Glendale Dog Bite Lawyer

Glendale Dog Bite Lawyer

If you or your child was bitten by a dog in Glendale, the first few days matter. Dog bite injuries can involve puncture wounds, infection risk, torn tissue, scarring, nerve damage, facial injuries, emotional trauma, and expensive follow-up care. Insurance companies often move quickly to minimize the injury, blame the victim, or suggest the dog had never acted aggressively before. A Glendale dog bite lawyer can preserve the evidence, identify the responsible owner or property holder, document the full injury, and pursue the insurance coverage available under California law.

The Law Offices of Asher Hoffman, APC represents children and adults injured by dogs throughout Glendale and Los Angeles County. We handle dog bite claims on a contingency fee basis, which means you pay no attorney fee unless we recover compensation for you. Call (877) 792-4529 for a free consultation.

Dog Bite Cases We Handle in Glendale

Dog attacks happen in residential neighborhoods, apartment complexes, parks, sidewalks, retail areas, and private homes. Glendale has dense housing, busy pedestrian corridors, and many shared spaces where residents, visitors, delivery workers, and children may encounter dogs. Our firm handles cases involving:

  • Dog bites to children at homes, apartment buildings, parks, or family gatherings
  • Facial bites, lip injuries, ear injuries, eyelid injuries, and visible scarring
  • Hand, arm, leg, and calf bites with puncture wounds or tissue tearing
  • Attacks in apartment hallways, stairwells, elevators, courtyards, and parking areas
  • Leash-related attacks on sidewalks, trails, and neighborhood streets
  • Dog bites involving delivery drivers, rideshare passengers, contractors, and invited guests
  • Knockdown injuries where a dog causes a fall, fracture, head injury, or torn ligament
  • Infection, rabies concern, tetanus treatment, antibiotics, and follow-up wound care
  • Plastic surgery, scar revision, nerve evaluation, and psychological trauma after an attack
  • Glendale Premises Liability Lawyer

Many dog bite claims are paid through homeowners insurance, renters insurance, landlord policies, or other liability coverage. We investigate every possible source of recovery so the injured person is not left dealing with medical bills, missed work, scarring, and trauma alone.

California Dog Bite Law

California has one of the strongest dog bite statutes in the country. Under Civil Code section 3342, a dog owner is generally liable when the dog bites a person who is in a public place or lawfully in a private place, including the owner’s property. The victim usually does not have to prove the dog had bitten someone before. The owner can be responsible even if the dog had no known history of aggression.

That rule is important because insurance companies sometimes try to confuse families by arguing the dog was friendly, the owner was surprised, or there was no prior warning. Prior aggression may matter for certain evidence and damages issues, but California’s strict liability rule means the absence of a prior bite does not automatically defeat the claim.

Some cases also involve negligence, premises liability, landlord responsibility, leash-law issues, negligent handling, or negligent security. For example, an apartment owner or property manager may have notice of a dangerous dog in a common area. A business may allow an unsafe animal into a store or patio area. A dog walker or handler may lose control of a large dog. We analyze every potentially responsible party, not just the dog owner.

Common Glendale Dog Bite Locations

Dog attacks can happen anywhere in Glendale, but certain locations create recurring patterns. We investigate bites and knockdown injuries near Brand Boulevard, Central Avenue, Glendale Avenue, Colorado Street, Broadway, San Fernando Road, Glenoaks Boulevard, Verdugo Road, and residential areas around Adams Hill, Rossmoyne, Verdugo Woodlands, Montrose, and the neighborhoods near Griffith Park and Chevy Chase Canyon.

Apartment and condo cases are especially fact-dependent. A bite in a hallway, elevator, courtyard, laundry room, parking garage, or shared walkway may involve lease rules, prior complaints, security reports, animal-policy violations, surveillance footage, and communications between tenants and management. A bite at a private home may involve homeowners insurance, renters insurance, and statements from witnesses who knew the dog’s behavior before the attack.

Local context matters because evidence disappears. Camera footage from apartment buildings, stores, restaurants, parking structures, and neighboring homes may be overwritten. Witnesses may be tenants, employees, delivery drivers, or nearby residents. Animal control records, prior complaints, veterinary records, and photographs of the dog can also become important.

Injuries Caused by Dog Bites

Dog bite injuries are often more serious than they first appear. Deep puncture wounds may damage tendons, nerves, muscles, and blood vessels. Facial bites may require stitches, scar management, plastic surgery, or later revision procedures. Hand bites can become infected and may affect grip strength, sensation, and work capacity. Knockdown injuries can cause fractures, concussions, back injuries, shoulder tears, knee injuries, and chronic pain.

Children are particularly vulnerable because a dog’s head may be close to the child’s face, neck, or upper body. Even after the wound closes, a child may struggle with fear, nightmares, anxiety around dogs, embarrassment about scars, or repeated medical appointments. Those harms are real and should be documented carefully before any settlement discussion.

Prompt medical care is important. A doctor may clean and irrigate the wound, assess infection risk, prescribe antibiotics, update tetanus protection, evaluate rabies issues, order imaging, refer to a specialist, or recommend plastic surgery follow-up. Keep all discharge paperwork, prescriptions, wound-care instructions, photographs, and referral records.

What To Do After a Dog Bite in Glendale

  • Get medical care immediately, especially for deep punctures, facial injuries, hand wounds, infection signs, or bites to children.
  • Identify the dog owner, handler, property owner, and any insurance information if available.
  • Photograph the wound right away and continue taking photos as bruising, swelling, scabbing, and scarring change.
  • Report the bite to the proper local authority or animal control agency when appropriate.
  • Get witness names, phone numbers, apartment numbers, unit numbers, and employee names.
  • Preserve torn clothing, bloody clothing, damaged glasses, shoes, or personal items.
  • Look for nearby cameras at apartments, businesses, parking structures, homes, buses, or doorbell systems.
  • Do not give a recorded statement to an insurance company before speaking with a lawyer.

Our firm can send preservation letters, request insurance information, gather records, document the injury progression, and protect you from adjusters who try to settle before the full scar, treatment plan, or emotional harm is known.

Compensation Available in a Glendale Dog Bite Claim

A dog bite claim may include economic and non-economic damages. Depending on the facts, recoverable damages can include emergency room bills, urgent care, wound care, antibiotics, injections, imaging, specialist visits, plastic surgery, scar revision, counseling, future medical care, lost wages, reduced earning capacity, out-of-pocket expenses, pain and suffering, emotional distress, disfigurement, anxiety, and loss of enjoyment of life.

We do not evaluate dog bite cases by looking only at the first medical bill. Scarring, infection risk, follow-up procedures, nerve symptoms, and psychological trauma can evolve over time. For children, the long-term impact of visible scarring or fear around animals deserves careful attention before a claim is resolved.

Deadlines for Dog Bite Cases in California

Most California personal injury claims must be filed within two years under Code of Civil Procedure section 335.1. Some cases have shorter deadlines. If a public entity may be involved, such as a bite or animal-related injury at a public school, park, public housing property, or government-controlled area, a government claim may be due within six months. There may also be practical deadlines because video, witness statements, animal records, and apartment records can disappear quickly.

Waiting can weaken the case. The sooner our firm is involved, the sooner we can preserve evidence, identify insurance, and document the injuries before the defense rewrites the story.

Nearby Glendale Accident Resources

Dog bite cases sometimes overlap with unsafe property conditions, apartment management issues, premises liability, or serious injury claims. Related resources include our Glendale personal injury lawyer page, Glendale slip and fall lawyer page, Glendale wrongful death lawyer page, and Los Angeles dog bite lawyer page.

Frequently Asked Questions About Glendale Dog Bite Claims

Is the dog owner responsible if the dog never bit anyone before?

Often, yes. California Civil Code section 3342 imposes strict liability on dog owners for bites when the victim was in a public place or lawfully in a private place. A prior bite is usually not required.

What if the bite happened at a friend’s or relative’s home?

Many claims are handled through homeowners or renters insurance, not by collecting directly from the person. We can evaluate coverage and help protect the relationship while still pursuing the compensation the injured person needs.

Can a landlord or property manager be responsible?

Sometimes. If a landlord, apartment manager, or property owner knew about a dangerous dog and failed to take reasonable steps in an area they controlled, there may be a premises liability claim in addition to the claim against the dog owner.

Should I wait to see how the scar heals before settling?

Usually, yes. Scars can change over months, and some cases require plastic surgery or scar revision opinions. Settling too early may undervalue future treatment, permanent disfigurement, and emotional harm.

How much does it cost to hire your firm?

There is no upfront attorney fee. Our firm handles dog bite cases on a contingency fee basis, which means we are paid only if we recover compensation for you.

Talk to a Glendale Dog Bite Lawyer

If you or your child was bitten by a dog in Glendale, do not wait for the insurance company to decide what the case is worth. The Law Offices of Asher Hoffman, APC can investigate liability, preserve evidence, identify insurance coverage, document the medical and emotional harm, and pursue the recovery you deserve. Call (877) 792-4529 for a free consultation with a Glendale dog bite lawyer.

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