Title: Anne Arundel County v. Reeves

State: maryland

Issuer: Maryland Supreme Court

Document:

Anne Arundel County, Maryland and Rodney Price v. Michael H. Reeves, No. 68, 
September Term, 2019 
 
CIVIL LIABILITY — STATUTORY CONSTRUCTION — MEASURE OF 
DAMAGES — COMPENSATORY DAMAGES — In light of Md. Code Cts. & Jud. 
Proc. (“CJP”) § 11-110’s plain language and structure, its relationship with the Wrongful 
Death Act, and its legislative history, we conclude that the statute defines and caps the 
recovery of compensatory damages in the case of the tortious death or injury of a pet to the 
amount specified in the statute.  Construing CJP § 11-110 to allow recovery for additional 
uncapped compensatory damages, including noneconomic damages, would produce 
illogical results.   
 
CIVIL LIABILITY — GROSS NEGLIGENCE — SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE 
— Legally sufficient evidence was presented at trial to permit a jury to make the finding 
that Officer Price was grossly negligent when there were specific facts in evidence at trial 
that the dog was not attacking the police officer, the police officer shot the dog twice while 
standing in front of the residence, and there were differing accounts of how the dog was 
positioned when shot.  
 
 
 
 
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County  
Case No. C-02-CV-15-002956 
Argued: September 11, 2020 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 68 
 
September Term, 2019 
 
 
 
ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, MARYLAND 
AND RODNEY PRICE 
 
v. 
 
MICHAEL H. REEVES 
 
 
Barbera, C.J., 
McDonald 
Watts 
Hotten 
Getty 
Booth 
Biran 
 
 
               JJ. 
 
 
 
Opinion by Barbera, C.J. 
Hotten, J., dissents. 
 
 
 
 
 
 Filed: June 7, 2021 
 
 
Pursuant to Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal 
Materials Act 
(§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic. 
 
 
 
 
 
Suzanne C. Johnson, Clerk 
2021-06-07 09:24-04:00
 
 
 
This case affords us the opportunity to address the scope of compensatory damages 
available in the case of the tortious injury or death of a pet.  Resolution of that issue requires 
our examination of the text of Md. Code Cts. & Jud. Proc. (“CJP”) § 11-110.  The General 
Assembly enacted CJP § 11-110 to allow pet owners to recover certain capped damages 
for the death or injury of their pet as a result of a tort.  We are asked to determine whether 
a pet owner may recover other forms of compensatory damages not expressly included 
within that statute.  We must also address the separate question of whether there was 
sufficient evidence of gross negligence in this case.   
These questions stem from Anne Arundel County Police Officer Rodney Price’s 
fatal shooting of a family dog while carrying out his duties as a police officer.  On February 
1, 2014, Officer Price encountered Respondent Michael Reeves’ dog, Vern, a Chesapeake 
Bay retriever, in the front yard of Mr. Reeves’ home.  Evidently believing he would be 
attacked, Officer Price shot Vern twice.  The dog died soon thereafter.  Mr. Reeves 
subsequently brought suit alleging, inter alia, that by fatally shooting Vern, Officer Price 
committed a trespass to Mr. Reeves’ chattel, acted with gross negligence, and violated Mr. 
Reeves’ rights under Articles 24 and 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights. 
The case went to trial before a jury in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County.  
The jury returned a verdict in favor of Mr. Reeves, finding that Officer Price committed a 
trespass to Mr. Reeves’ chattel, acted with gross negligence, and violated Mr. Reeves’ 
constitutional rights under Articles 24 and 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights.  The 
jury awarded no damages for the constitutional violations, $10,000 for the trespass to 
chattel claim, and $500,000 in economic damages and $750,000 in noneconomic damages 
2 
 
for the gross negligence claim.  The circuit court then reduced the gross negligence 
damages to $200,000 pursuant to the Local Government Tort Claims Act (“LGTCA”).  CJP 
§ 5-301 et seq.  The circuit court also reduced the trespass to chattel damages to $7,500 
pursuant to the then-applicable damages cap in CJP § 11-110.1 
On appeal, the Court of Special Appeals affirmed in part and held in an unreported 
divided decision that CJP § 11-110 did not bar Mr. Reeves from recovering noneconomic 
damages related to the death of his dog.  The same majority also held that there was legally 
sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict that Officer Price acted with gross 
negligence.   
For reasons that follow we hold that CJP § 11-110 limits the recovery for 
compensatory damages to the amount specified by that statute and does not allow for 
recovery of noneconomic compensatory damages stemming from the tortious injury or 
death of a pet.  In addition, we hold that there was legally sufficient evidence to support 
the jury’s finding that Officer Price was grossly negligent in the fatal shooting of Vern.  
However, under the single recovery rule, we also hold that Mr. Reeves may not recover 
any damages under the gross negligence claim.  Accordingly, we reverse in part and affirm 
in part the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals. 
 
 
1 Since the conduct underlying this case occurred, the Legislature has increased the 
cap to $10,000.  See S. 143, 2017 Leg., 437th Sess. (Md. 2017).  Throughout this opinion, 
we shall refer to the version of the statute in place at the time of the events of this case. 
3 
 
I. 
Facts and Procedural History 
The Incident 
On February 1, 2014, as part of an ongoing investigation into a spate of burglaries 
in a residential neighborhood in Anne Arundel County, Officer Price was going door-to-
door seeking relevant information.  Officer Price, the only witness to the events that ensued 
immediately thereafter, would later testify at trial to the following.  At approximately 4:45 
p.m., Officer Price approached Mr. Reeves’ residence from the house next door.  He saw 
a light on inside and noticed that some of the windows were open.  He also observed two 
doors at the front entrance to the house.  One door was open; a second door, at trial 
variously described as a screen door and a transparent storm door, was closed.  Officer 
Price determined from those indicators that the house was occupied at the time.  He testified 
that he had no reason to believe that any member of the Reeves family had any involvement 
with the burglaries and he did not have any “cause for concern” as he approached the house. 
Officer Price walked onto the front porch of Mr. Reeves’ home and knocked on the 
closed door.  When no one answered, he left the porch and headed towards Mr. Reeves’ 
driveway, where he stood with his back to the house.  As he was taking notes in his notepad, 
Officer Price heard the sound of a door behind him.  He turned around and saw a dog 
“coming at” him from about five feet away.  According to Officer Price, the dog was 
growling and barked once. 
Officer Price testified that he put his left forearm up at “roughly” the level of his 
neck as the dog approached.  Officer Price stated that the dog placed its front paws on his 
4 
 
forearm for about one second.  He recalled taking one step back and pushing the dog away 
from him.  Afraid that the dog was going to attack his face, Officer Price testified that he 
shot the dog twice while the dog’s paws were still on his left arm.  The dog then made a 
screeching noise and limped across the yard, where the dog collapsed.  After the shooting, 
Officer Price informed dispatch of what happened, saying “a dog came at me.”  According 
to Officer Price, the dog did not bite or scratch him during the incident. 
Officer Price is 5’8” and, at the time of the incident, weighed about 250 pounds.  He 
testified that he had a taser, baton, and mace on his person at the time.  Furthermore, he 
admitted that he did not vocalize any commands to the dog.  At the time of the incident, 
Officer Price had been a sworn officer for less than a year. 
Shortly after the shooting Mr. Reeves exited the house, approached Officer Price, 
and asked him what had happened.  Officer Price recalled at trial that he responded that the 
dog had come at him, and he had to shoot it.  Mr. Reeves testified that he then stepped 
forward and Officer Price responded by drawing his firearm.  With his hand on the weapon, 
Officer Price told Mr. Reeves: “Stop.  Don’t take another step.”2  Mr. Reeves then turned 
around and rushed to where his dog Vern had collapsed on the other side of the yard and 
was curled up beneath the neighbor’s fence.  Mr. Reeves proceeded to administer CPR to 
Vern. 
 
 
2 Mr. Reeves also testified that Officer Price likewise “put[] his hand on his weapon” 
on two other occasions when Mr. Reeves’ two sons approached Officer Price. 
5 
 
Additional officers arrived at the scene, and Officer Price returned to headquarters.  
Mr. Reeves testified that he believed that Vern died on the scene, but his son, Michael 
Reeves Jr., drove Vern to a nearby veterinary hospital where the dog was confirmed dead.3 
The Lawsuit and Subsequent Trial  
On September 24, 2015, Mr. Reeves and his sons, Michael Jr. and Timothy, filed a 
complaint asserting thirteen claims against Anne Arundel County (the “County”), Anne 
Arundel County Police Chief Kevin Davis, and Officer Price.4  The claims that ultimately 
proceeded to trial against the County and Officer Price (“Petitioners”) were: (1) trespass to 
chattel; (2) violation of Mr. Reeves’ constitutional rights under Article 24 of the Maryland 
Declaration of Rights for the unlawful shooting of his dog; (3) violation of Mr. Reeves’ 
constitutional rights under Article 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights for the 
unlawful seizure of the dog; and (4) gross negligence. 
Trial in the circuit court began on May 4, 2017.  Mr. Reeves’ counsel called Officer 
Price as an adverse witness.  Officer Price had previously stated in a deposition that because 
the dog’s paws were muddy, paw prints covered his uniform.  He had also stated during 
 
 
3 Michael Reeves Jr. testified at trial that the officers on the scene were blocking his 
truck for twenty to thirty minutes before he was ultimately able to drive to the veterinary 
hospital. 
 
 
4 Prior to trial, the circuit court dismissed the claims that Mr. Reeves’ sons had 
brought, as well as all claims against Chief Davis.  In his complaint, Mr. Reeves had also 
alleged civil conspiracy and a “pattern or practice” claim.  Before trial, the court bifurcated 
those claims from the four claims that proceeded to trial.  After the trial, the court resolved 
the bifurcated claims by granting summary judgment in favor of the County and Officer 
Price. 
6 
 
the deposition that he had dirt on both of his shoulders and on his badge.  At trial, counsel 
for Mr. Reeves introduced photographs that the police department took shortly after the 
incident.  When shown the photographs, one of which was magnified 300 times, Officer 
Price admitted that there was no mud or dirt from the dog’s paws on his upper body or 
badge.  He further acknowledged that the photographs showed mud on the thigh area of his 
pants.  He also admitted that there were no cuts or scratches on his forearm or tears in his 
uniform. 
Mr. Reeves’ counsel then played a video deposition of the testimony of an out-of-
state witness, Dr. Kevin Lahmers, a veterinary pathologist at the Virginia-Maryland 
College of Veterinary Medicine.  Dr. Lahmers performed the necropsy on Vern’s body.  
He could not determine which bullet was fired first.  However, he testified that either bullet 
wound could have been fatal.  According to Dr. Lahmers, one of the bullets entered through 
the dog’s sternum area while the dog was facing the firearm, passed through the heart and 
lung, and lodged close to the right hip.  He further testified that the other bullet entered 
either the right or left side of the dog’s body near its ribs, “with the animal turned 
perpendicular to the gun,” and exited the other side. 
Dr. Lahmers explained that Vern weighed around 75 pounds and, based on images 
of the dog, if standing on hind legs Vern would only reach the stomach or mid-abdomen 
of an adult man of average height.  Dr. Lahmer’s testimony was thus at odds with Officer 
Price’s account that Vern could have reached the height of the officer’s neck while the 
dog’s front paws were on the officer’s forearm. 
7 
 
Mr. Reeves’ son Timothy then took the stand and explained that his father had 
purchased Vern as a puppy in 2009.  According to Timothy, Vern was intelligent, playful, 
sweet, and a quick learner.  He testified that Vern had not displayed aggression towards 
other pets or people, including children, and Vern had no problems with large crowds in 
the neighborhood park.  Mr. Reeves’ other son, Michael Jr., testified that Vern was a 
member of their family.   
After the testimony of his two sons, Mr. Reeves took the stand.  He stated that he 
became interested in training dogs while stationed in Afghanistan.5  Mr. Reeves explained 
that he purchased Vern for $3,000 with the goal of eventually breeding Chesapeake Bay 
retrievers.  He took a year off from work to train the dog.  Mr. Reeves taught Vern voice 
commands, silent commands, and water training.  Mr. Reeves testified that Vern “was my 
best friend in the world, period.” 
Mr. Reeves also testified that he was taking medication to cope with the loss of 
Vern.  He stated that he no longer had any plans to breed Chesapeake Bay retrievers.  
Timothy testified that his father moved from Maryland to California after Vern was killed, 
and that the family “had all left because that incident for my father has just destroyed him.”  
At the close of trial, the circuit court denied the Petitioners’ motion for judgment as 
to Mr. Reeves’ claims under Articles 24 and 26.  The court submitted those claims, along 
with the trespass to chattel and gross negligence claims, to the jury.  The circuit court 
 
 
5 Mr. Reeves testified that, after serving in the Marines, he had worked as a 
contractor in the power industry.  He testified as to the wages that he earned and the fact 
that he had not worked since the death of Vern.  Per Mr. Reeves’ gross negligence claim, 
he alleged economic damages in the form of lost wages. 
8 
 
foreclosed the availability of punitive damages, though, by granting the Petitioners’ motion 
for judgment on the issue of actual malice and punitive damages. 
After deliberating for approximately one hour and thirty minutes, the jury returned 
the verdict finding that Petitioners had violated Mr. Reeves’ constitutional rights under 
Articles 24 and 26 of the Maryland Declaration of Rights, Officer Price had acted with 
gross negligence, and he had committed a trespass to Mr. Reeves’ chattel. 
The jury found a violation of Mr. Reeves’ due process rights under Article 24 by 
depriving him of his dog.  However, the jury awarded him $0 in damages for that 
constitutional claim.  The jury further found that Officer Price had violated Mr. Reeves’ 
constitutional rights under Article 26 by “seizing” Vern and/or interfering with the use or 
enjoyment of the dog.  The jury likewise awarded Mr. Reeves $0 in damages for that 
constitutional claim.  As to both constitutional claims, the jury also found that Officer Price 
did not act with “ill will or improper motivation.”6 
The jury then found that Officer Price was grossly negligent and awarded Mr. 
Reeves $500,000 in economic damages and $750,000 in noneconomic damages, for a total 
of $1,250,000.  Finally, for the trespass to chattel claim, the jury awarded Mr. Reeves 
 
 
6 This factual finding was relevant to the personal immunity of Officer Price under 
the LGTCA.  Local government employees in Maryland have no immunity if they act with 
“actual malice,” which is defined as “ill will or improper motivation.”  See LGTCA, CJP 
§ 5-301(b) (“‘Actual malice’ means ill will or improper motivation.”); CJP § 5-302(b)(2)(i) 
(“An employee shall be fully liable for all damages awarded in an action in which it is 
found that the employee acted with actual malice.”).  Because the jury found that Officer 
Price did not act with “ill will or improper motivation,” the County is liable. 
9 
 
$10,000 in economic damages.  The jury also made a factual finding on the verdict sheet 
that the dog was not attacking Officer Price at the time of the shooting. 
On May 18, 2017, Petitioners filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the 
verdict, remittitur, and/or a new trial.  The circuit court denied the motion in full.  The 
circuit court then reduced the jury award for trespass to chattel from $10,000 to $7,500, 
pursuant to CJP § 11-110.  The court further reduced the total damages award for the gross 
negligence claim from $1,250,000 to $200,000 pursuant to the LGTCA, resulting in Mr. 
Reeves receiving a total of $207,500 in damages.  Petitioners appealed to the Court of 
Special Appeals. 
The Decision of the Court of Special Appeals 
The Court of Special Appeals affirmed in part and vacated in part the judgment of 
the circuit court in a divided unreported opinion.  Reeves v. Davis, No. 1191, Sept. Term 
2018, 2019 WL 5606605 (Oct. 30, 2019).  The majority held that CJP § 11-110 did not 
limit Mr. Reeves’ total available damages to the capped amount stated in the statute.  The 
majority reasoned that Brooks v. Jenkins, a reported Court of Special Appeals opinion also 
addressing the fatal shooting of a dog by a police officer, was controlling.  Reeves, 2019 
WL 5606605, at *9; see Brooks, 220 Md. App. 444 (2014).  The majority explained that: 
The County . . . asks that we distinguish Brooks from this case because the 
jury did not award Reeves any damages for the County’s constitutional 
violations, whereas the jury in Brooks did.  However, . . . Brooks stands for 
the proposition that CJP § 11-110 does not bar recovery for non-economic 
damages, at least when the tortfeasor has been grossly negligent. 
 
Reeves, 2019 WL 5606605, at *9.  The majority also held that the jury was provided legally 
sufficient evidence to support its finding that Officer Price had acted with gross negligence.  
10 
 
Id. at *13.   
Judge Friedman dissented, disagreeing with the majority on both issues.  He 
interpreted CJP § 11-110 as limiting all available compensatory damages, including 
noneconomic damages, to the capped amount provided in the statute when the injury is to 
a pet.  Id. at *14 (Friedman, J., dissenting).  Given that the jury awarded no damages for 
the constitutional violations, under the one injury, one recovery rule, the only injury for 
which Mr. Reeves could recover compensatory damages was the death of his dog Vern, 
which is capped by the statute.  Id. at *13–14 (“Calling Mr. Reeves’ claims by different 
names—trespass to chattel, negligence, gross negligence, or even an intentional tort—
doesn’t change the analysis: there is still just one injury.”) (citation omitted).  Judge 
Friedman also would not have found that there was sufficient evidence to support a finding 
of gross negligence.  Id. at *14 n.2. 
On appeal to this Court, Petitioners present the following questions for review: 
1) As a matter of first impression, does [CJP § 11-110] limit the amount of 
damages recoverable for negligently causing the death of a pet?  
 
2) Did the Court of Special Appeals err in finding sufficient evidence of gross 
negligence? 
 
We affirm the holding of the Court of Special Appeals that there was sufficient 
evidence to support the jury’s finding of gross negligence.  However, we reverse on the 
statutory construction issue and hold that CJP § 11-110 limits the recovery for 
compensatory damages to the amount specified by the statute and does not allow recovery 
for noneconomic damages stemming from the tortious injury or death of a pet.  
 
 
11 
 
II. 
Discussion 
A. Statutory Construction of CJP § 11-110 
We are tasked with construing CJP § 11-110 to determine whether, as a matter of 
first impression before this Court, at the time of the incident the statute limited the recovery 
of all compensatory damages to $7,500 when a pet is tortiously injured or killed.  Statutory 
interpretation is a question of law reviewed de novo by this Court.  Brown v. State, 454 
Md. 546, 550 (2017).  We apply the well-established rules of statutory construction in 
Maryland: 
 
The cardinal rule of statutory interpretation is to ascertain and 
effectuate the real and actual intent of the Legislature.  A court’s primary 
goal in interpreting statutory language is to discern the legislative purpose, 
the ends to be accomplished, or the evils to be remedied by the statutory 
provision under scrutiny. 
 
 
To ascertain the intent of the General Assembly, we begin with the 
normal, plain meaning of the statute.  If the language of the statute is 
unambiguous and clearly consistent with the statute’s apparent purpose, our 
inquiry as to the legislative intent ends ordinarily and we apply the statute as 
written without resort to other rules of construction. We neither add nor 
delete language so as to reflect an intent not evidenced in the plain and 
unambiguous language of the statute, and we do not construe a statute with 
“forced or subtle interpretations” that limit or extend its application. 
 
 
We, however, do not read statutory language in a vacuum, nor do we 
confine strictly our interpretation of a statute’s plain language to the isolated 
section alone.  Rather, the plain language must be viewed within the context 
of the statutory scheme to which it belongs, considering the purpose, aim, or 
policy of the Legislature in enacting the statute.  We presume that the 
Legislature intends its enactments to operate together as a consistent and 
harmonious body of law, and, thus, we seek to reconcile and harmonize the 
parts of a statute, to the extent possible consistent with the statute’s object 
and scope.  
12 
 
 
Where the words of a statute are ambiguous and subject to more than 
one reasonable interpretation, or where the words are clear and unambiguous 
when viewed in isolation, but become ambiguous when read as part of a 
larger statutory scheme, a court must resolve the ambiguity by searching for 
legislative intent in other indicia, including the history of the legislation or 
other relevant sources intrinsic and extrinsic to the legislative process.  In 
resolving ambiguities, a court considers the structure of the statute, how it 
relates to other laws, its general purpose and relative rationality and legal 
effect of various competing constructions. 
 
 
In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation, 
not one that is absurd, illogical or incompatible with common sense. 
 
State v. Bey, 452 Md. 255, 265–66 (2017) (quoting State v. Johnson, 415 Md. 413, 421–22 
(2010)). 
1. Plain Meaning 
We start with the text of CJP § 11-110.  At the time of the incident, the statute 
provided in full:  
(a) Definitions. — (1) In this section the following words have the meanings 
indicated. 
 
 
(2) “Compensatory damages” means: 
 
(i) In the case of the death of a pet, the fair market value of the 
 
pet before death and the reasonable and necessary cost of 
 
veterinary care; and  
 
 
(ii) In the case of an injury to a pet, the reasonable and 
 
necessary cost of veterinary care. 
 
 
(3) (i) “Pet” means a domesticated animal. 
 
 
(ii) “Pet” does not include livestock. 
 
(b) Measure of damages. — (1) A person who tortiously causes an injury to 
or death of a pet while acting individually or through an animal under the 
person’s direction or control is liable to the owner of the pet for 
compensatory damages.  
 
13 
 
 
(2) The damages awarded under paragraph (1) of this subsection may 
 
not exceed $7,500. 
 
Petitioners contend that CJP § 11-110 applies to all torts, defines the types of 
compensatory damages a pet owner can recover, and limits those damages to the capped 
amount.  In support of this argument, Petitioners refer to the statute’s structure, which 
defines compensatory damages in the case of the death or injury of a pet, provides when a 
pet owner is entitled to those compensatory damages, and caps damages recoverable under 
the statute.  
Mr. Reeves argues that, given the statute’s unique definition of compensatory 
damages, the damages cap pertains only to reasonable and necessary veterinary care 
expenses and the pet’s fair market value.  Mr. Reeves asserts that nothing in the statute 
expressly limits the recovery of other possible types of damages, including pain and 
suffering or lost wages.  He notes that the 2005 amendment removed the words “[t]he 
measure of damages . . . is” from the 1999 version and replaced them with “[a] person who 
tortiously causes an injury to or death of a pet . . . is liable to the owner of the pet for 
compensatory damages,” as defined in the statute.  Mr. Reeves argues that this indicates 
that the Legislature amended the statute in 2005 to allow for the recovery of noneconomic 
damages. 
We disagree with Mr. Reeves’ reading of the statute.  The meaning of CJP § 11-110 
is plain.  CJP § 11-110(b)(1) provides that “[a] person who tortiously causes an injury to 
or death of a pet while acting individually or through an animal under the person’s direction 
or control is liable to the owner of the pet for compensatory damages.”  Although 
14 
 
“tortiously” is not defined in the statute, negligence, gross negligence, and trespass to 
chattel are torts.  As such, the statute applies to cases of gross negligence and trespass to 
chattel where the injury is to a pet.   
“Maryland has long accepted the doctrine of expressio (or inclusio) unius est 
exclusio alterius, or the expression of one thing is the exclusion of another.”  Comptroller 
v. Blanton, 390 Md. 528, 537 (2006).  Under the statute, “‘Pet’ means a domesticated 
animal” and “does not include livestock.”  CJP § 11-110(a)(3)(i)–(ii).  The statute’s 
definition of “Compensatory damages” in the case of the death of a “Pet” expressly states 
two things: “the fair market value of the pet before death” and “the reasonable and 
necessary cost of veterinary care.”  Id. § 11-110(a)(2)(i).  Additionally, the definition uses 
the word “means,” indicating that the Legislature intended for the list to be exhaustive.  Id. 
§ 11-110(a)(2); see Hackley v. State, 389 Md. 387, 393 (2005) (“[T]he Maryland Style 
Manual for Statutory Law prepared by the Department of Legislative Services . . . directs 
legislative drafters to ‘[u]se “means” if the definition is intended to be exhaustive’ . . . and 
to ‘[u]se “includes” if the definition is intended to be partial or illustrative . . . .’”) (second 
and third alterations in original).   
The text evinces legislative intent to allow for certain, defined compensatory 
damages in the case of the tortious death or injury of a pet.  Noneconomic damages, such 
as mental anguish and loss of companionship, are not included in the exhaustive definition 
of compensatory damages.  As such, noneconomic damages are unavailable under the plain 
meaning of CJP § 11-110.  The statute goes on to limit the recovery of damages under the 
statute to the capped amount.  CJP § 11-110(b)(2). 
15 
 
We do not read the plain language of CJP § 11-110 in a vacuum.  Analogous 
damages cap provisions in Title 11 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article confirm 
our understanding of the text’s plain meaning.  Maryland’s Wrongful Death Act provides 
a statutory cause of action for the recovery of certain economic and noneconomic 
compensatory damages in the case of the wrongful death of a person and strictly limits 
beneficiaries to spouses, parents, and children.  See CJP § 3-904.  CJP §§ 11-108 and 
11-109 define and cap the availability of noneconomic and economic damages in the case 
of wrongful death or personal injury.  The General Assembly has thus expressly provided 
for the recovery of noneconomic damages when a person has been wrongfully killed.  See 
CJP § 11-108(a)(2)(i) (“‘Noneconomic damages’ means: . . . In an action for wrongful 
death, mental anguish, emotional pain and suffering, loss of society, companionship, 
comfort, protection, care . . . or other noneconomic damages authorized under Title 3, 
Subtitle 9 of this article.”).  In contrast, CJP § 11-110 does not expressly provide for similar 
damages in the case of the wrongful death of a pet.  
Mr. Reeves argues that pet owners are most like the class of people that are 
permitted to recover noneconomic damages under the Wrongful Death Act because of the 
close, familial bond between pet owners and their pets.  Nevertheless, CJP § 11-110 is 
silent on the availability of noneconomic damages to pet owners whose pets are wrongfully 
killed.  The Wrongful Death Act, by contrast, expressly provides for and caps the recovery 
of noneconomic damages when a person’s spouse, child, or parent is killed.  CJP §§ 3-904, 
11-108.  In other words, CJP § 11-110’s relationship with other laws in Title 11 of the same 
Article does not support the anomalous result that legislative silence on the recovery of 
16 
 
noneconomic damages for the wrongful death of pets means that they are available when 
the Legislature has capped recovery of those damages in the case of the wrongful death of 
people.  Mr. Reeves’ reading of the statute would allow, for example, for the recovery of 
millions of dollars in uncapped noneconomic damages in a case involving veterinary 
malpractice, while noneconomic damages in a medical malpractice case remain capped.  
To read CJP § 11-110 in this way would produce absurd results.7  See Bey, 452 Md. at 266 
(“In every case, the statute must be given a reasonable interpretation, not one that is absurd, 
illogical or incompatible with common sense.”) (citation omitted).   
It would also be illogical for CJP § 11-110 to apply a cap solely on damages related 
to fair market value and reasonable and necessary veterinary expenses, while allowing pet 
owners to recover an unlimited amount of other compensatory damages for their emotional 
loss.  Fair market value and veterinary expenses are much more easily susceptible to 
calculation in monetary terms than are seemingly unlimited damages for emotional pain 
and suffering.  Indeed, in this case the jury awarded Mr. Reeves, in addition to the 
maximum amount allowable under CJP § 11-110 of $7,500, noneconomic damages equal 
to 100 times that amount.8  
 
 
7 One such result would be that a pet owner could recover noneconomic damages 
for the death of a pet, while that same person could not receive such damages for the loss 
of a best friend, sibling, fiancé(e), or grandparent.  We do not dispute that the Legislature 
could create such a scheme, but we will not interpret it as doing so through mere silence 
and in the face of the statute’s plain meaning. 
 
 
8 Mr. Reeves argues that recovery of other economic and noneconomic damages 
under CJP § 11-110 would not be limitless in this case because, at the time of the incident, 
the LGTCA capped those damages at $200,000.  CJP § 5-303(a)(1) (2013).  The LGTCA, 
however, would not apply in the case of veterinary malpractice, a person’s dog attacking a 
17 
 
If the General Assembly’s goal was to cap compensatory damages for pet owners, 
how strange for it to do so exclusively with respect to such a narrowly defined subset 
thereof.  Doing so would have left all other forms of compensatory damages both uncapped 
and without guidelines for calculation.  Unlike the Wrongful Death Act, the General 
Assembly did not provide a formula in CJP § 11-110 for quantifying emotional loss in the 
situation of the wrongful death of a pet.  Our reading of CJP § 11-110 in light of the 
Wrongful Death Act provisions confirms our understanding that such damages are 
unavailable in the case of the tortious injury to or death of a pet.  Certainly, the General 
Assembly knows how to expressly provide for noneconomic damages when it wants to, as 
it did with respect to the damages under the Wrongful Death Act.      
 
We also consider CJP § 11-110’s use of the term “compensatory damages” in the 
context of its broader meaning.  Two types of damages can be recovered from a tortfeasor: 
compensatory damages and punitive damages.  See Beall v. Holloway-Johnson, 446 Md. 
48, 70–72 (2016).  An award of compensatory damages is an “attempt to make the plaintiff 
whole again by monetary compensation.”  Id. at 70 (quoting Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Albright, 
433 Md. 303, 414 (2013)).  Compensatory damages “are not intended to grant to the 
plaintiff a windfall as a result of the defendant’s tortious conduct.  Thus, an award for 
compensatory damages must be anchored to a rational basis on which to ensure that the 
awards are not merely speculative.”  Id. (quoting Albright, 433 Md. at 414). 
 
neighbor’s cat, or numerous other situations covered under the statute where a private 
individual and not a local government is at fault.  CJP § 11-110 does not distinguish 
between tort claims against local governments and claims against private individuals.     
18 
 
 
Punitive damages are designed to accomplish another goal entirely—to punish the 
wrongdoer for particularly egregious or heinous conduct and to deter others from following 
suit.  See id. at 71–72.  When the trial court in this case granted the Petitioners’ motion on 
the issue of actual malice and punitive damages, it precluded the jury from awarding them 
to Mr. Reeves.9  As a result, the only type of damages available to Mr. Reeves for the 
grossly negligent shooting of his dog and the trespass to his chattel are compensatory 
damages, which are exhaustively defined and limited by the express terms of CJP 
§ 11-110.10 
 
 
9 The Dissent states that our reading of CJP § 11-110 would “limit all possible 
recovery” to a complainant in the case of the “injury or death of a pet.”  Dissent Slip Op. 
at 2–3.  However, this case does not deal with “all possible recovery” in such cases.  Rather, 
it deals solely with compensatory damages, as distinguished from punitive damages, and 
as they are defined in the statute.  The statute, by its own terms, does not address punitive 
damages, and they are also not at issue in this case.  Also not at issue here is the exception 
to the common law rule that allows for certain forms of noneconomic damages when 
property is damaged by a tortfeasor whose acts are “inspired by fraud, malice, or like 
motives.”  See Zeigler v. F St. Corp., 248 Md. 223, 225–26 (1967); Dobbins v. Washington 
Suburban Sanitary Comm’n, 338 Md. 341, 351 (1995).  This case clearly does not involve 
fraud, and the jury expressly found that Officer Price did not act with actual malice, i.e. “ill 
will or improper motivation.” 
 
 
10 CJP § 11-110 was not enacted upon tabula rasa.  Rather, it augmented well-
established common law principles of recovery in cases of tortious injury to personal 
property.  Under the common law, domestic animals such as pets have been legally 
classified as personal property.  E.g., Moore v. Myers, 161 Md. App. 349, 368 (2005).  
Furthermore, under the common law, “[t]he rule is well established that the measure of 
damages for the conversion or destruction of a chattel is the market value of the chattel at 
the time and place of the conversion or destruction.”  Weishaar v. Canestrale, 241 Md. 
676, 684 (1966) (citation omitted); Bastian v. Laffin, 54 Md. App. 703, 714 (1983) (“The 
measure of damages for tortious injury to personal property is the lesser of the difference 
between the value of the property immediately before the harm has been done and its value 
immediately thereafter or the reasonable cost of repairs.”).   
 
CJP § 11-110 did not alter the common law rules of this State that pets are personal 
property or that noneconomic damages are generally unavailable in cases involving injury 
19 
 
 
Additionally, there can be only one recovery of damages for each injury under 
Maryland law.  Beall, 446 Md. at 70; see also Smallwood v. Bradford, 352 Md. 8, 24 (1998) 
(“Duplicative or overlapping recoveries in a tort action are not permissible.”); Francis v. 
Johnson, 219 Md. App. 531, 561 (2014) (“The Maryland appellate courts have made clear 
that there can be only one recovery of damages for one wrong or injury.”).  We have 
explained that “[u]nder the Maryland rules, [d]ifferent legal theories for the same recovery, 
based on the same facts or transaction, do not create separate claims.”  Beall, 446 Md. at 
70 (second alteration in original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).  “The 
existence of multiple claims ultimately depends upon whether the ‘aggregate of the 
operative facts’ presented states more than one claim which can be separately enforced.”  
Id. at 70–71 (citation omitted).   
 
Here, Mr. Reeves’ gross negligence and trespass to chattel claims are premised on 
the same set of operative facts.  They are thus alternative legal theories for the same 
recovery.  Therefore, Mr. Reeves is entitled to one recovery as compensation.  
Notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Reeves suffered a tragic loss, the only injury before us 
for which Mr. Reeves can recover is the death of his dog, because the jury awarded no 
damages for the constitutional harms. 
 
to personal property.  See Robinson v. State, 353 Md. 683, 693 (1999) (“It is a generally 
accepted rule of law that statutes are not presumed to repeal the common law ‘further than 
is expressly declared, and that a statute, made in the affirmative without any negative 
expressed or implied, does not take away the common law.’”) (citation omitted).  Rather, 
CJP § 11-110 merely codified the existing recovery rule in cases involving pets, allowed 
for an additional and limited form of damages in the way of defined veterinary expenses, 
including veterinary expenses that exceed the pet’s fair market value, and capped all 
available compensatory damages. 
20 
 
 
In this way, this case is distinguishable from the decision in Brooks v. Jenkins, on 
which Mr. Reeves relies.  In Brooks, the Court of Special Appeals explained the scope of 
its holding as follows: “We hold only that [CJP § 11-110] does not limit the Jenkinses’ 
total recovery for the constitutional tort to the capped value of their pet’s vet bills.”  220 
Md. App. at 471.  Here, CJP § 11-110 did not work to cap Mr. Reeves’ constitutional claim 
damages to the value of veterinary bills or Vern’s fair market value.  Rather, the jury 
awarded no damages at all for those claims.  See Reeves, 2019 WL 5606605, at *13 
(Friedman, J., dissenting) (“The jury assigned no value to the denial of Mr. Reeves’ 
constitutional rights.  The jury did, however, assign a value to the destruction of Mr. 
Reeves’ dog.  Therefore, the injury to the dog is the only injury upon which Mr. Reeves 
can recover.”).  As a result, the analysis of Brooks is inapposite,11 and the only injury for 
which Mr. Reeves can recover is the death of his dog, which is limited to the capped amount 
in CJP § 11-110. 
 
 
11 In the 2020 and 2021 legislative sessions, “Buddy’s Law” was cross-filed in the 
House and Senate.  The bills propose to increase the current damages cap in CJP § 11-110 
from its current amount of $10,000 to $25,000.  S. 292, 2021 Leg., 442nd Sess. (Md. 
2021); H.D. 154, 2021 Leg., 442nd Sess. (Md. 2021); S. 997, 2020 Leg., 441st Sess. (Md. 
2020); H.D. 992, 2020 Leg., 441st Sess. (Md. 2020).  On March 2, 2021, after oral 
argument, Mr. Reeves’ counsel submitted a letter to this Court regarding committee 
hearings in the 2021 legislative session on the proposed amendments.  Mr. Reeves’ counsel 
wrote that certain comments made “demonstrate conclusively that the legislature is well 
aware of the Brooks case” and “[n]o effort has been made this session, or at any other time 
since 2014, to legislatively overturn Brooks.”  Even if, for the sake of argument, we were 
to view the Legislature as acquiescing to Brooks, the holding in Brooks deals with damages 
awarded to pet owners for the violations of their constitutional rights, which the jury did 
not award in this case. 
21 
 
 
The Dissent contends that we have passed on the opportunity to change Maryland’s 
common law to expand the damages available in the case of the tortious death or injury of 
a pet, in line with a minority modern trend.  See Dissent Slip Op. at 5–6, 9–13.  However, 
no such opportunity is before us.  The issue in this case is not whether our common law is 
or should be in line with modern sensibilities regarding pets.  Also not before us is the issue 
of whether Maryland law classifying pets as personal property should be changed.  See 
Dissent Slip Op. at 14–15.  Rather, this case presents the narrow issue of whether CJP 
§ 11-110, which defines all compensatory damages in cases involving the injury to or death 
of a pet, can also be read to allow for types of damages it leaves out of that exhaustive 
definition.  We conclude that the statute cannot be read in such a manner.   
 
The Legislature may wish to amend CJP § 11-110 in response to the various policy 
arguments in this case in order to allow for other forms of compensatory damages in cases 
involving the tortious injury or death of pets.12  However, under the statute in its current 
form, such damages are strictly limited to the two forms provided.  If the Legislature 
intended to compensate pet owners for noneconomic damages associated with the tortious 
death of their pets, it would have stated so plainly in the language of CJP § 11-110.   
 
12 One such policy argument is that advanced by the Maryland Veterinary Medical 
Association, the American Kennel Club, the Cat Fanciers’ Association, the Animal Health 
Institute, the American Veterinary Medical Association, the National Animal Interest 
Alliance, the American Pet Products Association, the American Animal Hospital 
Association, and the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, who submitted an amici curiae 
brief with this Court.  Therein, they stated that if awards of noneconomic damages are 
permitted for negligence, the cost of veterinary care, pet food and other products, and other 
pet services would increase to accommodate the new liability, and pet owners might not be 
able to afford these necessary products and services.  Such policy considerations are the 
proper province of the Legislature.     
22 
 
 
In sum, the plain meaning of CJP § 11-110 is that it defines what compensatory 
damages are available in the case of the tortious injury to or death of a pet and limits the 
total amount that may be recovered.  It does not allow for recovery of other forms of 
compensatory damages not expressly included therein. 
2. Legislative History 
The legislative history of CJP § 11-110 also comports with our understanding of its 
plain language.  “While not necessary in every instance, we often find it prudent to 
scrutinize the legislative history to confirm that our interpretation of the statute’s plain 
language accords with the legislature’s intent.”  Berry v. Queen, 469 Md. 674, 687–88 
(2020).  The “ends to be accomplished” by the statute in this case were to hold tortfeasors 
liable for pet owners’ veterinary expenses in addition to the fair market value of the pet.  
As explained in a 1989 Senate Floor report, the General Assembly enacted CJP § 11-110 
in response to a case where a trial court awarded only $600 in damages to a dog owner 
whose dog was attacked and injured by another dog, even though the injured dog’s 
veterinary bills cost $1,900.  The 1989 version of the statute expressly permitted a pet 
owner to recover veterinary expenses up to $2,500.  S. 595, 1989 Leg., 399th Sess. (Md. 
1989).  In 1999, the Legislature amended the statute to increase the damages cap to $5,000 
and to apply in the case of the death of a pet.  H.D. 214, 1999 Leg., 413th Sess. (Md. 1999).   
In 2001, House Bill 907 proposed amending the statute to allow recovery for certain 
noneconomic damages up to $25,000.  The bill would have excluded licensed veterinarians 
providing medical assistance and nonprofit employees from such liability.  H.D. 907, 2001 
Leg., 415th Sess. (Md. 2001).  House Bill 907 did not pass.  In 2002, House Bill 221, which 
23 
 
would have provided for the recovery of noneconomic damages in the case of the 
intentional death of a pet, likewise capped at $25,000, also did not pass.  H.D. 221, 2002 
Leg., 416th Sess. (Md. 2002).   
Petitioners argue that these bill failures indicate that the Legislature did not intend 
to allow for noneconomic damages for the injury to or death of a pet.  Mr. Reeves argues 
that the bill failures mean the opposite, i.e. the 2005 version enacted years later provided 
for the recovery of those damages.  On the contrary, these bill failures indicate to us that 
the Legislature did not intend for the statute to include noneconomic damages as 
compensatory damages in the case of injury to or death of a pet. 
We recognize that “the fact that a bill on a specific subject fails of passage in the 
General Assembly is a rather weak reed upon which to lean in ascertaining legislative 
intent.”  City of Baltimore Dev. Corp. v. Carmel Realty Assocs., 395 Md. 299, 329 (2006) 
(citation omitted).  However, whether a proposed amendment failed “can be useful 
sometimes in ascertaining or confirming legislative intent.”  Antonio v. SSA Sec., Inc., 442 
Md. 67, 87 (2015).  Here, amendments that would have expressly provided for the recovery 
of noneconomic damages and capped their recovery at $25,000 failed.  It does not follow 
that the Legislature intended CJP § 11-110 to allow for uncapped noneconomic damages 
when even the proposed bills in favor of allowing noneconomic damages would have 
capped their recovery, one of which would have also exempted veterinarians from liability.     
In 2005, the Legislature enacted House Bill 941, substantively amending CJP 
§ 11-110.  The 2005 amendment provided that a person who causes an injury to or death 
of a pet in tort “is liable to the owner of the pet for compensatory damages,” defined 
24 
 
compensatory damages, and capped recovery of those damages at $7,500.  H.D. 941, 2005 
Leg., 420th Sess. (Md. 2005).   
 
The Floor Report to House Bill 941 summarized the 2005 amendment to the statute 
as altering the damages that may be awarded for injuries to or death of a pet, increasing the 
cap on damages from $5,000 to $7,500, and “allow[ing] a pet owner to recover both the 
fair market value of the pet and the cost of veterinary care in the case of the death of the 
pet.”  Floor Report, H.D. 941, 2005 Leg., 420th Sess. (Md. 2005).  It was clear that the bill 
was intended to provide compensation for injuries to a pet and allow for veterinary 
expenses capped at a certain amount—not to allow the pet owner to recover uncapped 
noneconomic damages for the injury to or death of a pet.  The bill thus recognized that the 
replacement value of a pet that is injured or killed includes the cost of life-saving veterinary 
care.   
Following House Bill 941, there were no other substantive changes to the statute 
until 2017, when the Legislature increased the damages cap to $10,000.  S. 143, 2017 Leg., 
437th Sess. (Md. 2017).  Thus, the legislative history supports our reading of CJP § 11-110. 
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Gross Negligence  
We turn now to whether the jury had sufficient evidence to reach a finding of gross 
negligence against Officer Price and the circuit court’s denial of the Petitioners’ motion for 
judgment notwithstanding the verdict.  “An appellate court reviews the trial court’s 
decision to allow or deny judgment or [judgment notwithstanding the verdict] to determine 
whether it was legally correct, while viewing the evidence and the reasonable inferences 
to be drawn from it in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.”  Jones v. State, 
25 
 
425 Md. 1, 30–31 (2012) (alteration in original) (citation omitted).  This Court affirms the 
denial of a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict “if there is ‘any evidence, no 
matter how slight, that is legally sufficient to generate a jury question.’”  Id. at 31 (citation 
omitted).  Furthermore, if “the nonmoving party offers competent evidence that rises above 
speculation, hypothesis, and conjecture, the [judgment notwithstanding the verdict] should 
be denied.”  Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md. 680, 706 (2015) (alteration in original) (citation 
omitted). 
“Issues involving gross negligence are often more troublesome than those involving 
malice because a fine line exists between allegations of negligence and gross negligence.”  
Stracke v. Estate of Butler, 465 Md. 407, 420 (2019) (quoting Barbre v. Pope, 402 Md. 
157, 187 (2007)).  Gross negligence is “something more than simple negligence, and likely 
more akin to reckless conduct.”  Barbre, 402 Md. at 187 (citation omitted).  It is “an 
intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless disregard of the consequences as 
affecting the life or property of another, and also implies a thoughtless disregard of the 
consequences without the exertion of any effort to avoid them.”  Id. (citation omitted).  
Additionally, “a wrongdoer is guilty of gross negligence or acts wantonly and willfully 
only when he inflicts injury intentionally or is so utterly indifferent to the rights of others 
that he acts as if such rights did not exist.”  Id. (citations omitted).   
 
In Brooks v. Jenkins, the Court of Special Appeals held that the trial court did not 
err by permitting the jury to decide whether the deputy was grossly negligent when he shot 
the Jenkinses’ family dog.  220 Md. App. at 461–62.  Brooks observed that “the trial court 
in this case properly denied the motion for judgment so long as the Jenkinses introduced 
26 
 
evidence sufficient to permit the jury to infer that Deputy Brooks acted either with the 
intent to inflict injury or with ‘utter indifference’ to the rights of others.”  Id.  In Brooks, 
the court noted that there was no evidence the dog was a vicious animal or posed a threat; 
the video recording from the deputy’s body camera showed the dog’s tail wagging as it 
approached the deputy, and the dog did not approach the deputy with speed or in a crouched 
position; and the video recording showed the deputy point his gun directly at the dog’s 
chest and shoot, rather than use lesser force.  Id. at 462.  The court stated that “the evidence 
sufficed to support the jury’s finding that the Deputy overreacted to the potential threat, 
responded with excessive force, and acted with reckless indifference, and the court was 
correct to allow the jury to make that decision.”  Id.   
 
Here, the jury was presented with more than evidence of “simple negligence.”  
When “viewing the evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from it in the light 
most favorable to the non-moving party,” there was sufficient evidence for a juror to have 
drawn the rational inference that Officer Price acted with utter indifference towards Mr. 
Reeves’ rights when Officer Price shot his dog twice.  See Jones, 425 Md. at 30–31.  The 
facts in evidence rose above mere “speculation, hypothesis, and conjecture” that Officer 
Price was grossly negligent.  See Cooper, 443 Md. at 706.     
 
The jury was presented with Officer Price’s testimony, the testimony of the Reeves 
family, and the recorded video testimony of Dr. Lahmers, a veterinary pathologist expert.  
The jury also had the opportunity to view the photographs.  As in Brooks, there was 
sufficient evidence for the jury to have rationally found that Officer Price was grossly 
negligent when he shot Mr. Reeves’ dog.  Dr. Lahmers testified that Vern could only reach 
27 
 
a person’s mid-stomach while standing on hind legs.  This contradicted Officer Price’s 
testimony that the dog’s paws were resting on his forearm at neck level.  Photographs 
magnified 300 times depicted mud on Officer Price’s pant legs, not on his upper uniform, 
as he had claimed, indicating inconsistencies in Officer Price’s account of events.   
 
Officer Price admitted at trial that, as he approached Mr. Reeves’ residence, he had 
no suspicions that the family was involved with the burglaries that he was investigating.  
He also admitted that it appeared the home was occupied at the time.  Officer Price was 
not on Mr. Reeves’ property in order to serve a warrant or look for a suspect.  By his own 
account, Officer Price saw that lights were on in the house, the windows were up, and the 
front door was open.  He was taking notes in front of Mr. Reeves’ residence when the dog 
approached him.  Officer Price discharged his weapon at the dog while standing in front of 
the home in the middle of the afternoon.  Additionally, like in Brooks, there were other 
non-lethal measures he could have taken.  Officer Price could have used his taser, baton, 
or mace, or made verbal commands.   
 
Although Officer Price testified that Vern was growling and barked once as the dog 
approached him, a reasonable juror could have found, as this jury did, that the dog did not 
attack him.  The jury heard conflicting accounts from Officer Price and Dr. Lahmers as to 
how the dog was positioned when shot.  Whereas Officer Price recalled that the dog’s paws 
were on his arm when he fired the shots, Dr. Lahmers testified that the dog was turned 
away from the officer when one of the shots was fired.  Furthermore, like in Brooks, there 
was no evidence that Vern was vicious or threatening.  Testimony at trial indicated that 
28 
 
Vern had no history of aggression and got along with the neighbors, young children, and 
other animals.   
Accordingly, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Mr. Reeves, we agree 
with the Court of Special Appeals that Mr. Reeves presented sufficient evidence at trial for 
a rational juror to find that Officer Price was grossly negligent.  Thus, we uphold the circuit 
court’s denial of the Petitioners’ motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.  
However, despite the fact that there was sufficient evidence on the gross negligence claim, 
as explained above Mr. Reeves’ damages are limited to $7,500 for his claims, as both the 
trespass to chattel claim and the gross negligence claim sought recovery for the same harm 
and both are torts covered by CJP § 11-110.  Thus, consistent with the jury’s award and 
the circuit court’s reduction of the award, Mr. Reeves is limited to $7,500 on his trespass 
to chattel claim, and $0 on his alternative gross negligence claim. 
III. 
Conclusion 
 
 In light of CJP § 11-110’s plain language and structure, its relationship with the 
Wrongful Death Act, and its legislative history, we conclude that the statute defines and 
caps the recovery of compensatory damages in the case of the tortious death or injury of a 
pet.  Construing CJP § 11-110 to allow recovery for additional undefined and uncapped 
compensatory damages, including lost wages and mental anguish, would produce illogical 
results.  Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals on the 
statutory construction issue.   
29 
 
 
Further, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals on the gross 
negligence issue.  There was sufficient evidence at trial for the jury to find that Officer 
Price acted with gross negligence by shooting Mr. Reeves’ dog.  When viewing the 
evidence and the reasonable inferences to be drawn from them in the light most favorable 
to the nonmoving party, a rational juror could have found that Officer Price acted willfully 
or with utter indifference towards Mr. Reeves’ rights, and thus, was grossly negligent.  
However, pursuant to the single recovery rule and CJP § 11-110, we reduce the total 
damages award to $7,500, consistent with the statutory cap at the time that this cause of 
action arose. 
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF SPECIAL 
APPEALS AFFIRMED IN PART AND 
REVERSED IN PART.  COSTS TO BE 
DIVIDED 
EQUALLY 
BETWEEN 
PETITIONERS AND RESPONDENT. 
 
 
Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County 
Case No. C-02-CV-15-002956  
Argued: September 11, 2020 
 
 
 
 
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS 
OF MARYLAND 
 
No. 68 
 
September Term, 2019 
 
__________________________________ 
 
ANNE ARUNDEL COUNTY, 
MARYLAND AND RODNEY PRICE 
 
v.   
 
MICHAEL H. REEVES 
__________________________________ 
 
Barbera, C.J., 
McDonald, 
Watts, 
Getty, 
Hotten, 
Booth, 
Biran, 
 
JJ. 
__________________________________ 
 
Dissenting Opinion by Hotten, J. 
__________________________________ 
 
Filed:   June 7, 2021
For while we have our eyes on the future[,]  
history has its eyes on us[.]   
This is the era of just redemption[.]  
We feared at its inception[.] 
We did not feel prepared to be the heirs 
of such a terrifying hour 
but within it we found the power 
to author a new chapter[.]1 
 
Respectfully, I dissent.  The Majority interpreted Md. Code Ann., Courts and 
Judicial Proceedings (“Cts. & Jud. Proc.”) § 11-110 to preclude the recovery of 
noneconomic damages for a pet dog killed as a result of gross negligence.  The Majority 
need not have reached its conclusion under a narrow construction of the statute and 
Maryland common law.  Assuming arguendo that our controlling authority mandated the 
result found in the Majority opinion, the ineffable societal value ascribed to pets warrants 
a reassessment of Maryland law that continues to treat cherished family pets as mere 
chattel.   
The Majority’s interpretation of Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 unnecessarily eliminates a 
plaintiff’s right to recover damages for grossly negligent harm to property under 
Maryland common law. 
 
Generally, a plaintiff may not recover emotional or non-economic damages for 
negligently caused personal or real property loss.  Dobbins v. Washington Cty. Suburban 
Sanitary Comm’n, 338 Md. 341, 351, 658 A.2d 675, 679-80 (1995) (“it remains the law of 
Maryland that a plaintiff cannot ordinarily recover for emotional injuries sustained solely 
as a result of negligently inflicted damage to the plaintiff’s property.”); H & R Block, Inc. 
 
1 
Amanda 
Gorman, 
The 
Hill 
We 
Climb, 
The 
Hill, 
https://thehill.com/homenews/news/535052-read-transcript-of-amanda-gormans-
inaugural-poem (Jan. 21, 2021), archived at https://perma.cc/YR5V-WGZX. 
 
2 
 
v. Testerman, 275 Md. 36, 48-49, 338 A.2d 48, 55 (1975) (“Maryland decisions have 
generally denied compensation for mental anguish resulting from damage to property.”).   
Acts “inspired by fraud, malice, or like motives[]” provide a major exception to this 
general rule.  Ziegler v. F St. Corp., 248 Md. 223, 226, 235 A.2d 703, 705 (1967) 
(highlighting emotional damages motivated by fraud or malice are recoverable even in the 
absence of physical impact); State, for Use of Aronoff v. Balt. Transit Co., 197 Md. 528, 
539, 80 A.2d 13, 18 (1951).  A defendant who commits tortious acts to property beyond 
mere negligence can be held liable for emotional damages.  See Aronoff, 197 Md. at 538, 
80 A.2d at 17 (citing Buchanan v. Stout, 123 A.D. 648, 108 N.Y.S. 38 (1908) (holding that 
the plaintiff cannot recover for the tortious death of her cat without a showing of willful or 
grossly negligent2 behavior)). 
The Majority affirmed in part the Court of Special Appeals’ holding that Officer 
Price acted with gross negligence when he shot and killed Vern, but the Majority reversed 
in part the Court’s holding that Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 permits recovery of emotional 
damages that arise from grossly negligent harm to pets.  The Majority reads the statute’s 
 
2 This Court has defined “gross negligence” as 
 
[a]n intentional failure to perform a manifest duty in reckless disregard of the 
consequences as affecting the life or property of another, and also implies a 
thoughtless disregard of the consequences without the exertion of any effort 
to avoid them. . . .  A wrongdoer is guilty of gross negligence or acts wantonly 
and willfully only when he inflicts injury intentionally or is so utterly 
indifferent to rights of others that he acts as if such rights do not exist.  
 
Taylor v. Harford Cty. Dept. of Soc. Services, 384 Md. 213, 228, 862 A.2d 1026, 1034 
(2004) (citations omitted) (emphasis added). 
 
3 
 
$10,000 compensatory damage cap to limit all possible recovery for an injury or death of 
a pet. 
The Majority did not have to reach this conclusion and should have concluded that 
pets killed or injured with gross negligence may permit the recovery of emotional damages.  
We are bound to interpret statutes that displace common law as narrowly as possible.  See 
generally Robinson v. State, 353 Md. 683, 728 A.2d 698 (1999) (noting that statutes in 
derogation of the common law are to be construed narrowly, so as to not make any change 
beyond that which is expressly stated and necessary).  To date, Maryland common law has 
not clearly specified whether gross negligence is equivalent to “fraud, malice, or like 
motives” especially in the context of tortious harm to pets.  This Court has noted that there 
is not a consistent usage of gross negligence across “more than twenty-five appearances in 
our statutes[.]”  Taylor, 384 Md. at 227, 862 A.2d at 1034.3  This Court in some instances 
equated gross negligence with “fraud, malice, or like motives” in the past,4 which 
 
3 See, e.g., Md. Code Ann., Insurance § 5-201(j)(“Except for fraud, willful 
misconduct, or gross negligence, a qualified actuary is not liable for damages . . .”); Md. 
Code Ann., Business, Occupations & Professions § 3-311(a)(1)(iii) (revoking an 
architecture license if applicant or licensee “is guilty of any fraud, gross negligence, 
incompetence, or misconduct. . .”); Md. Code Ann., Natural Resources § 8-716.1(f)(1) 
(waiving statute of limitations for personal tax debt if “proof of fraud or gross negligence. 
. .”).      
 
4 Cooper v. Rodriguez, 443 Md. 680, 710, 118 A.3d 829, 846 (2015) (holding 
corrections officer acted with gross negligence to lose immunity under Maryland Tort 
Claims Act); Booth v. Robinson, 55 Md. 419 (1881) (holding directors of a corporation 
breach their fiduciary duty through gross negligence in the same way directors would be 
for fraud); see also Ford v. Balt. City Sheriff’s Office, 149 Md. App. 107, 120-21, 814 A.2d 
127, 134 (2002) (if “the State employee has acted with malice or gross negligence, . . . the 
State is immune from suit and the injured party may only bring a viable tort claim against  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
(continued . . .) 
 
4 
 
according to longstanding precepts of Maryland common law may render a tortfeasor liable 
for emotional damages for damage to property.  Arnoff, 197 Md. at 539, 80 A.2d at 18.  It 
would have been sound, especially given the strong emotional bond between people and 
pets, for the Majority to recognize an additional exception to the common law that grossly 
negligent harm to pets may entail liability for emotional damages.  Pets, particularly dogs, 
possess individual personalities, emotions, intelligences, and behaviors.5  Maryland law 
should distinguish between the recovery of grossly negligent harms to pets and inanimate 
objects accordingly.  
a. The Majority’s holding creates a double anomaly in Maryland law. 
Pets already hold an anomalous position within Maryland law.  They are the only 
type of “property” with capped compensatory damages.  The Majority’s decision places 
pets in a doubly anomalous position: they are the only type of property subject to a 
compensatory and non-compensatory cap.  A tortfeasor may “wantonly and willfully” 
shoot and kill a beloved, family dog, “utterly indifferent” to the family’s emotional bond 
and pay no more than $10,000 in damages, while a fraudster who intentionally tricks a 
 
(. . . continued) 
the State employee.”) (emphasis added); but see Ellerin v. Fairfax Sav., F.S.B., 337 Md. 
216, 228, 652 A.2d 1117, 1123 (1995) (precluding gross negligence as a basis for punitive 
damages in non-intentional tort cases). 
 
5 News and social media are replete with stories that reinforce common experience 
and understanding of pets as cherished companions.  See, e.g., The Dodo, 
http://www.thedodo.com (last visited May 25, 2021), archived at https://perma.cc/V52M-
TRHK. 
 
5 
 
family into selling a painting of their dog would face uncapped compensatory damages and 
punitive damages.  
The Majority’s decision also creates an incongruous result where a person can be 
criminally liable for neglecting their pet under Maryland’s animal cruelty law, Md. Code 
Ann., Criminal Law § 10-601(c)(1) (“‘Cruelty’ means the unnecessary or unjustifiable 
physical pain or suffering caused or allowed by an act, omission, or neglect[]”), but if 
someone else kills one’s pet with gross negligence, they will only face a maximum 
compensatory damage penalty of $10,000.   
b. The Majority’s decision contrasts with the modern trend of our sister 
jurisdictions that have expanded pet owners’ ability to recover for injured or 
killed pets. 
The Majority’s decision stands at odds with the modern trend of our sister 
jurisdictions that have recognized a greater right of recovery for injured or killed pets.  
More than fifty years ago, the Florida Supreme Court held in LaPorte v. Associated 
Independents, Inc. that “the malicious destruction of the pet provides an element of damage 
for which the owner should recover, irrespective of the value of the animal[.]”  163 So. 2d 
267, 269 (Fla. 1964).  The plaintiff saw a garbage collector throw a trash can at her dog, 
Heidi.  Id. at 268.  The garbage collector laughed and drove away.  Id.  Heidi died from the 
impact.  Id.  The trial court limited the plaintiff’s recovery to the fair market value of the 
dog.  Id. at 269.  The Florida Supreme Court reversed recognizing the “very real” affection 
between a person and their pet.  Id.   
Similar decisions have since been reached in Alaska, California, Florida, Hawaii, 
Idaho, Kentucky, Puerto Rico and Washington.  See, e.g., Jay M. Zitter, Annotation, 
 
6 
 
Recovery of Damages for Emotional Distress Due to Treatment of Pets and Animals, 91 
A.L.R. 5th 545 § 3 (2001) (annotating various jurisdictions’ laws that allow for recovery 
of emotional damages for an injured or killed pet).  In Plotnik v. Meihaus, 208 Cal. App. 
4th 1590, 146 Cal. Rptr. 3d 585 (4th Dist. 2012), the plaintiffs sued their neighbor after he 
allegedly struck their 12-inch tall miniature pinscher with a baseball bat after the dog 
dashed into the neighbor’s yard.  Id. at 1605, 146 Cal. Rptr. at 598.  The California Court 
of Appeal for the Fourth District held: 
We believe good cause exists to allow the recovery of damages for emotional 
distress under the circumstances of this case . . . . [W]hile it has been said 
that [dogs] have nearly always been held to be entitled to less regard and 
protection than more harmless domestic animals, it is equally true that there 
are no other domestic animals to which the owner or his family can become 
more strongly attached, or the loss of which will be more keenly felt.  
Additionally, one can be held liable for punitive damages if he or she 
willfully or through gross negligence wrongfully injures an animal.  
 
Id. at 1607, 146 Cal.  Rptr. 3d at 600 (internal citations and quotation omitted).   
The court based its decision on California’s civil code that permits recovery of 
exemplary damages or “damages for the sake of example and by way of punishing the 
defendant[]” for malicious, oppressive, or fraudulent conduct.  Cal. Civ. Code § 3294 
(1992).  These conditions for granting relief to an injured pet in California closely parallel 
Maryland’s common law basis of recovering emotional damages for property in Maryland.  
See Ziegler, 248 Md. at 226, 235 A. at 705 (allowing recovery of emotional damages for 
harms to real property “inspired by fraud, malice, or like motives[]”).  By permitting the 
recovery of emotional damages for injuries or death sustained by pets, as a result of grossly 
 
7 
 
negligent conduct, we would have joined a modern trend among sister jurisdictions that 
recognize the close emotional bond humans share with their pets.  
The Majority’s interpretation contravenes the General Assembly’s legislative purpose to 
expand the amount a plaintiff may recover for tortious harms to their pet. 
In 1989, the General Assembly originally enacted the predecessor to Cts. & Jud. 
Proc. § 11-110 to expressly allow a plaintiff to recover for harms to his or her pet.  Brooks 
v. Jenkins, 220 Md. App. 444, 468, 104 A.3d 899, 913 (2014) (stating that the original 
statute’s purpose was to “establis[h] a certain method for the measurement of damages to 
an injured pet” and to clarify a plaintiff’s right to recover for an injured pet).  Veterinarian 
bills usually exceeded a pet’s fair market value, so the statute ensured that plaintiffs would 
not suffer the unjust result of paying for extensive veterinarian bills, while the tortfeasor 
only had to pay for the pet’s replacement cost.6  The General Assembly also recognized 
that, unlike the decision to repair or replace other personal property, pet owners do not 
view veterinarian care as a discretionary expense. 
The predecessor to Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 eliminated the unjust result and 
recognized veterinary care as a recoverable form of compensatory damages to pets.  It also 
reversed the common law lesser alternative valuation of market value or cost of repair.  See 
 
6 Senator Zirkin, sponsor of SB 143, the 2017 amendment to Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-
110, shared an anecdote from a constituent during the Second Reading of SB 143 in which 
a tortfeasor shot the plaintiff’s dog, but the plaintiff bore most of the cost of the dog’s 
veterinarian treatment.  Similar stories motivated, in part, the original enactment of the 
predecessor to Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110.  Injury to or Death of Pets – Damages, S.B. 143, 
Second 
Reading, 
2017 
Sess. 
(Md. 
2017),  
http://mgaleg.maryland.gov/mgawebsite/FloorActions/Media/senate-19-?year=2017RS, 
archived at https://perma.cc/5XXT-JTXN (hereinafter S.B. 143 Second Reading).  
 
8 
 
Bastian v. Laffin, 54 Md. App. 703, 714, 460 A.2d 623, 629 (1983) (“The measure of 
damage for tortious injuries to personal property is the lesser of the difference between the 
value of the property immediately before the harm has been done and its value immediately 
thereafter or the reasonable cost of repairs”) (emphasis added).  Now, plaintiffs may 
recover whichever “is greater”: fair market replacement value or “reasonable cost of 
veterinary care.”  Subsequent amendments only reinforced and strengthened the plaintiff’s 
right to recovery by increasing the compensatory damages cap. 
The legislative history of the 2017 amendment to Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 
(increasing the compensatory damage cap from $7,500 to $10,000) further illustrates the 
intent of the General Assembly to expand Marylanders’ right to recover for harms inflicted 
on their pets.  Senator Zirkin testified that he sponsored the amendment because the 
previous “arcane” cap created the anomalous result that a plaintiff may recover for a 
destroyed vase, but “for some random reason it says [a pet] is valued no more than $7,500.”  
Senator Zirkin expressed the intent and animating spirit of the amendment in no uncertain 
terms: 
If I shot your painting worth $10,000, I would get more money than if I shot 
your dog. . . .  This seems outrageous . . . it seemed particularly cruel to call 
[what we consider] a family member just an object and then put an arbitrary 
cap on what it’s worth.  It seems inane to me. 
 
S.B. 143 Second Reading. 
 
The General Assembly also knew of the Court of Special Appeals’ recognition of 
recovery of emotional damages for an injured pet under Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 in 
Brooks, but declined to overturn the decision through amendment.  This Court presumes 
 
9 
 
awareness and acceptance of a law’s interpretation when the General Assembly “re-enacts 
the statute without changing in substance the language at issue.”  Plein v. Dep’t of Labor, 
369 Md. 421, 437, 800 A.2d 757, 767 (2002).  The Court of Special Appeals decided 
Brooks in 2014, which held Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 cannot limit a plaintiff’s overall 
recovery of the underlying tort.  220 Md. App. at 469, 104 A.3d at 913-14. 
This Court need not rely on a presumption to draw the conclusion that the General 
Assembly knew and tacitly approved of Brooks.  During a hearing of SB 143, Kelley 
Donohue, on behalf of the Maryland Association for Justice, expressly referenced Brooks 
in her testimony.  The legislators knew of a plaintiff’s ability to recover other damages 
under a theory of gross negligence in Brooks and subsequently amended the statute without 
changing the compensatory damages language or disturbing the right of a plaintiff to 
recover for emotional damages for a pet harmed through gross negligence.  I would have 
interpreted the legislative history of Cts. & Jud. Proc. § 11-110 as supporting an expansion, 
not restriction, of a plaintiff’s right to recover emotional damages for grossly negligent 
harm to a pet. 
The Majority’s decision missed an opportunity to bring Maryland’s common law in line 
with Marylanders’ love for their pets. 
Marylanders have strong emotional bonds with their pets, especially their dogs.  
Most people, including Mr. Reeves, considered his dog a part of the family and “his best 
friend in the world[.]”  The designation of dogs as mere personal property belies common 
experience, cultural values, and societal expectations.  Treating dogs as mere property also 
erases a dog’s intrinsic attributes as a living being and the irreplaceable instinct to love and 
 
10 
 
protect human companions.  A dog, unlike an inanimate object, welcomes its human 
companion after a day at work, protects its human companion when in danger, and exhibits 
behavior and emotions that is consistent with grief and distress when its human companion 
is ill, injured, or passes away.  Given prevailing societal values, attitudes, and norms, it no 
longer appears tenable to deny emotional damages for a cherished family dog, killed with 
gross negligence, in the same way that the common law precludes emotional damages for 
an inanimate object that was accidentally broken.  See Unger v. State, 427 Md. 383, 417, 
48 A.3d 242, 262 (2012) (adjusting the common law to accord with modern societal values, 
conditions, and interests).  
Marylanders can no longer rely on Brooks to vindicate the loss of a cherished pet 
companion.  The Majority’s decision comes at a time when pet ownership is surging.  The 
2019-2020 National Pet Owners Survey estimated 67% of U.S. households have a pet, up 
from 56% in 1988.  This data omits the recent uptick following the Covid-19 global 
pandemic.  Kim Kavin, Dog Adoptions and Sales Soar During the Pandemic, The 
Washington Post (Aug. 12, 2020).  Pet adoption has always provided more than just 
companionship, it establishes a connection and unconditional love.  KK Ottesen, Humane 
Society President Discusses the Surge of Pet Ownership During the Pandemic – And What 
Animals Can Teach Us, The Washington Post (Apr. 27, 2021) (“[Animals] provide 
[connection and unconditional love].  That’s who they are.  That’s what they do.”).   
The Majority has missed an opportunity to recognize pets, not just as emotive, 
intelligent, loving, and cherished members of our families, but as representing more than 
mere personal property.  In the past, courts did not wait for legislative enactment to expand 
 
11 
 
the concept of personage when societal needs, values, and interests demanded it.  This 
Court can break from precedent when “passage of time and evolving events” render it 
“archaic or inapplicable to modern society[.]”  State v. Stachowski, 440 Md. 504, 520, 103 
A.3d 618, 627 (2014).  Greater legal protection of beloved family pets is long overdue.7  
The average Marylander may be surprised to hear that while the law treats a caring, 
loyal, and vivacious pet dog as personal property, it treats a corporation as a person.  
Common law has recognized corporate personhood for centuries.  Cook Cty., Ill. v. United 
States ex rel. Chandler, 538 U.S. 119, 125, 123 S. Ct. 1239, 1244 (2003) (“There is no 
doubt that the term [person] then extended to corporations, the Court in 1826 having 
 
7 The perpetuation of Maryland common law’s categorization of pets as personal 
property, despite prevailing societal sentiment, calls to mind a vigorous dissent from Judge 
Starcher of the West Virginia Supreme Court: 
 
This opinion is simply medieval.  The majority blithely says that “our law 
categorizes dogs as personal property”—that “damages for sentimental 
value, mental suffering, and emotional distress are not recoverable” when 
one’s pet is injured or killed by the negligence of another person.  In coming 
to this conclusion, the majority overlooks the fact that the “law” in question 
is the common law which is controlled by this Court.  There was nothing 
stopping the majority from changing that common law other than their lack 
of concern for pet owners and the emotional bonds that exist between owners 
and their pets.  When the common law of the past is no longer in harmony 
with the institutions or societal conditions of the present, this Court is 
constitutionally empowered to adjust the common law to current needs. . . .   
As Justice Holmes succinctly reflected, “[t]he common law is not a brooding 
omnipresence in the sky but the articulate voice of some sovereign or 
quasisovereign that can be identified.” . . . Yet the majority opinion continues 
to maintain the primitive limits of the common law, and refuses to adjust to 
the realities of the modern world, and permit recovery of damages for 
sentimental values, mental suffering, or emotional distress. 
Carbasho v. Musulin, 217 W. Va. 359, 363, 618 S.E.2d 368, 372 (2005) (Starcher, J., 
dissenting). 
 
12 
 
expressly recognized the presumption that the statutory term ‘person’ ‘extends as well to 
persons politic and incorporate, as to natural persons whatsoever.’”) (quoting United States 
v. Amedy, 24 U.S. 392, 400 (1826)) (other quotations omitted); see also Trustees of 
Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 17 U.S. 518, 667 (1819) (opinion of Story, J.) (A 
corporation “is, in short, an artificial person, existing in contemplation of law, and endowed 
with certain powers and franchises which, though they must be exercised through the 
medium of its natural members, are yet considered as subsisting in the corporation itself, 
as distinctly as if it were a real personage.”) (emphasis added). 
The average Marylander may be more surprised to hear that the law has recognized 
a boat, or more precisely, a vessel, as a legal person.  Ralli v. Troop, 157 U.S. 386, 403, 15 
S. Ct. 657, 664 (1895) (affirming “a distinct principle of the maritime law, namely, that the 
vessel, in whosesoever hands she lawfully is, is herself considered the wrongdoer, liable 
for the tort, and subject to a maritime lien for the damages”) (emphasis added).  Even 
though vessels constitute inanimate amalgamations of mostly steel, aluminum, fiberglass 
and timber, the law endows the vessel with a legal personality (usually gendered as female) 
and empowers “her” recovery for tort damages.  
The common law extended recognition of legal personage to what the average 
person would consider property not because people loved corporations and vessels more 
than their pets.  Instead, legal, commercial, and societal interests demanded it.  “[A]nything 
can be made a legal unit, and the subject of rights and duties, a fund, a building, a child 
unborn, a family.  There is no reason, except the practical one, why, as someone has 
suggested, the law should not accord to the last rose of summer a legal right not to be 
 
13 
 
plucked.”  Jeffery S. Kerr, et al., A Slave by Any Other Name is Still a Slave, 19 Animal L. 
221, 226 (2013) (quoting Gerard Cark Gebdersib, The Position of Foreign Corporations 
in American Law (Harvard U. Press 1918)) (footnote omitted).  
Similarly, extending legal personhood to pets on a limited basis to recover for 
emotional damages for the pet’s grossly negligent injury or death could present an 
incremental change to Maryland tort law.  More importantly, it serves to dignify the deep 
emotional connection between humans and their pets and underscores a widely shared 
belief in modern society that animals are not chattel, but members of the family.8   
The law should similarly extend a recognition of limited personhood to pets, if only 
so their human companions can seek recovery for grossly negligent conduct that caused 
injury or death to that pet.  The law should reflect the importance and centrality of pets to 
individual families and society as a whole. It has already done so for multinational 
corporations and vessels.  Pets deserve similar treatment.   
Formalistic adherence to classifying pets as property dredges up the law’s ignominious 
history of treating living beings, notably slaves and women, as property not legal persons.    
 
The designation of pets under the common law as mere personal property deprives 
pets the dignity of living beings.  When Maryland became a state in 1788, it formally 
inherited the common law of England, which still considered slaves, women, and pets as 
 
8 The law already allows a mother, who sustains personal injury, and as a result of 
the negligent conduct of another, suffers the loss of a fetus, to recover emotional damages 
for the death of an unborn child.  Smith v. Borello, 370 Md. 227, 247, 804 A.2d 1151, 1163 
(2002) (holding that a mother may recover demonstrable emotional distress that 
accompanies and is attributable to the loss of the fetus and the distress recoverable includes 
that arising from the unexpected termination of her pregnancy and the enduring of a 
miscarriage or stillbirth).  
 
14 
 
property.  Over decades of struggle and progress, Maryland, like every state in the union, 
cast aside the harmful classification of people as property.9  Pets should not be consigned 
to eighteenth-century notions of property.  It denies the dignity abundantly ascribed to pets 
by society.  It prevents people of Maryland from being made whole after a tragic injury or 
death of their pet.   
The legal arc of Maryland is one of progress and bends inexorably towards greater 
recognition of rights.  The common law designation of pets as personal property, rooted in 
legal formalism, conflicts with society’s values and the trajectory of common law in 
Maryland and throughout the country.  Our pets are more than just living beings.  They are 
 
9 History has taken a dim view on legal decisions that perpetuated the treatment of 
people as property merely because the law previously prescribed it.  The United States 
Supreme Court infamously held in Dred Scott v. Sandford, “[b]ut it is too clear for dispute, 
that the enslaved African race were not intended to be included, and formed no part of the 
people who framed and adopted this declaration[.]”  60 U.S. 393, 410 (1857).  The Dred 
Scott decision has been widely condemned and regarded as one of the most repudiated 
decisions by the United States Supreme Court.  Robert A. Burt, What Was Wrong with 
Dred Scott, What’s Right about Brown, 42 Wash. & Lee 1, 1 (1985) (“No [United States] 
Supreme Court decision has been more consistently reviled than Dred Scott v. Sanford.)  
This Court made the same mistake as the United States Supreme Court when it decided 
Hughes v. Jackson, 12 Md. 450 (1858) (recognizing Maryland’s common law treatment of 
slaves as property, devoid of civil rights, including the right to sue or be sued).   
While different in kind and degree, courts propagated the doctrine of coverture, 
which treated married women as quasi property of the husband.  R. & E. Builders, Inc. v. 
Chandler, 144 Vt. 302, 304, 476 A.2d 540, 541 (1984) (describing “common law legal 
fiction that a husband and wife are one person for most legal purposes[]”).  Notably, “a 
wife could not sue anyone for a tort committed against her without her husband’s consent; 
neither could she be sued for committing a tort without having her husband joined as a 
defendant.”  Id. at 304, 476 A.2d at 541.  Courts only gradually removed de jure 
subjugation of women from the common law in the twentieth century.  Trammel v. United 
States, 445 U.S. 40, 52, 100 S. Ct. 906, 914 (1980) (“Chip by chip, . . . cast aside so that 
[n]o longer is the female destined solely for the home and the rearing of the family, and 
only the male for the marketplace and the world of ideas[]”).   
 
15 
 
widely considered best friends, guardians, and members of the family.  Maryland law 
should recognize and bestow pets with the same degree of dignity. 
CONCLUSION 
In this instance, it appears that pet owners who sustain the loss of the pet as the 
result of the grossly negligent acts of another will have no recourse other than with the 
General Assembly to move Maryland forward. 
For these reasons, I dissent and would affirm the judgment of the Court of Special 
Appeals.