SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5326-93T2
JOHN TRISUZZI and ELAINE
TRISUZZI,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
RITA TABATCHNIK and BENJAMIN
TABATCHNIK,
Defendants-Respondents.
_________________________________________________________________
Argued: September 12, 1995 - Decided: Ocotober 31, 1995
Before Judges Dreier, A.M. Stein and Kestin.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Law Division, Morris County.
Jack Dashosh argued the cause for appellants
(Mr. Dashosh on the brief).
James F. Sullivan argued the cause for
respondents (Sullivan and Graber, attorneys;
Jennifer L. Remington on the brief).
The opinion of the court was delivered by
A.M. STEIN, J.A.D.
This is a dog bite case. Plaintiff John Trisuzzi, who was bitten by the dog, appeals a verdict of no cause for action entered in favor of defendants, the dog owners, following the negative response by the jury to the first two special interrogatories. Plaintiff Elaine Trisuzzi, John's wife, appeals the
trial judge's dismissal of her claim of negligent infliction of
emotional distress.
We reverse as to plaintiff John Trisuzzi for retrial on
liability under the dog bite statute, N.J.S.A. 4:19-16, because
the trial judge did not inform the jury of the circumstances
under which plaintiff could be considered lawfully upon defendants' property. We find no error in the judge's rulings and
instructions as to common law negligence and affirm the verdict
of no cause for action on that theory of the case. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We also affirm the dismissal of Elaine Trisuzzi's
claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress resulting
from the trauma of watching her husband being attacked by the
dog.
On June 15, 1988, at approximately 7:30 p.m., John, Elaine
and their nineteen-year-old daughter were taking their customary
evening walk, which took them past defendants' house on Everdale
Road in Randolph Township. Because the street had no sidewalks,
they were walking in a sixteen to twenty-foot roadway.
Defendants owned a five-year-old, eighty-five pound German
Shepherd. John testified that he saw defendants' dog come
running towards his wife and daughter in what he described as an
"attack mode." The dog had its ears back and its teeth bared and
was coming at full speed. John immediately ran to place himself
between the dog and his daughter. He claimed that he was practically touching his daughter when the dog first made contact with
him.
According to John, the dog came into the street and leaped
upon him. John, trained in martial arts, lifted his leg to kick
while the animal was mid-air. His leg hit the side of the dog
and the dog went down to the ground. Immediately, the dog sprang
on John, who again pushed the dog down. When the dog got up, it
went for John's throat. John claimed that the animal was "like a
mad dog" and had a menacing look in its eyes.
John continued to ward off the dog with punches and kicks
until he lost his balance. When the dog then went for John's
neck, he put his hands in the dog's mouth to keep the animal from
his throat. John testified that the dog jumped on him about a
dozen times, landing on and biting at his stomach, legs and
groin. The dog also bit both of John's hands which were now
bleeding "profusely." John testified that he believed that he
was in a life-or-death situation and that he was protecting his
family from the dog.
The dog then circled John. When the animal moved to the
side, John tried to run but the dog put his head down and snarled
at him. Just as John grabbed a small stick, the dog again jumped
on him. He hit the dog with the stick until it ran back.
Defendant Rita Tabatchnik then appeared from the side of the
house and tried to grab the dog. She was eventually able to
restrain the animal. The entire incident lasted about two to
three minutes, and according to plaintiff, it took place entirely
in the public roadway. Plaintiff claimed that he never went onto
defendants' property.
As John and his family walked back home, he took off his T-shirt and wrapped it around his bleeding hands. His wife and
daughter were "hysterical" and his wife was "almost . . . in
shock." When they arrived home, John washed and disinfected his
hands. He testified that he tried to downplay the incident so as
not to alarm his family. We do not discuss the remainder of
injuries claimed by plaintiff except as they are relevant to the
disposition of Elaine's appeal.
John's wife and daughter corroborated his version of the
accident. His daughter testified that John never went onto
defendants' property during the attack and that the closest he
got to the property line was five feet. His wife also testified
that the attack had occurred in the public roadway.
The next day, plaintiff described the incident to Randolph
Township's animal warden, who issued a summons to Rita for
harboring a vicious dog. That charge was eventually tried in the
local municipal court and Rita was found guilty.
Plaintiffs' attorney read to the jury excerpts from Rita's
testimony in the municipal court, where she defended the charge
of violating the township's vicious dog ordinance. There she
testified that her eyes were not on the dog when it first started
to bark at plaintiff.
This account differed from both her deposition testimony,
which was also read to the jury, and her direct trial testimony.
On both occasions, Rita insisted that her eyes were on the dog
the entire time and that she saw plaintiff make the first aggressive move towards the animal.
Rita testified at trial that the dog had been tied to a run
behind the house for an hour before the incident. At about 7:00
p.m. she untied the dog and it followed her to the deck on the
side of her house. While defendant was washing mud from a pair
of her toddler's shoes, the dog went down the steps and urinated
on a bush on the property, then moved to another bush approximately two feet closer to the road, where it again urinated. The
second bush was about twelve to seventeen feet from Rita and
eight to ten feet from the roadway.
According to Rita, the dog barked, then she heard John
"roar" and saw him jump at the dog from the side of the road into
her mulch bed immediately adjacent to the roadway. Rita claimed
that John did a number of "judo kicks" on the dog's head, and a
series of "hi ya" exclamations as he jumped into the mulch bed
after the dog. Rita testified that John was about twenty feet
away from his wife and daughter when this encounter occurred.
After John kicked the dog several times he picked up a branch
from the mulch bed and began beating the dog. Rita insisted that
the dog never bit or otherwise came into contact with plaintiff.
She claimed that she called to the dog from a distance of about
five feet, then grabbed it by the collar.
On cross-examination, defendant conceded that she watched
the dog "off and on" after untying its leash. She admitted that
she may have lost eye contact with the dog while she was washing
her son's shoes. She insisted, however, that when she saw the
dog heading for the roadway, it was walking slowly, not running.
She was not concerned that the dog would run into the roadway
because the dog had learned "his lesson" when hit by a car three
years before.
Rita insisted on cross-examination that the dog stood on her
property, approximately eight to ten feet from the road, only
barking at plaintiff. She claimed that John beat the dog with a
stick while it was trying to back up and that she grabbed the
dog's collar while the animal was retreating. Although the dog
may have been barking, she did not recall seeing its teeth bared
or hearing it growl. She admitted that the dog moved around John
several times in a semicircle.
The dog bite statute provides for absolute liability of a
dog owner under certain circumstances:
The owner of any dog which shall bite a person
while such person is on or in a public place, or lawfully on or in a private place, including the property
of the owner of the dog, shall be liable for such
damages as may be suffered by the person bitten, regardless of the former viciousness of such dog or the
owner's knowledge of such viciousness.
For the purpose of this section, a person is lawfully upon the private property of such owner when he
is on the property in the performance of any duty
imposed upon him by the laws of this state or the laws
or postal regulations of the United States, or when he
is on such property upon the invitation, express or
implied, of the owner thereof.
[N.J.S.A. 4:19-16 (emphasis added).]
The three elements plaintiff must prove under this statute are that: (1) defendant is the owner of the dog; (2) the dog bit
plaintiff; and (3) the bite occurred while the plaintiff was
either in a public place or lawfully in a private place.
DeRobertis v. Randazzo,
94 N.J. 144, 153 (1983). The statute
allows recovery for all injuries sustained by the bite victim,
even though some of the injuries may result from the dog attacking the victim in other ways. Gross v. Dunham,
91 N.J. Super. 519, 522 (App. Div. 1966).
The term "invitation" allows recovery for invitees and
licensees but not trespassers. DeRobertis v. Randazzo, supra, 94
N.J. at 152. An implied invitation creates a license affording
the statute's protection to anyone whose presence is expressly or
impliedly permitted on the land. Ibid. A plaintiff is entitled
to prove that he or she had an express or implied invitation to
be on the property and that he or she reasonably believed that
the scope of the permission extended to the place of the incident. Id. at 153.
The trial judge instructed the jury:
In deciding whether the plaintiff was on or in a public
place or lawfully on or in a private place including
the property of the defendants you should note that
anyone whose presence is expressly or impliedly permitted on the property is entitled to the protection of
the statute I have just read. The permission extends
to all areas where the plaintiff may reasonably believe
to be included within its scope.
The jury answered "no" to the following questions on the
jury verdict sheet and concluded its deliberations:
1. Did the dog bite plaintiff in a public place
or while plaintiff was lawfully on defendants' property?
2. Did the defendants act negligently in keeping
the dog on June 15, 1988?
The charge was insufficient. The jury should have been
instructed to consider the circumstances under which John could
have been considered lawfully on defendants' property. The
evidence presented a jury question as to whether John initially
or eventually stepped onto defendants' property in an effort to
protect himself and his family from his perceived threat from the
dog. The jury should have been instructed that John had a right
by implied invitation to be on defendants' property if he was
there to protect himself or his family members from serious
physical harm.
(1) One is privileged to enter or remain on land in
the possession of another if it is or reasonably appears to be necessary to prevent serious harm to
(a) the actor . . . or
(b) . . . a third person . . . .
[Restatement of Torts 2d, § 197 (1965) (cited with
approval in Demetros v. Penna. R.R.,
90 N.J. Super. 308, 310 (App. Div. 1966).]
This doctrine of private necessity is an extension of the
rescue doctrine. Burns v. Market Transition Fac.,
281 N.J.
Super. 304, 310 (App. Div. 1995). As Justice Cardozo, then a
judge of the New York Court of Appeals, said:
Danger invites rescue. The cry of distress is the
summons to relief. The law does not ignore these
reactions of the mind in tracing conduct to its consequences. It recognizes them as normal. It places
their effects within the range of the natural and
probable. The wrong that imperils life is a wrong to
the imperiled victim; it is a wrong also to its rescuer.
[Wagner v. International R. Co., 133 N.E. 437, 437 (N.Y. 1921) (quoted in Burns, supra, 281 N.J. Super. at
310; and Cafone v. Spiniello Constr. Co.,
42 N.J.
Super. 590, 602-03 (App. Div. 1956), certif. denied,
23 N.J. 258 (1957).]
The private necessity doctrine was invoked in Rossi v.
DelDuca,
181 N.E.2d 591 (Mass. 1962). The victim had trespassed
onto defendant's father's property in an effort to run away from
a Weimaraner, who was chasing her. Id. at 592. Defendant kept a
Great Dane on the property which attacked and bit the victim.
Ibid. The Massachusetts Supreme Court held that the technical
trespass did not deprive the victim from recovering under the
strict liability dog bite statute, which prohibited recovery by
trespassers. Id. at 593-94. Plaintiff was privileged to enter
upon the property of another if it was or reasonably appeared to
be necessary to prevent serious injury to herself. Id. at 593.
The jury should have been allowed to determine whether John
was acting pursuant to the privilege of private necessity if he
entered upon defendants' land. Merely asking the jury to say
whether plaintiff was bitten while lawfully on defendants'
property was an inadequate instruction.
The trial judge's instructions should "plainly spell out how
the jury should apply the legal principles to the facts as it may
find them . . . ." Jurman v. Samuel Braen, Inc.,
47 N.J. 586,
591-92 (1966). The judge should "mold the instruction in a
manner that explains the law to the jury in the context of the
material facts of the case." State v. Concepcion,
111 N.J. 373,
379 (1988). The instruction did not inform the jury how defendants could be found liable even if all or part of John's encounter with the dog occurred on their property.
We reject plaintiffs' contention that Rita Tabatchnik's
conviction for harboring a vicious dog in violation of a Randolph
Township ordinance collaterally estops the Tabatchniks from
arguing that John was not lawfully on their property when he was
bitten by the dog. Rita was fined $50 for the violation and an
order of viciousness was entered "against" the dog.
The municipal court conviction for the vicious dog violation
was not admissible in the civil action. "In a civil proceeding .
. . evidence of a final judgment against a party adjudging him
guilty of an indictable offense . . . [is admissible] against
that party, to prove any fact essential to sustain the judgment."
N.J.R.E. 803(c)(22) (emphasis added); Eaton v. Eaton,
119 N.J. 628, 644 (1990) (record of conviction for a non-indictable
offense is inadmissible in a civil action). Nor can the facts
necessary to sustain the municipal court conviction for a non-indictable offense be used to estop defendant from retrying those
facts in a civil action. Kohnherr v. Ferreira,
215 N.J. Super. 123, 128-30 (App. Div. 1987); Burd v. Vercruyssen,
142 N.J.
Super. 344, 353 (App. Div.) ("municipal conviction is inadmissible to prove the facts underlying that conviction"), certif.
denied,
72 N.J. 459 (1976).
Finally, the trial judge properly dismissed Elaine
Trisuzzi's claim for negligent infliction of emotional distress
resulting from her witnessing the encounter between her husband
and the dog.
The cause of action for negligent infliction of emotional
distress requires proof of the following elements: (1) the death
or serious physical injury of another caused by defendant's
negligence; (2) a marital or intimate familial relationship
between plaintiff and the injured person; (3) observation of the
death or injury at the scene; and (4) severe emotional distress.
Portee v. Jaffee,
84 N.J. 88, 101 (1980). The trial judge
concluded that Elaine's claim did not satisfy factors one and
four of the Portee test. He found that neither the physical
injuries which Elaine watched her husband sustain nor her resulting emotional distress were serious enough to give rise to
liability under Portee. We agree. Elaine saw the dog jump on
her husband, bite him on his hands and bite at his groin. The
injuries to the hands were not serious enough to disable her
husband, who wrapped the wounds in his T-shirt and, with his wife
and daughter, walked home from the incident. His most serious
claimed injury, that to his penis, did not manifest itself until
well after his encounter with the dog.
Nor was Elaine's emotional distress sufficiently severe to
give rise to a Portee claim. Elaine testified that she personally observed the dog jump on and bite her husband. Although the
attack did not last long, to her it seemed "an eternity." She
became "frozen with fear" and cried hysterically during the
entire brief episode. After the incident, Elaine became afraid
of strange unleashed dogs. She no longer walked or bicycled
alone and carried a stick or mace with her at all times. She
also began having nightmares.
Elaine saw a psychologist only five times because she felt
she had to resolve her problems herself. Dr. Skinner, her clinical psychologist, diagnosed her as suffering from a simple phobia
of dogs running loose. The symptoms included nightmares, anticipatory anxiety and feelings of guilt because she became paralyzed
with fear at the time of the attack and was unable to protect her
daughter. The doctor opined that had Elaine continued his
recommended therapy, the phobia would have been resolved.
To be compensable, emotional distress must be "sufficiently
substantial to result in physical illness or serious psychological sequelae." Eyrich v. Dam,
193 N.J. Super. 244, 253 (App.
Div.), certif. denied,
97 N.J. 583 (1983). Liability is imposed
only where the distress is "sufficiently palpable, severe or
enduring." Decker v. Princeton Packet, Inc.,
116 N.J. 418, 431
(1989). Elaine's claimed distress resulted in a fear of dogs,
causing her to have nightmares. The only interruption in her
daily life was that she no longer felt comfortable walking or
bicycling by herself. The trial judge correctly concluded that
this distress was not sufficiently severe to justify submitting
the matter to the jury. Buckley v. Trenton Sav. Fund Soc'y,
111 N.J. 355, 368 (1988) (mere aggravation, embarrassment, headaches
and loss of sleep do not constitute severe emotional distress as
a matter of law).
Reversed and remanded for a new trial as to liability under
the dog bite statute, N.J.S.A. 4:19-16. Affirmed as to the
verdict of no cause for action on the common law negligence claim
and as to the dismissal of plaintiff Elaine Trisuzzi's claim for
negligent infliction of emotional distress.