Justia Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in Animal / Dog Law
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A man owned several pit bulls on his rural property near Texarkana, Texas. Despite a fence, the dogs repeatedly escaped and attacked people and animals in the area. After a series of incidents—including attacks on a neighbor’s horse and a woman on a scooter—the owner was formally notified by law enforcement that his dogs were considered dangerous under Texas law. Despite this notice, the dogs continued to escape and, in September 2022, attacked a ten-year-old boy, causing serious injuries that required surgery.The owner was indicted for injury to a child by omission, with the prosecution alleging he failed to restrain or enclose his dangerous dogs as required by Section 822.042(a) of the Texas Health and Safety Code. A jury in the trial court found him guilty and sentenced him to thirty-five years in prison. On appeal, the Sixth Court of Appeals reversed the conviction, holding that the State failed to prove the owner had a statutory duty to protect the child, reasoning that only duties arising from the Texas Family Code had previously been recognized for this type of offense.The Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas reviewed the case to determine whether Section 822.042(a) of the Texas Health and Safety Code can serve as a statutory duty to act for purposes of the injury to a child by omission statute. The court held that Section 822.042(a) does impose a mandatory statutory duty on owners of dangerous dogs to restrain or enclose them, and that this duty can be imported to satisfy the statutory duty element required for conviction under Penal Code Section 22.04(b)(1). The court reversed the judgment of the court of appeals and remanded the case for further proceedings. View "COCKRELL v. STATE OF TEXAS" on Justia Law