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Suki's legacy: The dog attack that went all the way to the Court of Appeal

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Sun, 1 Sep 2024, 4:19pm
Robert Telford with Suki, who has been the focus of a protracted legal case after she bit another dog in an Auckland park. Suki died last year before her case helped resolve a grey area of the law. Photo / Robert Telford
Robert Telford with Suki, who has been the focus of a protracted legal case after she bit another dog in an Auckland park. Suki died last year before her case helped resolve a grey area of the law. Photo / Robert Telford

Suki's legacy: The dog attack that went all the way to the Court of Appeal

Author
Tracy Neal,
Publish Date
Sun, 1 Sep 2024, 4:19pm

After biting another dog in a public park, Suki the dog was sentenced to death 鈥 but following an appeal she was taken off death row.

Now, three years on, Suki and her owner鈥檚 case has proved central to clearing up a hazy law relating to destruction orders for dogs.

The Court of Appeal has this month ruled a destruction order can be issued only if the dog鈥檚 owner is convicted.

In this case, Suki鈥檚 owner, Robert Telford, avoided conviction on a charge laid under dog control law after the attack. But, the Auckland family鈥檚 relief was shortlived because, at the same time, the District Court ordered the purebred Staffordshire Terrier was to be destroyed.

Telford successfully appealed to the High Court, and Suki, who until then had been placed under 鈥渉ouse arrest鈥 and allowed out only under strict conditions such as being muzzled, was released from death row.

Beloved family dog Suki at home with wh膩nau from right: Tiger, Portia and Paige Telford. Photo / Robert Telford
Beloved family dog Suki at home with wh膩nau from right: Tiger, Portia and Paige Telford. Photo / Robert Telford

But, the news was bittersweet for the Telford family as Suki died in November after becoming unwell.

鈥淪uki鈥檚 gone now, and this is her legacy. Even though we lost her she鈥檚 had an impact on the law, that will help others.鈥

When Suki bit Charlie

Suki鈥檚 family were out in April 2021 when the 12-year-old dog, named after the Japanese word for 鈥渂eloved鈥, escaped from their property.

She ran into Auckland鈥檚 Waterview Park nearby and attacked Charlie, who had been out on a lead and was lounging beneath a picnic table with its owner.

Telford says the attack was 鈥渢otally out of character鈥 for the dog that they had owned since she was a puppy and before that day she had never run away or bitten another animal or human.

He had checked the security of the property where they鈥檇 moved only days earlier before letting Suki spend time in the yard, but the dog suffered from separation anxiety and escaped while the family were out.

鈥淲e鈥檇 just moved that week, and I think Suki ran away that day looking for us,鈥 Telford said.

Suki grabbed the small dog by the throat and latched on. As Charlie yelped, its owner and a bystander got Suki to let go, before she attacked again.

The bystander eventually locked Suki in a nearby public toilet and animal management took her.

Charlie needed an overnight stay at a veterinarian clinic followed by further treatment for multiple puncture wounds.

Telford, his partner, Erika Hiyama, and their six children rushed home when they heard what had happened.

They found Suki detained in the dog pound, something Telford says was a 鈥渉orrible moment鈥 knowing she was unlikely to get the healthcare she was dependent on while there.

Telford handed the animal controller all of Suki鈥檚 medication, including eye drops and anxiety pills, but was told that there was no staff resource to handle Suki鈥檚 care.

An animal control officer visited the Telford property to check it was suitable and Suki was released on 鈥渂ail鈥 where she remained throughout the court proceedings, only being allowed out under strict terms including that she was muzzled.

Pathway to court

After the attack, Telford was charged by the Auckland Council with being the owner of a dog that attacked a domestic animal.

He admitted the charge, not thinking twice about pleading guilty 鈥 he said what happened was the truth.

In the District Court, Judge Terence Singh granted him a discharge without conviction because of his personal circumstances, in that the legal penalty for the attack, a $3000 fine, would be 鈥渙ut of all proportion to Telford鈥檚 offending鈥.

Their hearts sank when the judge then made an order for Suki鈥檚 destruction.

鈥淪he鈥檚 been a big part of our family life.,鈥 said Telford. 鈥淢y mum flew up from Taranaki for the court case and just burst into tears.

鈥淓veryone started crying.鈥

Beloved family pet Suki Telford, who died last year, after being removed from death row. Photo / Robert Telford
Beloved family pet Suki Telford, who died last year, after being removed from death row. Photo / Robert Telford

Telford was encouraged to appeal and was successful in the High Court but it cost the family 鈥渢housands鈥 they didn鈥檛 have.

鈥淔inancially we weren鈥檛 in a position to fight it, but we had to do it for Suki and the other dogs.鈥

In the High Court, Justice Sally Fitzgerald held that a conviction was a necessary precedent to making such an order and that the District Court did not have jurisdiction to order destruction.

She declined to exercise the discretionary power available to make an order for destruction because she considered that public safety concerns did not require it.

After the appeal, Suki was taken off death row.

Trying to clarify the law

The Auckland Council then sought to challenge the High Court decision, hoping to 鈥渞esolve the conflict that exists in the High Court case law鈥, since a section of the Act was amended in 2003.

The amendment in 2003 was the result of a major review promoted by public outrage over several serious dog attacks.

Since then, there have been five decisions by courts saying a conviction was a necessary precondition to an order for destruction and four that said it wasn鈥檛.

The Auckland Council, like other territorial authorities around the country, is responsible for enforcing and bringing prosecutions under dog control laws but it could not challenge the High Court decision.

The only avenue available was for the Solicitor-General to refer a question of law to the Court of Appeal.

That hearing was not to determine whether Suki would live or die but to clarify a point of law around the wider issue related to orders for the destruction of dogs.

In a decision released this month, the Court of Appeal ruled that a conviction must be a precondition of a destruction order for prosecutions brought under a particular section of the Dog Control Act.

Suki鈥檚 Legacy

Telford told 九一星空无限 that when he saw the Court of Appeal decision, he broke down.

Suki was put down last November after she became very unwell and a growth was found in her gut. She鈥檇 spent the day in the sun on a blanket with family, who all sat around her before she was taken to the vet.

Telford said it鈥檚 been a harrowing time for not only them but for the owner of the other dog, who he says they did their best to assist, including paying vet bills.

鈥淲e acknowledge there was a victim but I felt we did our best to make that right,鈥 he said.

The Court of Appeal said the case wasn鈥檛 straightforward, but they concluded that the legal arguments that hinged on the 2003 amendment were not sustainable.

They said their answer 鈥渕ay be greeted with dismay by regulators鈥, but if so, the remedy lay with Parliament.

They said the act should be clear and certain, but, the number of occasions it had come before the senior courts for interpretation suggested otherwise.

The Court of Appeal said the arguments advanced by counsel for the Solicitor-General had some force and they were sympathetic to them.

鈥淲e are conscious too of concerns that have been aired publicly in recent times about dog attacks posing a serious problem in several areas of New Zealand, including in urban settings.鈥

Telford believes the broad-brush approach to prosecution is unfair.

His partner, Erika Hiyama, says a lot of dog owners might not know that it doesn鈥檛 take much to trigger a prosecution.

鈥淚 understand when a dog is not well looked after and becomes a weapon because people create that, but when you have a family pet that鈥檚 made one mistake, they get put down and I think that鈥檚 horrific.

鈥淭hey are loved members of a family and they don鈥檛 get a chance 鈥 one strike and they鈥檙e gone,鈥 Telford says.

The Auckland Council鈥檚 head of prosecutions, John Kang said the Court of Appeal decision would be relevant to some dog attack cases, but only if a judge was satisfied that the legal threshold for discharging a defendant without conviction was met, or if the defendant was acquitted.

He said that outside of any discretionary destruction orders made by a judge, in all other cases, the exceptional circumstances test for waiving a destruction order would continue to apply.

Kang said the Auckland Council would continue upholding its responsibilities to enforce laws related to dogs within the Auckland region, according to the Solicitor-General鈥檚 prosecution guidelines.

Tracy Neal is a Nelson-based Open Justice reporter at 九一星空无限. She was previously RNZ鈥檚 regional reporter in Nelson-Marlborough and has covered general news, including court and local government for the Nelson Mail.

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