Why this case is different in San Antonio.
Dog attacks leave more than physical injuries — children especially carry psychological wounds long after the scars heal. These cases deserve the same seriousness as any major injury claim. In San Antonio, those dynamics get layered on top of Texas law — and on top of the realities of practicing here: the courts, the highways, and the patterns of how these cases actually unfold.
San Antonio has one of the largest Hispanic populations in the country, and we offer the entire firm experience in English and Spanish.
San Antonio Roads & Hotspots
Most dog bite claims we see in San Antonio arise on I-35, I-10, Loop 410, Loop 1604, and US-281. The highest-incident areas tend to be the I-10/I-35 split downtown (the Mixmaster), Loop 410 North, Wurzbach Parkway, and the I-35 corridor heading north toward New Braunfels.
Bexar County Courts
Dog bite cases in San Antonio are filed in the Bexar County Civil District Courts at 100 Dolorosa St., San Antonio. Larger or cross-state matters go to the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, San Antonio Division.
Common causes of San Antonio dog bites.
- Owners failing to control known-aggressive dogs
- Leash law violations — particularly in parks and neighborhoods
- Inadequate fencing allowing a dog to escape
- Strangers entering yards where dangerous dogs are kept
- Dogs unsupervised around children
- Repeat-offender dogs whose owners ignored prior bite history
The injuries we see in these cases.
San Antonio dog bite cases produce a range of injuries — and the value of any case is driven heavily by the severity and permanence of those injuries:
- Deep puncture wounds and lacerations
- Facial scarring (especially in children, who are bitten in the face at high rates)
- Nerve damage and loss of function
- Infection from bacteria in the dog’s mouth
- Permanent disfigurement requiring reconstructive surgery
- Post-traumatic stress and lasting fear of dogs
The evidence that wins these cases.
Dog bite cases in San Antonio are won by the side that locks down the right evidence first. For dog bites, the critical evidence typically includes animal control reports, the dog’s prior bite history, medical records and photographs documenting the injuries, witness statements, and information about the owner’s homeowner’s or renter’s insurance. The longer you wait to retain counsel, the more of it gets lost, overwritten, or destroyed in routine course.
Surveillance footage from local businesses, ECM data from commercial vehicles, witness memories, and incident reports all degrade or disappear within weeks. We send formal preservation letters as soon as we’re retained — locking down what wins these cases. Talk to us now.
Texas’s ‘One Bite’ Rule — And Why It’s Not the Whole Story
Texas follows a modified version of the ‘one bite’ rule from Marshall v. Ranne — meaning an owner is liable if they knew or should have known the dog was dangerous. But there are several paths to recovery beyond that rule: negligence (failure to control the dog), negligence per se (violating a leash law or other ordinance), and negligent handling by someone temporarily in control.
Most dog bite recoveries come from the owner’s homeowner’s or renter’s insurance, which typically covers dog bite liability. We work to identify all available coverage and pursue every viable theory of liability.
Compensation in a San Antonio dog bite case.
Texas law allows recovery for both economic and non-economic damages in dog bite cases. The categories include:
- Past and future medical expenses — including surgery, rehab, and long-term care
- Lost wages and lost earning capacity — including diminished future income
- Pain and suffering — physical and emotional
- Mental anguish — including documented anxiety, depression, and PTSD
- Property damage and out-of-pocket loss
- Loss of consortium for spouses, and other family-relationship losses
- Punitive damages in cases of gross negligence — drunk driving, repeated FMCSA violations, intentional misconduct
For perspective on what shapes the value of a case in real-world terms, see our FAQ on case worth and our guide on surgery and recovery.
The San Antonio case process.
- Free consultation — we review your case, no obligation, in English or Spanish.
- Investigation and evidence preservation — preservation letters go out within days.
- Medical treatment — we make sure you’re getting the care you need, including through medical liens if insurance is a barrier.
- Demand and negotiation — once your medical picture is clear, we present the case to the defendant’s insurer for full value.
- Litigation if needed — most cases settle, but we prepare every case as if it’s going to trial. The defense knows.
- Resolution and distribution — we handle the closing, including coordination with medical providers, lienholders, and probate (in wrongful death matters).
Why The Longhorn Law Firm.
We’re a focused injury firm — not a high-volume settlement mill. We treat clients like people, prepare cases like they’re going to trial, and we don’t settle short. Founder Shawn Barnett has been on the other side of a serious crash himself, which shapes how we represent injured clients. Our co-counsel Jonathan Perez handles our Texas matters and has particular experience with HEB and other major Texas defendants.
Our San Antonio office, in partnership with The Law Office of Jonathan Perez, sits at 10 Dominion Drive, Building 2, Suite 2204, San Antonio, TX 78257.