. The plaintiff, Henry Simpson, brought an action in the District
Court for damages against John Gordon Bannerman, alleging, in
alternative counts, (1) that the defendant wrongfully kept a dog of
a fierce and mischievous nature and whilst so kept the dog attacked
and bit the plaintiff as a result of which he suffered pain and dam-
ages, and (2) that the defendant so negligently and carelessly con-
ducted himself in and about the care and management of a dog
in the premises of the defendant that the dog attacked and bit the
plaintiff with the consequences mentioned above. The grounds of
defence taken at the hearing before his Honor Judge Edwards were
a denial of wrongfully keeping a dog of a fierce and mischievous
nature; a denial that the dog bit the plaintiff, any injury suffered
by the plaintiff as alleged in the first count being alleged to have
been brought about by his own act; and a denial of negligence in
keeping the dog. The facts as found by the District Court Judge
were substantially as follows : - The plaintiff, who was a builder and
contractor, had ordered some timber to be sent to a house at
which he was going to do some work. He went to the house and
found that the timber had not been delivered there ; he then walked
along the street to see if the timber had been delivered at a nearby
house, and, whilst standing on the footpath in the street, looked over
the fence of the defendant's premises to see if it were there. The
fence was a close wooden fence, 5 ft. 6 in. high, on the top of which
was fastened a barbed wire at the height of six inches above the
fence. In the act of looking over the fence the plaintiff incautiously
put his hand on the top of the fence. No sooner had he done so
than an Alsatian dog, on the inside and concealed from the plaintiff
by the fence, sprang up and bit him on the hand, inflicting injuries.
There were two gateways leading into the defendant's premises,
and it was somewhere between them that the plaintiff rested his
hand on the fence. Upon each gat
the dog," but the notices were not seen by the plaintiff prior to his
sustaining the injuries. His Honor found that the defendant knew
of the dog's mischievous propensity. His Honor said he had no
doubt that the plaintiff did not know that there was a savage, or
any, dog on the premises. On returning about two hours afterwards,