“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Durant, OK Dog Bite Lawyer

Dog attacks can change a victim’s life in seconds in Durant, OK. When negligent pet ownership leads to an attack, victims suffer serious harm. McKay Law fights for dog bite victims throughout OK. Oklahoma follows a strict liability rule for dog bites—liability arises automatically when a dog bites a person lawfully in a public place or lawfully on private property. This includes situations where the victim was lawfully on the property, the dog was unprovoked, the owner violated leash laws, the dog escaped an inadequate fence, or proper restraint was ignored. These attacks often cause severe physical injuries plus lasting emotional and psychological trauma. Children suffer disproportionately in dog bite cases—frequently sustaining the most severe and disfiguring wounds. Potential defendants include the dog’s owner, property owners who allowed the dog on premises, landlords who knew of a dangerous dog, dog walkers, kennels, and pet sitters. Compensation typically comes from the owner’s home or rental policy, which generally provides liability protection. Our Durant dog bite attorneys move quickly to preserve evidence—prior bite reports, animal control records, neighbor complaints, vet records, medical documentation, photographs of injuries, and witness statements. We fight for every dollar including emergency care, long-term medical needs, psychological treatment, and full compensation for visible and emotional harm. Adjusters frequently argue the victim provoked the dog—we counter with evidence and expert testimony. All animal attack claims is handled on a contingency basis—no fees unless we recover. Contact McKay Law today for a free consultation with a Durant, OK dog bite lawyer who will pursue every dollar your case is worth.

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Dog Bite Lawyer in Durant, OK | McKay Law

Dog Bite Attorney in Durant, OK | McKay Law

What Is a Dog Bite Claim?

Dog bite injuries are often dismissed as minor — but they’re frequently devastating. Beyond the immediate pain and bleeding, dog bites produce lasting physical and emotional injuries. Kids suffer the most dog bites, with bites often occurring to the face and head. The state’s dog bite statute provides strong legal protection for victims (Okla. Stat. tit. 4, § 42.1). Our firm fights for dog bite victims in Durant and in surrounding communities.

Oklahoma Dog Bite Law

Oklahoma law makes dog owners strictly liable for bites (Okla. Stat. tit. 4, § 42.1). Under this statute:

  • Dog owners are liable for bites without proof of prior knowledge of dangerous behavior
  • Oklahoma rejects the one-bite rule
  • Victims don’t need to show the owner knew the dog had biting tendencies
  • The victim must have been lawfully present at the location
  • Provocation can defeat the claim

Strict liability makes recovery easier than in many other states.

Why Dogs Bite

  • Dogs running loose
  • Dogs not leashed in public
  • Negligent containment
  • Owners allowing strangers to approach unfamiliar dogs
  • Dogs guarding territory, food, or puppies
  • Known aggressive dogs
  • Defective or insufficient barriers
  • Failure to follow leash laws
  • Failure to muzzle dangerous dogs
  • Negligent breeding or training
  • Unsupervised children

What Dog Bites Do to Victims

  • Bite wounds
  • Skin tearing
  • Facial injuries
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Permanent nerve damage
  • Soft tissue damage
  • Broken bones
  • Vision damage
  • Ear and lip injuries
  • Bacterial infections
  • Rabies exposure
  • Other infectious disease risks
  • Psychological trauma
  • Death from severe attacks, especially in children and elderly

Dog Bites and Children

Kids face higher dog bite rates and worse outcomes:

  • Children’s faces and heads are at dog mouth level
  • Children may not recognize warning signs of an aggressive dog
  • Children often approach dogs they shouldn’t
  • Children may be unable to escape or defend themselves
  • Face bites need ongoing surgical care
  • Psychological trauma can affect children for life

Potential Defendants

  • The owner of the dog
  • Property owners who allowed dangerous dogs
  • Pet care providers
  • Facilities housing the dog
  • A breeder
  • A landlord

Elements of Your Claim

Under Oklahoma’s strict liability statute, you must prove:

  • Defendant Owned the Dog
  • The defendant’s dog bit you
  • The victim was in a place they had a legal right to be
  • The victim did not provoke the dog
  • You sustained compensable losses

You don’t have to show:

  • That the dog had bitten anyone before
  • Prior bite history
  • That the owner did anything wrong beyond owning the dog

Defenses Dog Owners Try to Use

  • Provocation
  • Claiming the victim was on the property unlawfully
  • Comparative fault
  • Time-barred defense
  • Disputing ownership

Most defenses fail when the facts are properly developed.

Evidence That Wins Dog Bite Cases

  • Photos of bite wounds
  • Photographs of the scene
  • Medical records
  • Animal control records
  • Law enforcement reports
  • Dog’s veterinary records
  • Eyewitness accounts
  • Prior bite history of the dog
  • What the owner said about the dog
  • Insurance information
  • Rabies and vaccination records

Insurance Coverage for Dog Bites

Dog bite cases typically draw on:

  • Homeowner’s insurance
  • Renter’s policy
  • Umbrella insurance
  • Landlord insurance

Some policies exclude specific dog breeds, making some claims more difficult.

Recovery for Dog Bite Victims

  • Healthcare costs
  • Plastic and reconstructive surgery
  • Scar revision surgery
  • Rabies and infection treatment
  • Rehab
  • Lost wages and diminished earning ability
  • Non-economic damages
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Counseling and therapy costs
  • Loss of companionship
  • Wrongful death compensation when the bite was fatal
  • Exemplary damages where the owner knew of the dog’s danger and ignored it

Oklahoma’s Statute of Limitations

You typically have 2 years from the date of the bite to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). For children, the statute may be tolled for children.

Our Process

We get to work immediately to investigate ownership and the dog’s history, pull animal control and police reports, document injuries thoroughly with photos and medical records, work with medical and mental health providers, map available coverage, address scar revision and reconstruction needs in case valuation, and build each file for the courtroom.

Common Questions

Q: Do I have to prove the dog bit before?

A: Never. You don’t need to prove the dog had a history of biting.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Zero upfront. No fee unless we recover.

Q: My child was bitten — what’s the deadline?

A: Two years from the bite — but the deadline may be tolled until age 18 for minors. Act quickly — early evidence and treatment records matter.

Q: The owner says I provoked the dog — does that defeat my claim?

A: It depends on what really happened. This defense often fails when the facts come out.

Q: Will my friend or relative have to pay out of pocket if their dog bit me?

A: No — coverage normally comes from their insurance.

Q: What if the bite happened on the dog owner’s property and I’m a guest?

A: Strong claim. As a lawful guest, you have full protection under the statute.

Q: Should I give the dog owner’s insurance company a recorded statement?

A: Never. Talk to a lawyer first.

Q: What if the dog was loose and I don’t know the owner?

A: We can track down ownership.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: Two years from the date of the bite (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). Children’s deadlines may be tolled until age 18.

Compensation After a Dog Attack in Durant, OK

Dog bites send hundreds of thousands of Americans to the emergency room every year. A significant percentage of bite victims are children. Dog bite injuries can leave lasting physical and psychological scars. An attorney familiar with these claims builds these claims around the actual law that governs them.

Why Dog Bite Cases Aren’t Like Other Injury Cases

Strict Liability vs. Negligence Frameworks

The applicable rules vary significantly. Jurisdictions take different approaches.

Strict Liability States

Some states hold dog owners liable without proving fault. The plaintiff doesn’t need to show owner fault. Liability attaches automatically.

One-Bite Rule States

In one-bite rule jurisdictions use a common-law negligence framework. The “one bite” rule is a misnomer.

Hybrid Approaches

Many states use hybrid frameworks. The applicable rule here drives the entire claim analysis.

Negligence Per Se From Leash Law Violations

Beyond the bite-specific rules, violations of leash laws, dangerous dog ordinances, or similar regulations create separate liability paths.

Negligence Generally

Standard negligence principles also apply where owner negligence contributed to the attack.

Beyond Bites: The Range of Dog Attack Injuries

The category includes injuries beyond bites.

Bite Injuries

Puncture wounds from tooth contact are the signature injuries. Bite injuries often penetrate to muscle, tendon, or bone.

Crush Injuries

Larger dogs can crush limbs, hands, or other body parts may involve fractures.

Lacerations and Tearing Injuries

Dogs often shake their victims, causing tearing injuries. These tearing wounds often require extensive surgical repair.

Knock-Down Injuries

Larger dogs knocking children, elderly persons, or others to the ground can cause significant injuries.

Infections

Bite wounds carry high infection risk. Bite-related infections include bacterial infections from streptococcus or staphylococcus.

Rabies Exposure

Unknown vaccination status necessitate the rabies vaccine series.

Nerve Damage

Nerve damage from bites can produce permanent loss of sensation or function.

Disfiguring Scars

Bite injuries often leave permanent scars. Facial scars in particular carries significant emotional and economic damages.

Psychological Trauma

PTSD from the attack affects many bite victims. Young victims often suffer lasting psychological effects.

Children and Dog Attacks

Pediatric bite injuries are a major category.

Why Children Are Vulnerable

Pediatric injuries often involve the face leading to higher rates of disfiguring injuries.

Children may not recognize warning signs. Children also tend to interact with dogs in ways that can trigger attacks.

Special Damages Considerations

Pediatric injuries often carry higher damages:

  • Decades of potential medical needs
  • Pediatric surgical considerations
  • Pediatric psychological care
  • Psychological effects spanning decades

Who Can Be Held Liable?

The Dog Owner

The owner is typically the primary defendant.

Property Owners

When property owners allowed dangerous dogs on premises can be defendants in some scenarios. Landlords who knew about dangerous dogs can carry premises liability exposure.

Parents and Guardians

Animals owned by minors may transfer liability to parents.

Dog Walkers and Sitters

If a pet care provider had custody may share liability for the attack.

Animal Control and Government Entities

When animal control failed in their duties, public-entity liability can apply — with specific procedural overlays.

Kennels and Boarding Facilities

Boarding facility incidents create business liability.

Insurance Considerations

Personal residential insurance typically responds. Coverage is usually available.

Coverage Issues to Watch For

Breed Exclusions

Breed-based exclusions are common. When breed exclusions apply, alternative coverage may be needed.

Multiple-Incident Exclusions

When there’s a prior incident, alternative recovery may be necessary.

Policy Limit Issues

Policy limits may be inadequate for serious cases, leading to challenges with full compensation.

Common Insurance Defenses

“Provocation”

The dog was provoked is the most common dog bite defense. Provocation typically requires deliberate teasing, abuse, or actions that would reasonably provoke a dog. Standard human activity isn’t legal provocation.

“Trespassing”

“You shouldn’t have been there” may apply in some scenarios. This defense has narrow application, particularly to children.

“Comparative Fault”

Defense argues the victim contributed to the attack. The state’s comparative negligence framework may reduce — but typically won’t eliminate — recovery.

“Assumption of Risk”

Risk-acceptance arguments. This defense applies in narrow circumstances.

Critical Steps After a Dog Attack

Get Medical Attention Immediately

Bite wounds need prompt medical care. Even minor-looking bites need medical evaluation.

Identify the Dog and Owner

Identify the dog owner. Capture the dog’s specific characteristics. Document the dog’s vaccination history.

Report the Attack to Animal Control

File an animal control report. This creates documentation. Animal control may quarantine the dog.

Photograph the Injuries

Photograph wounds over time. Visual evidence becomes important for damages.

Photograph the Attack Scene

Visual documentation of the scene can establish facts about the attack circumstances.

Identify Witnesses

Independent observers may make or break the case.

Don’t Sign Anything From the Owner or Their Insurer

Releases, statements, or settlement offers presented early should not be signed without legal advice.

Damages Available

Recoverable losses include:

  • Initial medical treatment
  • Reconstructive surgery
  • Ongoing surgical care
  • Infection-specific medical costs
  • Vaccination series costs
  • PTSD and trauma treatment
  • Earnings affected by the attack
  • Pain and suffering
  • Long-term cosmetic damages
  • Effects on family relationships
  • Punitive damages where prior knowledge of dangerousness was severe

Attorney Costs

Counsel handling these cases charge no upfront fees. Case reviews cost nothing.

Don’t Wait

Witness recollections fade. Visual evidence of how injuries appeared and healed happens in the moment. Filing deadlines controls. Getting an attorney involved promptly preserves every angle of the claim.

McKay Law Is Your Durant Advocate After A Dog Bite Incident

A dog bite happens in an instant, but the fallout can last a lifetime. What might start a friendly approach or a routine walk through the neighborhood can escalate into puncture wounds, torn muscle, nerve damage, deep lacerations, broken bones from being knocked down, and infections that require aggressive antibiotic treatment. Children are particularly vulnerable — most bites to kids land on the face and head, leaving scars and emotional trauma that haunt them long after the wound heals. At McKay Law, we handle dog bite claims with the seriousness they deserve, working with treating physicians, plastic surgeons, mental health professionals, and animal behavior experts to establish the full extent of the physical and psychological harm. We examine the dog’s history — prior bites, complaints to animal control, breed and behavioral records, and the owner’s awareness of the animal’s aggression — to construct a case that holds the right people accountable.

Most homeowners’ and renters’ insurance policies address dog bite claims, but the carriers behind those policies push back to limit payouts, often faulting the victim for “provoking” the animal or arguing the bite wasn’t as significant as it really was. When you become part of the McKay Law family, we don’t accept those tactics. We fight for full compensation for emergency room treatment, surgical repair, reconstructive and cosmetic procedures, rabies and infection treatment, physical therapy, counseling for emotional trauma — especially in children — prescription costs, lost wages for working parents and adult victims, future medical needs, and the lifelong impact of scarring, disfigurement, and the fear that often persists long after the bite. Call us right away at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to schedule your free consultation and place a firm that takes dog bite injuries seriously behind you.

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