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Wrongful Death
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Personal Injury
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Overtime Claims
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Dog Attacks
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Car Accidents
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DOG BITE LAWS IN CALIFORNIA
In California
the owner of any dog is liable for the damages suffered by any person who
is bitten by the dog while in a public place, or lawfully in a private
place. The owner of the dog is liable even if the dog bites on the
owner's property. It does not matter if the owner new the dog was vicious
or not. A person is considered to be lawfully upon the private property
when he is on the property in the performance of any duty imposed upon
him by the laws of the State of California or by the laws or postal
regulations of the United States, and also when the person on the private
property on invitation from the property owner, the invitation could be
expressed or implied.
Someone breaking into a
private home and bitten by a dog would not have a cause of action. If
your dog rushes out and bites someone knocking on your door and bites
someone that is there for the purpose of converting you to their religion
or to sell you a subscription to a nonexistent magazine, then they would
have a cause of action, because of implied invitation. If you happen to
have a fence that is locked or just closed and with a sign advising that
no one is invited implied or expressly then you are unlikely to be
liable, but exceptions to this rule also apply.
Under California law if you are bitten where
you have a right to be, you automatically win on liability, and it is
only a matter of proving damages. If you are bitten after ignoring a sign
that says no trespassing or no entrance, or perhaps “no invitation
is made to enter my property expressly or impliedly” then a
different standard applies. The standard is one of negligence, was the
owner's conduct reasonable. Training an attack dog to attack any human
being upon entering the property is probably not reasonable. There is
also the mail man exception, the mail man has to drop off the owner's
mail and if bitten would have a lawsuit against the dog owner, regardless
of whether there is a sign or not.
The best way to avoid
liability if you own a dog might be to put up a sign that says, one that
says there is no implied invitation to this property, keep out, all
others in consideration for entering this property you assume the risk of
getting bitten by a dog. It would not eliminate the risk of liability for
a dog biting a human being, especially if it is at night and there is no
light on the sign, but otherwise if the sign can be read, it would help
minimize or eliminate the liability.
If you happen to be
the victim, it is unlikely that you had fair warning and that you were
bitten while breaking into someone's home. A dog bite or dog attack is a
special kind of personal injury claim. It is a type of claim that is not
evaluated by a computer. The types of damages that are pursued are often
for pain, suffering, emotional distress, disfigurement, loss or earnings,
reasonable and necessary medical expenses, and future medical treatment.
If the dog attack while the victim was doing something illegal, it is
unlikely that a lawsuit can be maintained.
A person cannot bring a
lawsuit when a bite occurs if the dog is a military dog or police dog and
the person bitten was annoying, harassing, or provoking the dog and the
dog was defending itself. A person cannot bring a lawsuit against a
military dog or police dog if the dog was assisting an employee of the
agency in apprehension or holding of a suspect where the employee has
reasonable suspicion of the suspect's involvement in criminal activity.
There is no real clear line as to what reasonable suspicion means. No
lawsuits are permitted when the military or dog is assisting an employee
of the agency in investigation of a crime or possible crime, in the
execution of a warrant, and in the defense of a peace officer or another
person.
If the person bitten by
a military or police dog is not a party to, nor a participant in, nor
suspected to be a party to or a participant in, the act or acts that
prompted the use of the dog in the military or police work, is allowed to
bring a lawsuit. It is not unusual for passerbys or bystanders to get
bitten by a poorly trained dog.
For the police and
military dog exception to apply the agency must also have adopted a
written policy on the necessary and appropriate use of a dog for the type
of work the dog is to do.
If a dog bites a human
being, the owner of the dog is required to take steps to remove the
danger of a bite from the same dog on another person.
If the dog has bitten
twice, any person, the DA, or city attorney can bring an action in court
to determine if the confinement and treatment of the dog is sufficient to
keep it out of danger to other persons. The court has the power, after
hearing, to order that remove the dog from the area where it is confined,
or to destroy it if necessary.
A different standard
applies when the dog has been trained to fight. If the dog has been
trained to fight only one bite is required for any person, the district
attorney, or city attorney to bring an action in court to determine if
the dog's confinement is sufficient to keep the dog from biting another
human being. The court after hearing, has the power to prevent the
reoccurrence of a bite, by removal of the dog from the area or
destruction if necessary.
In California there are no free bites. If
the dog bites a human being, there is liability for personal injury,
unless there some sort of exception such as a police dog or military dog
exception.
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