Dog Bite / Attack
California Civil Code Section 3342 imposes strict liability on dog owners for bites that occur in public places or lawfully on private property. No prior viciousness history is required. The...
Dog Bite / Attack guide →Dog bite infections — including Pasteurella, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Capnocytophaga, and in rare cases rabies — are a serious medical and legal concern. California Health and Safety Code Section 121690 governs rabies quarantine and r
This page provides general legal information about dog bite infection and rabies claims in California. It does not provide legal advice. Consult a licensed California attorney for guidance specific to your situation.
Dog bite infections — including Pasteurella, Staphylococcus, Streptococcus, Capnocytophaga, and in rare cases rabies — are a serious medical and legal concern. California Health and Safety Code Section 121690 governs rabies quarantine and reporting requirements. A dog bite that requires rabies prophylaxis post-exposure (PEP) significantly increases the medical expense element of damages.
California Civil Code Section 3342 imposes strict liability on dog owners for bites occurring in public places or on lawfully accessed private property. No prior bite history is required — the owner is liable from the first bite. This strict liability framework places the burden on the owner, not the victim, to prevent dog bites.
The strict liability elements under Civil Code Section 3342 are: (1) the defendant owned or harbored the dog; (2) the dog bit the plaintiff; and (3) the plaintiff was in a public place or lawfully on private property. For dog bite infection and rabies situations, the most contested element is typically the third — whether the victim was lawfully present — or the provocation defense raised by the owner.
General negligence claims can supplement or replace strict liability when the specific facts place the claim outside Section 3342's scope (e.g., the victim was a trespasser, or the injury was a knock-down rather than a bite). Local leash ordinance violations establish negligence per se in these negligence-based claims.
"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, including the property of the owner of the dog, regardless of the former viciousness of the dog or the owner's knowledge of such viciousness."
The two recognized defenses to California Civil Code Section 3342 strict liability are provocation and trespass. Provocation requires showing the victim took affirmative threatening action toward the dog that caused the dog to react defensively. Accidental contact, passive presence, and reactions to the dog's own threatening behavior are not legal provocation. Trespass requires showing the victim had no permission, invitation, or legal authority to be on the property.
California's pure comparative fault system interacts with both defenses: partial provocation may reduce but not eliminate recovery, while complete provocation or confirmed trespass can bar recovery under the strict liability statute (though negligence claims may remain).
California dog bite civil claims recover: past and future medical expenses (emergency care through future scar revision procedures); lost wages and earning capacity; and non-economic damages (pain, suffering, emotional distress, disfigurement, loss of enjoyment of life). No cap applies in personal injury cases. For serious disfigurement, particularly facial bites on children, non-economic damages can be substantial. Punitive damages under Civil Code Section 3294 require proof of the owner's conscious disregard for known danger.
Two years from the date of the bite under CCP Section 335.1. For minor victims, tolled until age 18 under CCP Section 352. Government entity bites: six-month administrative claim under Government Code Section 945.4 before any lawsuit.
Yes. Medical complications from a dog bite — including infections, cellulitis, osteomyelitis, sepsis, and rabies prophylaxis treatment — are all recoverable as part of the economic damages in a California dog bite claim under Civil Code Section 3342. The owner's strict liability extends to all compensable consequences of the bite, including secondary medical complications.
The most common bacteria in dog bite wounds are Pasteurella (present in 50% of infected dog bites), Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Eikenella corrodens, and Capnocytophaga canimorsus. Capnocytophaga infection, while rare, can cause life-threatening sepsis, particularly in immunocompromised individuals and in those who are asplenic.
Yes. Rabies PEP, which consists of a series of injections typically costing $3,000–$10,000 in California, is fully recoverable as medical expenses in a dog bite civil claim. Whether PEP is required depends on the vaccination status of the dog and the circumstances of the bite, as evaluated by a public health professional.
If the dog owner and dog cannot be identified and the dog cannot be tested or quarantined for 10 days under California Health and Safety Code Section 121690, a decision about rabies PEP is made on public health grounds. The cost of PEP becomes part of the dog bite damages claim against the owner.
Yes. Psychological injuries including post-traumatic stress disorder, cynophobia (fear of dogs), anxiety, and nightmares are recoverable non-economic damages in California dog bite cases. Expert testimony from a psychologist or psychiatrist may be required to establish the diagnosis, causation, and prognosis for significant psychological injury claims.
No. The need for rabies post-exposure prophylaxis is determined by public health protocols based on the dog's vaccination status and availability for quarantine, not by whether the dog actually had rabies. If PEP was medically indicated by the circumstances, the cost is recoverable regardless of the ultimate rabies result.
California Civil Code Section 3342 imposes strict liability on dog owners for bites that occur in public places or lawfully on private property. No prior viciousness history is required. The...
Dog Bite / Attack guide →An unprovoked dog attack with no prior warning and no threatening behavior from the victim is the clearest case under California Civil Code Section 3342. When the owner cannot raise the prov...
Unprovoked Dog Attack guide →Dog bites to children are the most serious and most common category of dog bite injury in the United States. Children face higher risk of facial bites, disfigurement, and psychological traum...
Child Bitten by Dog guide →