The Province

Owners of electrocut­ed dog suing the city

Suit alleges defendants failed to provide warning signs of potential danger for the public

- KEITH FRASER kfraser@postmedia.com twitter.com/keithrfras­er

The owners of a dog that was electrocut­ed on a sidewalk in North Vancouver are suing the city and FortisBC for damages.

On Feb. 23, 2018, Nanami Ushiroji was out walking her dog, Coby, on the sidewalk on the south side of Carrie Cates Court near the loading bay at Lonsdale Quay.

She says in the lawsuit filed by her and her husband, Khusro Hamidi, that during the walk, Coby, a mixedbreed dog they had owned for seven years, stepped on a grate that was on top of a junction box, yelped, jumped up and then died.

“When the plaintiff Ushiroji bent down to touch Coby with her right arm, she felt an electrical-type pain in that whole arm, and felt Coby’s stiff, and what appeared as a, dead body,” says the notice of civil claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court.

“The plaintiff Ushiroji and a bystander attempted to resuscitat­e Coby, but they were unsuccessf­ul. Coby had already died.”

Rebeka Breder, an animal rights lawyer who is representi­ng the couple, said Tuesday that what makes the case “outrageous” is that it seems the City of North Vancouver had known previously that there were problems with the junction box in the area and didn’t take the matter seriously enough.

The suit says there were two prior incidents of a dog being shocked by electricit­y, one of the incidents happening the day before Coby’s electrocut­ion and another a year earlier. Neither of the two prior incidents were fatal.

“This dog really meant everything to them,” Breder said of her clients. “Coby was a son to them. They don’t have any children and Coby was a son to them. To see your own son, so to speak, be electrocut­ed in front of your own eyes, is traumatizi­ng to say the least.”

Named as defendants in the case are the city, FortisBC, which delivers natural gas and electricit­y to customers in B.C., and Cobra Electric Ltd.

The defendants failed or neglected to take adequate steps to restrict or prevent public access to the sidewalk or junction box and did not post any signs warning the public of the danger, claims the lawsuit.

Work on the area done in 2017 and 2018 was conducted in a “dangerous manner” in that it created a hazard or nuisance that the junction box would be electrifie­d over time with the result that a person, or their companion animal walking on the junction box would be electrocut­ed, it says.

The plaintiffs claim that they have suffered severe emotional injuries, including post-traumatic stress disorder, shock, sleeplessn­ess, anxiety, anguish and mental distress and loss of enjoyment of life.

They are seeking general, special, aggravated, exemplary and punitive damages.

The city could not be reached for comment. FortisBC said in an email that it respects the judicial process and does not comment on matters before the courts.

Cobra Electric president Murray Berry said he had been in touch with the city, and his company was not to blame.

“The only comment I have on that is that we were hired by the city to correct the problem. The problem was (created) by somebody else other than us.”

 ?? — NICK PROCAYLO/PNG ?? The sidewalk on Carrie Cates Court near the loading bay area behind JJ Bean. Nanami Ushiroji was walking here with her dog Coby on the sidewalk in North Vancouver when the dog stepped on a grate on top of a junction box and died after being electrocut­ed.
— NICK PROCAYLO/PNG The sidewalk on Carrie Cates Court near the loading bay area behind JJ Bean. Nanami Ushiroji was walking here with her dog Coby on the sidewalk in North Vancouver when the dog stepped on a grate on top of a junction box and died after being electrocut­ed.

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