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Dog Bite Lawyer in Texas & New Mexico – The Longhorn Law Firm
Dog Bite & Animal Attack Attorneys

A dog attacked you. We make sure they pay.

Dog bites cause more than just physical wounds — they cause permanent scarring, lifelong trauma, and fear. When someone's dog hurts you, the owner is responsible. We hold them accountable.

Licensed in TX & NM
$50M+ Recovered
No Fee Unless We Win
Available 24/7

Dog bites are different from most other injury cases. They're personal. The trauma lingers long after the wounds heal. And the laws around dog owner liability vary significantly between Texas and New Mexico. We handle these cases with the care, attention, and aggression they deserve.

Texas dog bite law

Texas does not have a statewide "strict liability" law for dog bites. Instead, Texas follows what's sometimes called the "one-bite rule" — meaning an owner can be liable if they knew or should have known their dog was dangerous.

Texas victims can recover under one of three theories:

  1. One-bite rule: The owner knew the dog had bitten before, was aggressive, or had dangerous propensities.
  2. Negligence: The owner failed to use reasonable care to control their dog — letting it run loose, not securing the yard, etc.
  3. Negligence per se: The owner violated a leash law, animal control ordinance, or other safety regulation.

Some Texas cities also have additional ordinances — including dangerous-dog laws and breed-specific restrictions — that create additional avenues for liability.

New Mexico dog bite law

New Mexico follows a similar approach to Texas but with some important differences. New Mexico courts apply the principle that an owner is liable for damages caused by their dog when the owner knew or should have known the dog was vicious or had a tendency to attack.

In addition, leash-law violations in New Mexico can establish negligence per se — automatically establishing fault when the dog was off-leash in violation of local ordinance.

Both states allow recovery against the dog owner's homeowner's insurance — which is typically where the money comes from in these cases.

What to do after a dog bite

  1. Get medical care immediately. Dog bites carry serious infection risks (including rabies exposure) and often require stitches or reconstructive surgery.
  2. Report the bite to local animal control. This creates an official record and starts the dangerous dog evaluation.
  3. Photograph everything — your wounds, the dog, the location, any blood on clothing.
  4. Identify the dog's owner. Get their name, address, phone number, and insurance information if possible.
  5. Get witness contact information.
  6. Save your clothing as evidence.
  7. Keep all medical records and bills. Reconstructive surgery, scar revision, psychological treatment.
  8. Don't talk to the owner's insurance until you have a lawyer.

Damages in dog bite cases

Dog bite cases often involve damages that go well beyond initial medical bills:

  • Reconstructive surgery — often multiple procedures over years
  • Scar revision — surgical procedures to reduce permanent scarring
  • Permanent disfigurement compensation
  • Psychological treatment — PTSD and fear of dogs is real and compensable
  • Lost wages
  • Pain and suffering — often substantial in dog bite cases, especially involving facial injuries
  • Future medical care for children whose scarring requires multiple surgeries as they grow
"A dog bite scar is forever. So is the trauma. Compensation should reflect both."

When the victim is a child

Children are bitten by dogs at a disproportionately high rate, and their injuries are often more severe because of their smaller size and proximity to the dog's mouth. Facial bites are especially common — and especially devastating.

Child dog bite cases have unique considerations:

  • Statutes of limitations are typically tolled (paused) until the child turns 18 in both Texas and New Mexico
  • Future surgeries as the child grows must be accounted for in damages
  • Psychological treatment is often necessary and long-term
  • Settlements involving minors often require court approval

If you've been hurt, don't wait. Call us now or fill out our free case review form. We listen, evaluate honestly, and tell you what we think — no obligation, no pressure.

Common Dog Bite Injuries

What we see most often.

01
Puncture Wounds
Deep bite punctures with high infection risk — often requiring antibiotics and careful monitoring.
02
Lacerations & Tearing
Especially severe from larger dogs — often requiring stitches and sometimes reconstructive surgery.
03
Facial Injuries
Devastating facial scarring, particularly common in attacks on children. Often requires multiple surgeries.
04
Nerve Damage
Bites that damage nerves can cause permanent numbness, weakness, or chronic pain.
05
Fractures
Larger dogs can crush bones in arms, legs, and hands.
06
Psychological Trauma
PTSD, anxiety, fear of dogs, sleep disturbance — fully compensable injuries.
How They Try to Beat You

Insurance company tactics we see every day.

Homeowner's and renter's insurance companies handle most dog bite claims — and they're skilled at trying to limit payouts on what they consider 'nuisance' cases. They underestimate the trauma.

01
Claiming the Victim 'Provoked' the Dog
The standard defense: 'The dog only bit because the child was teasing/poking/running/screaming.' We refute this with witness testimony, scene reconstruction, and behavioral evidence about the dog's history.
02
Hiding the Dog's Bite History
Insurers often claim the dog had never bitten before — even when it has. We subpoena vet records, animal control reports, and prior insurance claims to expose the truth.
03
Minimizing Permanent Scarring
Adjusters argue scars 'will fade' or 'are not that visible.' Plastic surgeons confirm dog bite scars are often permanent and require multiple revisions. We get specialists involved.
04
Disputing Emotional Trauma
Dog bite victims — especially children — develop lasting PTSD, fear of dogs, and anxiety. Insurers downplay this. We bring in therapists and psychologists to document the psychological injury.
05
Rushing to Settle Before Scar Maturity
Scars take 12–18 months to fully mature. Insurers push early settlement before you know what you'll be left with. We never settle before scar revision needs are fully evaluated.
06
Targeting Children's Claims
Some adjusters take advantage of parents not knowing their child has a claim that survives until age 20 (TX) or 21 (NM). We protect minors' interests with proper court approval of any settlement.

Already getting calls from the insurance company? Don't say a word.

What You Can Recover

The full scope of your damages.

01
Medical Expenses
Past, current, and future — including hospital bills, surgeries, prescriptions, therapy, and long-term care.
02
Lost Wages
Every paycheck missed because of your injuries — including PTO used, sick leave, and missed shifts.
03
Loss of Earning Capacity
Future income you'll never earn because your injuries permanently limit your ability to work.
04
Property Damage
Repair or replacement of your vehicle, equipment, or personal property damaged in the incident.
05
Pain & Suffering
The physical pain you've endured and will continue to endure as a result of someone else's negligence.
06
Mental Anguish
PTSD, anxiety, depression, sleep disorders — the emotional toll the incident took.
07
Loss of Consortium
The impact your injuries had on your marriage, your relationships, and your role in your family.
08
Punitive Damages
When the at-fault party's conduct was especially reckless — drunk driving, intentional acts, gross negligence.
How Your Case Moves Forward

The settlement process, step by step.

Most clients have never been through a personal injury case before. Here's exactly what to expect — from the day we take your case to the day you collect your check.

01
Free Consultation & Case Acceptance
You call us, tell us what happened, and we'll evaluate honestly whether you have a case worth pursuing. If we take it, you sign a contingency agreement — meaning we only get paid if we win. No upfront costs, ever.
Typical Timeline: 24–48 Hours
02
Investigation & Evidence Gathering
We send notice letters to insurance companies (which stops them from contacting you directly), order police and incident reports, pull surveillance footage, gather witness statements, and start building your case. We also send a spoliation letter demanding all evidence be preserved.
Timeline: 2–6 Weeks
03
Medical Treatment & Documentation
You focus on getting better — we handle the legal side. We coordinate with your doctors to make sure your injuries are properly documented, all treatment is captured in the record, and any long-term implications are evaluated by specialists.
Timeline: Until You Reach Maximum Medical Improvement
04
Demand Package & Negotiation
Once your treatment plateaus, we send the at-fault insurer a comprehensive demand package — medical bills, lost wages, expert reports, pain and suffering documentation, and a settlement demand. Then we negotiate hard. Most cases settle here.
Timeline: 60–120 Days
05
Lawsuit Filing (If Needed)
If the insurance company won't pay fair value, we file suit. This dramatically changes the negotiation dynamic — insurance companies often increase their offers substantially once they realize you're serious. We prepare every case as if it's going to trial.
Timeline: 6–18 Months from Filing
06
Trial or Final Settlement
Most cases settle before trial — but we're always ready to go to court. When your case resolves (settlement or verdict), we pay off your medical liens, deduct case costs and our fee, and you receive your net recovery. Direct deposit available.
Result: Maximum Recovery
Medical Bills & Treatment

What happens to your medical bills.

The number one worry we hear from clients isn't legal — it's "How am I going to pay these medical bills?" The answer depends on your specific situation, but here's how it usually works.

In most cases, you don't have to pay your medical bills out of pocket while your case is pending. Treatment can be billed to your health insurance, MedPay/PIP coverage, or treated on a medical lien — meaning the provider waits to be paid from your settlement.

When your case settles, your medical bills come out of the gross settlement before you receive your portion. We negotiate aggressively with hospitals, providers, and lien holders to reduce what you owe — often saving clients tens of thousands of dollars in medical liens.

We never want a client to skip treatment they need. The full extent of your injuries must be documented to maximize the value of your case. If money is an obstacle to treatment, talk to us — we have a network of providers who treat injury victims on liens.

★ Critical
ER Immediately
Dog bites require prompt medical care — infection risk is high, rabies must be assessed, and proper documentation begins at the ER. Even 'minor' bites can develop serious infections.
★ Plastic Surgery
Scar Revision Often Needed
Many dog bite wounds — especially facial wounds in children — require scar revision surgery, sometimes years later. These future costs must be calculated and included in damages.
★ Mental Health
Document PTSD
Children bitten by dogs often develop lasting fear and PTSD. Counseling/therapy is both treatment and evidence. Document the emotional injury from the start.

Worried about medical bills? Let's get you a plan.

Where We Practice

Courts where we file your case.

TX
Texas Courts
  • Bexar County District Courts (San Antonio)Personal injury cases filed in our home base — including high-value cases moved up from county court.
  • Travis County District Courts (Austin)Active practice in Austin's busy injury docket — known for fair juries and reasonable verdicts.
  • Harris County District Courts (Houston)The largest trial volume in Texas — we file and try cases here regularly.
  • Dallas County District CourtsFull coverage of North Texas injury and wrongful death cases.
  • Tarrant County District Courts (Fort Worth)Active in DFW's injury courts.
  • U.S. District Court — Western District of TexasFederal court matters where diversity jurisdiction or federal questions apply.
NM
New Mexico Courts
  • Second Judicial District (Albuquerque)The state's largest district court — covers Bernalillo County and most of central New Mexico.
  • First Judicial District (Santa Fe)Covers Santa Fe, Rio Arriba, and Los Alamos counties.
  • Third Judicial District (Las Cruces)Southern New Mexico's primary injury venue.
  • Fifth Judicial District (Roswell & Carlsbad)Permian Basin oilfield injury cases and southeastern NM matters.
  • Eleventh Judicial District (Farmington)Northwestern New Mexico — including Navajo Nation adjacent matters.
  • U.S. District Court — District of New MexicoFederal trial work throughout the state.
Frequently Asked

Common questions, straight answers.

Q1
Does the dog have to have bitten someone before for me to have a case?
No. Texas applies a modified 'one bite rule' but also negligence and statutory liability — owners can be liable even on a first bite if they were negligent. New Mexico applies strict liability in many cases regardless of prior bites. Most dog bite cases succeed regardless of bite history.
Q2
Who pays — the dog owner personally or their insurance?
Almost always their homeowner's or renter's insurance. Standard policies typically include $100K–$500K of liability coverage for dog bites. We rarely have to pursue owners personally. If they're uninsured, we explore other recovery avenues.
Q3
What if the dog owner is my friend or family member?
Common situation. The claim isn't against your friend personally — it's against their insurance policy. They literally pay premiums for this purpose. Most clients are surprised to learn how their friends/family encourage them to pursue the claim, because it doesn't affect them out of pocket.
Q4
What if I was bitten on the dog owner's property — am I a 'trespasser'?
If you were invited (friend, family, delivery, postal, service worker), you're an invitee or licensee and protected. Even uninvited visitors may have rights depending on the circumstances. We analyze each case individually.
Q5
How long do dog bite scars take to heal — and when should I settle?
Scars take 12–18 months to fully mature. Settling earlier means accepting less than what your permanent disfigurement is worth. We hold settlements until scar maturity and after plastic surgery consultation for revision needs.
Q6
What if the at-fault party doesn't have insurance — or doesn't have enough?
You may still have recovery options through your own uninsured/underinsured motorist (UM/UIM) coverage, homeowner's policies (for premises cases), or umbrella policies. Most Texas and New Mexico residents have coverage they don't realize they have. We pull every policy involved to find every dollar available.
Q7
Will my case actually go to trial?
Most cases settle before trial — but we prepare every case as if it will go in front of a jury. Insurance companies and defendants know which attorneys actually try cases and which ones won't. That reputation directly affects the settlement offers we get. If trial is the only path to fair value, we're ready.
Q8
How do you calculate what my case is worth?
Case value depends on factors including: total medical bills (past and future), lost wages and earning capacity, severity and permanence of injuries, pain and suffering, available insurance coverage, and liability strength. No honest attorney will quote you a specific number without reviewing your full case — but we'll give you a realistic range after our investigation.
Q9
What if I can't afford medical treatment while my case is pending?
We work with a network of doctors and specialists who treat injury victims on a medical lien — meaning they wait to be paid out of your settlement, not from your pocket. We also help you tap into health insurance, MedPay, PIP, and any other available benefits to make sure you get the care you need.

Don't face the insurance
companies alone.

Free consultation. No obligation. No fee unless we win.

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