Why Arizona Dog Bite Cases Are Different (And Better for the Victim)
Most states follow the “one bite rule” — the owner is only liable if the dog had previously demonstrated aggressive behavior. Arizona does not. Under ARS 11-1025, the owner of a dog is liable for the damages caused when the dog bites a person, regardless of the dog’s prior history, regardless of whether the owner had any reason to believe the dog was dangerous, and regardless of whether the owner exercised reasonable care. The strict-liability framework is one of the most plaintiff-favorable dog bite statutes in the country.
The defense team’s job in Arizona dog bite cases is therefore not to fight liability — it is to minimize damages, dispute medical costs, and inflate the victim’s comparative fault percentage. Understanding what the defense will actually argue is the first step in protecting recovery.
The Arizona Strict Liability Framework
ARS 11-1025 — Strict Liability
The owner of a dog which bites a person when the person is in or on a public place or lawfully in or on a private place, including the property of the owner of the dog, is liable for damages suffered by the person bitten, regardless of the former viciousness of the dog or the owner’s knowledge of its viciousness.
ARS 11-1025(B) — One-Year Statute of Limitations
Dog bite claims under the strict liability statute must be filed within ONE year of the bite, not the standard two-year PI window under ARS 12-542. This is a critical and easily-missed deadline. If the strict liability window is missed, the victim can still pursue a common-law negligence claim within two years, but the negligence theory requires proving the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous — exactly the “one bite rule” the strict liability statute eliminates.
Arizona vs. “One Bite Rule” States — Why It Matters
| Legal Framework | What the victim must prove | Defense available |
|---|---|---|
| Arizona ARS 11-1025 (strict liability) | Bite occurred + victim was lawfully present | Provocation by victim; trespass |
| One-bite rule states (e.g., New York, Texas common law) | Owner knew or should have known dog was dangerous (prior bites, aggressive history) | “My dog had never bitten anyone before” |
| Negligence-only states | Owner failed to exercise reasonable care | “I had the dog leashed/fenced/posted warnings” |
| Hybrid states (mix of strict liability and negligence) | Variable by jurisdiction and circumstance | Variable |
The practical effect of Arizona’s framework is that the case usually does not turn on whether the dog had bitten before. It turns on the damages — medical costs, scarring, emotional impact, lost wages — and on whether the victim was lawfully present at the location of the bite.
The Two Defenses Available to Arizona Dog Owners
Provocation
ARS 11-1027 provides a defense if the victim provoked the dog. “Provocation” in Arizona case law generally requires conduct that would cause a reasonable dog to react aggressively — striking the dog, deliberately startling it, attacking it. Petting a dog or approaching it normally is not provocation, even if the dog reacts. Children under a certain age are generally held to be incapable of legally “provoking” a dog as a matter of law.
Trespass
The strict liability statute applies when the victim is “lawfully” in or on a public or private place. A trespasser does not meet this requirement. The defense will try to argue the victim was somewhere they should not have been (cutting through a yard, ignoring a “no entry” sign). Whether the victim was lawfully present is heavily fact-dependent.
Damages You Can Recover in a Phoenix Dog Bite Case
- Medical expenses — emergency room visits, surgeries (often multiple for serious bites), infection treatment, plastic surgery, rabies prophylaxis if applicable, future scar revision procedures
- Lost income — particularly significant for jobs requiring physical contact or visible appearance
- Pain and suffering — the dog bite experience itself plus the longer-term anxiety and phobia development that frequently follows
- Disfigurement and scarring — separately compensable in Arizona; significant for facial bites, hand bites, and visible-area bites
- Psychological injury — PTSD, dog phobia, fear of going outside, sleep disruption documented by mental health professionals
- Permanent impairment — loss of function in a hand, finger, or limb following nerve or tendon damage
- Property damage — torn clothing, broken jewelry, damaged belongings during the attack
Phoenix Dog Bite Cases Worth Acting On Quickly
Bites to children
Children are the most frequent dog bite victims in Phoenix. Facial bites and hand bites carry the highest scarring and psychological-impact potential. Pediatric plastic surgery costs and lifetime scar revision procedures form a substantial portion of damages.
Bites at multi-family housing
Bites at apartment complexes, condominium common areas, and HOA-managed pools often expand the defendant pool to include the property management company under premises liability theories alongside the dog owner.
Bites by service animals or quasi-service animals in commercial settings
Bites at restaurants, retail stores, and hotels can implicate the business under premises liability if the business failed to exclude the animal or failed to warn other patrons.
Bites by dogs owned by landlords or property management
Landlord-owned guard dogs that bite tenants or visitors create both ARS 11-1025 strict liability and standard premises liability claims.
Bites resulting in nerve damage or tendon damage
Hand bites and bites involving the fingers frequently produce permanent loss of grip strength or fine motor function. These cases warrant orthopedic and hand-specialist evaluation early.
Phoenix dog bite cases have a shorter SOL than other PI cases
Under ARS 11-1025(B), the strict-liability dog bite window is ONE year from the date of the bite, not two. After one year, the case can still proceed under common-law negligence (two-year window), but that theory requires proving the owner’s knowledge of the dog’s dangerousness — the very thing strict liability eliminates. The one-year window is easy to miss.
The First Steps After a Phoenix Dog Bite
- Get medical evaluation immediately. Dog bites carry high infection risk. Rabies prophylaxis decisions must happen within specific time windows.
- Identify the dog and the owner. Name, address, dog’s vaccination history, prior bite history if known.
- Report the bite to Maricopa County Animal Care and Control. Creates an official record that the dog bit. The animal control file becomes evidence.
- Photograph the injury as it develops. Initial injury, healing progression, scar formation. Time-stamped phone photos.
- Get witness contact information. Names and phone numbers of anyone who saw the attack.
- Do not give a recorded statement to the owner’s homeowner’s insurance. The first call comes within days; you are not obligated to provide one before consulting counsel.
- Contact a Phoenix dog bite attorney quickly. The one-year strict-liability window starts running immediately.
Why Wood Injury Law for Your Phoenix Dog Bite Case
- No fees unless we recover money for you. Contingency representation.
- Free initial consultation. Phone or in person.
- Direct attorney attention. You work with Josh Wood, not a case manager.
- ARS 11-1025 practice depth. The strict-liability framework is the lever; we know how to use it.
- Phoenix metro focus. Maricopa County animal control records, local pediatric plastic surgeons, local trauma specialists.
Frequently Asked Questions About Phoenix Dog Bite Claims
How long do I have to file a Phoenix dog bite lawsuit in Arizona?
The dog had never bitten anyone before. Does that matter in Arizona?
Whose insurance pays for a Phoenix dog bite injury?
The dog bit me on the owner’s property after I went there to visit. Does that affect the case?
The owner says I provoked the dog. What does “provocation” mean in Arizona?
My child was bitten. Is the case different?
What if the dog was not vaccinated for rabies?
Will the dog be put down?
What does it cost to hire a Phoenix dog bite attorney?
Bitten by a Dog in Phoenix?
You have ONE year under ARS 11-1025 to bring the strict liability claim. The shorter window is easy to miss. Free consultation, no fee unless we recover.