Where the plaintiffs had no evidence to refute the defendant dog owner’s sworn statement that they had no way to know of their dog’s dangerous propensities, summary judgment for the defendants was affirmed.

In A.M. by Amanda M. v. Masek, No. W2024-01412-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 23, 2025), the plaintiffs visited the defendants’ home to celebrate Christmas. The plaintiffs’ minor son stayed the night, and the next morning he went into the defendants’ back yard with the defendants’ dogs. The defendants had not left the child alone with the dogs before and intended to join him in the yard soon. Within three minutes, one of the dogs attacked the boy.

The plaintiffs filed this suit, and the defendants moved for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment based on the filings of the parties, finding that the plaintiffs did not prove an essential element of their claim. The Court of Appeals affirmed.

I have been working on the Fourth Edition of Day on Torts:  Leading Cases in Tennessee Tort Law for several years.

It has been a massive undertaking.  First published in 2008, the new book has two volumes totaling over 1300 pages.  It summarizes the leading case on 579 different tort law topics and cites thousands of other cases.

Here is a listing of the overall topics covered in this book, each of which is broken down further into subtopics.

Abuse of Process ∙ Alienation of Affections ∙ Amusement Parks ∙ Animal Control Officer’s Rule ∙ Animals Other Than Bovines, Dogs, and Horses ∙ Assault and Battery ∙ Assumption of Risk ∙ Attorney’s Fees ∙ Attorney’s Lien ∙ Bad Faith Failure of Insurer to Pay First Party Claim  (Statutory Cause of Action) ∙ Bad Faith Failure to Settle Tort Claim (Common Law Claim) ∙ Bovine Activities ∙ Breach of Promise to Marry ∙ Causation ∙ Charitable Immunity ∙ Contractual Choice of Law Provisions ∙ Comparative Fault – Generally ∙ Comparative Fault – Allocation and Applicability ∙ Confidential Relationship ∙ Conflict of Laws in Tort Cases ∙ Contribution  ∙ Conspiracy  ∙ Constructive Fraud ∙ Conversion∙ Criminal Conversation ∙ Damages – Generally ∙ Damages in Personal Injury Cases ∙ Damages to Property and Financial Interest ∙ Damages in Wrongful Death Cases ∙ Defamation ∙ Dog Bites and Dog Attacks ∙ Duty ∙ Ecclesiastical Abstention Doctrine ∙ Exclusivity of Workers Compensation Law –  Ability of Employees to Sue Employers in Tort ∙ Exculpatory Agreements (Also Known as Contractual Waivers of Liability)∙ Expert Witnesses ∙ False Imprisonment ∙ Family Purpose Doctrine ∙ Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA) ∙ Forum Non Conveniens ∙ Forum Selection Clauses in Personal Injury and Death Cases ∙ Fraud∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – General Principles ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Damages ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Health Care Liability ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Limitation of Actions ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Motor Vehicle Cases (including road and bridge) ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) –  Premises Liability ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Injuries to Inmates (other than those alleging premises liability) ∙ Governmental Tort Liability Act (GTLA) – Miscellaneous ∙ Gross Negligence ∙ Health Care Liability – Cases Which Define the Scope of Health Care Liability Law ∙ Health Care Liability Action – Issues Arising Under the Notice Provision of Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-121 ∙ Health Care Liability Action – Issues Arising Under Certification of Good Faith Provisions of Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-26-122 ∙ Health Care Liability – Battery and Informed Consent ∙ Health Care Liability – General Issues ∙ Health Care Liability – Expert Witness Issues ∙ Health Care Liability – Statute of Limitations ∙ Health Care Liability – Statute of Repose ∙ Health Care Providers –  Asserted Claims / Liens on Recoveries ∙ Horses (Equine) – Actions Involving ∙ Imputed Negligence or Fault ∙ Indemnity Claims ∙ Independent Contractor ∙ Intentional and/or Reckless Infliction of Emotional  Distress (formerly known as Outrageous Conduct) ∙ Intentional Interference with Business Relationship ∙ Intentional Interference with Contractual Relationships ∙ Interference With and Mishandling Human Remain ∙ Intrusion on Seclusion ∙ Invasion of Privacy ∙ Jurisdiction in Tort Cases ∙ Last Clear Chance Rule ∙ Legal Malpractice ∙ Limitation of Actions (Statutes of Limitation) and Certain Statutes of Repose ∙ Liquor Liability ∙ Loss of Chance ∙ Loss of Consortium (Personal Injury Cases) ∙ Malicious Harassment ∙ Malicious Prosecution ∙ Minor, Right of Parent to Bring Claim ∙ Misrepresentation by Concealment ∙ Motor Vehicle Cases – Generally ∙ Motor Vehicle Cases – Insurance-Related Issues ∙ Negligent or Intentional Acts by a Child ∙ Negligence Per Se ∙ Negligence Arising During Bailment ∙ Negligent Entrustment ∙ Negligent Hiring, Supervision and Retention ∙ Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress (“NIED”) ∙ Negligent Misrepresentation ∙ Nuisance ∙ Parent – Child Immunity ∙ Personal Property ∙ Physician – Patient Confidentiality ∙ Physical or Mental Disability, Impact in Tort Cases ∙ Policeman and Fireman’s Rule ∙ Preemption ∙ Premises Liability ∙ Products Liability ∙ Punitive Damages ∙ Rescue Doctrine ∙ Res Ipsa Loquitor in Non-HCLA (Medical Negligence) Case ∙ Savings Statute ∙ Settlement ∙ Spoliation of Evidence ∙ Spousal Immunity ∙ State of Tennessee, Tort Claims Against the State (Actions Before the Tennessee Claims Commission) ∙ Strict Liability for Ultra-Hazardous Activities ∙ Subrogation ∙ Subsequent Medical Negligence, Liability of Original Tortfeasor ∙ Suicide, Cases Involving ∙ Tennessee Public Participation Act (TPPA) ∙ Tort of Another – Recoverability of Fees ∙ Trespass ∙ Trespass to Chattels ∙ Unavoidable Accident ∙ Unfair Competition ∙ Vicarious Liability ∙ Wrongful Death ∙ Wrongful Pregnancy

The book is normally priced at $415, which includes shipping and handling but does not include sales tax.   Through the end of April, 2026, the book is available for $315, plus sales tax (no S&H).

Order on Amazon.

 

Where a dog had previously growled at a stranger and the owner had stated the dog did not know how to be around other people, there was a genuine issue of material fact regarding whether the defendant owner knew about the dog’s dangerous propensities before it bit the plaintiff.

In Munoz v. Sepulveda, No. M2024-01002-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Sept. 9, 2025), the plaintiff visited the defendant’s property to purchase a lamb. When the plaintiff arrived, she saw two dogs in a fenced enclosure. She approached the enclosure to look at the dogs, and one of the dogs bit her.

The plaintiff filed this action against the defendant, and the defendant moved for summary judgment, pointing to his testimony that the dog had never bitten anyone before. The trial court granted summary judgment, but the Court of Appeals reversed, finding that the plaintiff had shown a genuine issue of material fact.

Where an HCLA (medical malpractice) plaintiff sent pre-suit notice to an address that was neither the defendant doctor’s business address nor the place where the plaintiff received treatment, dismissal based on the failure to comply with the pre-suit notice requirements was affirmed.

In Springfield v. Eton, No. W2024-01024-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 3, 2025), the plaintiff filed suit against the defendants based on a failed surgical artery graft which eventually necessitated the amputation of her right leg. Defendant Dr. Eton was the surgeon, who at the time had been placed with UT Regional One Physicians (“UTROP”) through a placement company. Dr. Eton was from Chicago, but he was working with UTROP in Memphis at the time.

The plaintiff sent pre-suit notice to both Dr. Eton and UTROP, with the claim against UTROP based solely on vicarious liability. At the time, Dr. Eton’s address on the Tennessee Department of Health’s website only listed “Chicago, IL 60614.” The plaintiff sent Dr. Eton’s pre-suit notice to the address in Memphis “for an ambulatory outpatient surgery center owned by Regional One.” This was not the address at which the plaintiff had received treatment.

Where the defendant governmental entity admitted in its answer that it owned the vehicle involved in the accident, and that the driver involved was its employee and was “acting within the course and scope of his employment” at the time of the accident, the plaintiff did not have to offer evidence on this issue.

In Butcher v. Shelby County Board of Education, No. W2024-01202-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 10, 2025), the plaintiff was injured in a car accident where the other driver was 100% at fault. The other vehicle was owned by the defendant board of education. In its answer, the defendant admitted that it owned the vehicle, that the driver was its employee, and that the driver was acting within the course and scope of his employment.

At the close of the trial, the defendant moved for involuntary dismissal on the basis that the plaintiffs “failed to prove that [the driver] was an employee” of the defendant, which was a prerequisite to removing immunity under the GTLA. The trial court denied the motion and entered a verdict for the plaintiff, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Where the plaintiff fell when exiting a bus, and she stated at the time of the fall that the driver had not properly lowered the ramp and that her lower extremities might be injured, the statute of limitations began to run on the date of the fall.

In Jordan v. East Tennessee Human Resources Agency, Inc., No. E2025-00445-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 13, 2025), the plaintiff, who used a wheelchair, frequently used the defendant’s transportation services. On July 13, 2023, the plaintiff was exiting a van in her wheelchair when she fell forward onto her face. The wheelchair allegedly fell onto her legs. Video of the incident captured the plaintiff and a bystander stating that the ramp was not lowered properly, and plaintiff saying that she might have hurt her lower extremities but was not certain due to her paralysis. Later in July, the plaintiff visited the doctor and discovered that she had been injured in the fall.

On July 16, 2024, the plaintiff filed this negligence suit under the GTLA. The defendant moved for summary judgment pursuant to the one-year statute of limitations, which the trial court granted and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Where the trial court granted summary judgment to the defendant in a car accident case based on the plaintiff’s lack of sufficient evidence as to breach of duty and causation, and the plaintiff’s appellate brief failed to mention duty at all, summary judgment was affirmed.

In Metcalf v. Woodard, No. W2024-01321-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 29, 2025), the plaintiff was injured in a motor vehicle collision with a UPS tractor trailer. The plaintiff filed a suit asserting several claims, although she eventually voluntarily dismissed all claims except general negligence. The trial court issued a scheduling order, and the plaintiff failed to disclose any expert witnesses by the relevant deadline. The plaintiff identified expert witnesses eleven months after the deadline, after which the defendants moved for summary judgment. The trial court held a hearing and granted summary judgment to the defendants, ruling that the plaintiff had presented insufficient evidence to establish the elements of breach of duty or causation.

The plaintiff appealed the grant of summary judgment, but in her statement of issues, she focused solely on the exclusion of her causation experts. The plaintiff’s appellate brief “fail[ed] to make any reference to ‘breach’ or ‘duty.’” By failing to make any argument that she established the essential element of breach of duty, the plaintiff waived that argument on appeal. Because summary judgment was granted on two bases, including the failure to show breach of duty, summary judgment was affirmed due to the plaintiff’s failure to address that issue on appeal.

Where a nursing facility could not authenticate the decedent’s signature on an arbitration agreement, denial of the facility’s motion to compel arbitration was affirmed.

In Niter-Martin v. Methodist Healthcare-Memphis Hospitals d/b/a Methodist University Hospital, No. W2024-01193-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 4, 2026), the plaintiff filed claims for negligent care and wrongful death against defendant nursing facility related to the facility’s care of the plaintiff’s mother, who passed away six days after the complaint was filed. The defendant facility filed a motion to compel arbitration, and it attached an arbitration agreement allegedly signed by the decedent to the motion.

In response to the motion to compel arbitration, the plaintiff argued that the facility could not authenticate the arbitration agreement. The trial court agreed and denied the motion, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

Where a car accident defendant failed to file a motion for new trial raising certain evidentiary issues, those issues had been waived on appeal.

In Pajazetovic v. Baker, No. M2024-00372-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 6, 2025), the plaintiff was involved in a car accident. The plaintiff filed suit against the driver and the owner of the other car, and the defendant’s underinsured motorist carrier was also served.

Prior to the first trial, the defendants filed a motion in limine to exclude the plaintiff’s accident reconstructionist, arguing that his opinion was based solely on his determination of which witnesses were most credible rather than on “calculations or other scientific explanations.” The trial court denied the motion in limine, the accident reconstructionist testified, and the first trial resulted in a hung jury. The accident reconstructionist passed away before the second trial, and the trial court ruled that the expert was unavailable under Rule 804. The trial court allowed his testimony from the first trial to be used. This second trial resulted in a jury verdict for plaintiff of more than $120,000.

When faced with a TPPA petition to dismiss, a plaintiff must present more than conclusory statements to establish a prima facie case for their claims.

In Blythe v. Forshythe, No. M2023-01463-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Nov. 6, 2025), the plaintiff was a surgeon and the defendant was a scrub tech. The plaintiff and the defendant had a verbal altercation during a surgery, and the defendant scrub tech stated that the plaintiff grabbed her wrist and physically knocked her off a stool in the operating room.

After the surgery, the defendant gave a statement to the hospital, filed a police report, and filed a complaint with the health board. Based on these verbal and written statements, the plaintiff surgeon filed this case asserting claims for defamation and intentional interference with a business relationship against the defendant scrub tech. The defendant filed a petition to dismiss under the Tennessee Public Participation Act (“TPPA”), which the trial court granted, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

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