said ‘OK I’ll tell Junior. He’s the one that owns the German Shepherds.’”

"He fell over and then he took his gun and then shot twice,” Champion’s owner said.


As authorities work to find out what happened, Champion is working to heal and hopefully not lose his paw.

"I was sick when I thought he'd blown his leg off,” Champion’s owner said.

"It caught this leg, and hopefully if I can keep the infection out of his joint, he won't lose his paw,” the dog’s owner said.

The McClain County Sheriff’s Office said Glasgow was not arrested.

The investigation was turned over to the OSBI. The Purcell Police Department said because of that ongoing investigation, it could not comment on the matter.

As far as Glasgow’s current employment status, a Purcell Police Department spokesperson said that is a personnel matter that he is not at liberty to discuss.

Do you think anyone else who drives up to a police officer, gets out of their vehicle and is slurring their words and reeking of alcohol would be allowed to call someone to come and get them and take them home? Of course not. You would be forced on the side of the road to do a field sobriety test or a mandatory blood draw at a hospital. Then YOU would be charged with impaired driving. 

 

(News9 - Oct 14, 2016)

Thursday, September 15, 2016

Tennessee: Heeler attacked by pit bull is up for adoption

TENNESSEE -- "Biscuit needs a good home...free...female about 10-12 years old ...she was attacked by a pit bull and had to be taken to vet...she gets her stitches out tomorrow...

she has always lived on a farm and never on a leash...she is doing well and becoming very active...we have had her on a diet and she is losing weight..she has always been on a farm ...very good protecting the chickens/goats etc. from predators...she is house broken but prefers to be outdoors...not a cat fan...

she needs a loving home with land and to be loved and live her life out....Please pm me if interested...If you know where I live you know it is not a good place for her...Thanks for your consideration."

Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Texas: Joshua Fortier is accused of killing his puppy, which was found floating dead in a bathtub full of water.

TEXAS -- The Austin Police Department has issued a warrant for Joshua Paul Fortier. Fortier is suspected of committing the offense of cruelty to non-livestock animals. Fortier is accused of feeding his dog a bottle of rubbing alcohol after ingesting LSD, synthetic marijuana, and ecstasy.

According to the arrest warrant, Fortier and his girlfriend of one year, Kayla Reed, were living together in an apartment in the 2200 block of W. William Cannon Drive. Fortier and Reed had adopted a dog together in November of 2015 from the rescue group, Austin Pets Alive. The dog, identified as a brown and black neutered male American Blue Heeler mix, was only about three months old at the time.

On May 5, 2016, Reed came home from school and found Fortier standing at the open front door of their apartment. Fortier was crying and telling Reed that she would not like what he had done.


According to official documents, Reed then entered the home and found Kano floating dead in a bathtub full of water. She also found an open and empty bottle of rubbing alcohol on the floor near the dog's water bowl. Reed then went to confront Fortier but discovered he had left the apartment  on foot without his phone or car keys.

Several hours later, Fortier flagged down an Austin police officer at a gas station on Manchaca Road, approximately 1.5 miles away from his apartment. Fortier told officers that he needed help, that he needed a job, and that he had killed his dog. He told officers that he had killed his dog by feeding it a bottle of rubbing alcohol and that he had smoked marijuana from a person he barely knew.

The officers believed that Fortier may have smoked synthetic marijuana and was having hallucinations due to the substance. They also believed that Fortier was a danger to himself and/or others and placed him under a Peace Officer Emergency Detention for mental health evaluation.

According to official documents, Fortier was found to be on drugs at the time of this incident. It was found that Fortier had been ingesting LSD, synthetic marijuana, and ecstasy. Fortier admitted to doctors that he had killed his dog Kano and at one time stated that he killed the dog because it was a demon. Fortier spent ten days in a mental hospital was released once he was no longer considered a danger to himself or others.

Police officers went and spoke with Fortier's neighbors who stated they had seen Kano the previous day and that he was perfectly healthy. Another neighbor stated that prior to Reed coming home, he heard a loud thump from inside the apartment and then keard Kano crying/whimpering. This neighbor also stated that after he heard Kano crying, Fortier had walked into the neighbor's apartment unannounced and completely naked.

The neighbor stated that Fortier appeared to be disoriented as if on drugs.

The neighbor told Fortier that he was in the wrong apartment. He then gave Fortier a shirt and shorts and told him to leave. Fortier left and a shot time later Reed returned home from school.

Austin Pets Alive has released the following statement regarding the incident:

Austin Pets Alive! has recently learned about the tragic killing of Kano. We are heartsick that this has happened to one of our graduates. Thankfully the court system is pursuing justice for Kano and we hope it will exhaust every option to hold this person accountable for a horrific crime. Pets are at the mercy of the decisions of their humans and it is vital, for the sake of pets and people alike that people are not allowed to get away with endangering them.

APD has issued a warrant for Joshua Paul Fortier's arrest. He is accused of committing cruelty to non-livestock animals when he knowingly, or recklessly tortured an animal. Anyone with information about Fortier is asked to contact the Austin Police Department.

(Fox 7 - Aug 2, 2016)

Thursday, July 7, 2016

Arizona: Abused Pinal puppy gets a safe new home; Martin Benavidez, 51, charged with animal cruelty

ARIZONA -- The six-month old puppy that was hung from its hind legs by a former owner has found a new home.

The dog was rescued by Pinal County Sheriff deputies on June 16 from a home in San Tan Valley.

Neighbors reported seeing the animal hung upside down in the owner’s horse stable and hearing it whimper in pain.


Riksta Dickerson, a Pinal County Animal and Control officer, was one of the officers that responded to the scene. She recalled finding the dog underneath a table. As he emerged, she remembered observing the dog drag his hind end as he attempted to walk.

“He was in so much pain,” Dickerson said, “it really tugged on my heart.”


The dog was transported to the county’s animal shelter and given the name “Spur.” Dickerson, a lifelong lover of animals, said she couldn’t get Spur off her mind. She just couldn’t comprehend how someone could torture such a fun-loving dog.

Dickerson took it upon herself to foster Spur at her home as he recovered from his injuries. She quickly noticed Spur to be a little clingy, constantly checking in on her. It matched well with his new name, she said, because he would stick to someone like a spur to a boot.


He fit right in with Dickerson’s three other dogs, playfully running around with them in his new backyard. They’re apt to splashing around in Dickerson’s pool and jumping into bed with her.

Though Spur has healed from his injuries, she said he still suffers from a slight limp.


It’s not uncommon for animal control officers to fall in love with the animals they rescue, said Pinal County Animal Control Director Audra Michael. Especially in the cases that involve abuse, she said, her officers can easily get attached.

The types of abuse Michael’s officers typically respond to involve animals that are emaciated, dehydrated or in unfit living conditions. A dog hung upside down was a first for her, she said, and hopes not to see it again.


Spur’s former owner was arrested on charges of animal cruelty shortly after the dog was rescued. Martin Benavidez, 51, relinquished custody of the dog after being arrested.

Dickerson said she’s in the process of adopting Spur and expects to have it finalized by the end of this week.

(Tri Valley Central - June 30, 2016)

Earlier: