A dog bite can cause deep puncture wounds, nerve damage, scarring, and lasting fear, and children are bitten most often and most seriously. On a walk through a Fremont neighborhood, at a local park, or in a shared courtyard in Newark, an owner’s failure to control a dog can change a family’s life in seconds. Bites in shared spaces like apartment courtyards and along Fremont and Newark sidewalks often raise questions about leashing and control, and evidence such as animal-control reports, photographs, and witness accounts helps establish what happened and who is responsible.
Mirador Law serves Fremont from our Newark office. Under Civil Code section 3342, California is a strict liability state, so an owner can be responsible even if the dog had never bitten anyone before. Compensation usually comes through the owner’s homeowner or renter insurance. The general deadline is two years under Code of Civil Procedure section 335.1, and when the victim is a child, the deadline is generally paused until the child turns 18.
The following hypothetical examples illustrate how these cases can unfold. They are not based on any specific client and are provided for educational purposes only. A child is bitten by a neighbor’s dog that got loose in a shared Fremont courtyard. Under strict liability, the dog’s history does not decide the claim, and the child’s care is addressed through the owner’s policy.
See also: East Bay Dog Bite Lawyer | Fremont and Newark Personal Injury Lawyer
