“Labor Omnia Vincit” McKay Law​

Newcastle, OK Dog Bite Lawyer

Dog bites can leave lasting scars—both visible and invisible in Newcastle, OK. When a dog owner fails to control their animal, the consequences can be permanent. McKay Law represents 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. Oklahoma law applies in cases involving lawful visitors, leash law breaches, and negligent ownership of any kind. Common harm from dog attacks severe physical injuries plus lasting emotional and psychological trauma. Kids are at heightened risk in dog bite cases—with face and head injuries common because of their small size. Potential defendants include the owner plus anyone else who knew about the dog’s aggression and failed to act. Compensation typically comes from standard homeowner’s or renter’s coverage, which usually includes liability for dog bites. Our Newcastle dog attack injury attorneys build comprehensive cases—prior bite reports, animal control records, neighbor complaints, vet records, medical documentation, photographs of injuries, and witness statements. We pursue full compensation including medical bills, future care, plastic surgery, scar revision, lost wages, pain and suffering, mental anguish, and disfigurement damages. Insurance companies often try to blame the victim—we shut those tactics down. Every dog bite case is handled on a contingency basis—no fees unless we recover. Contact McKay Law today for a no-cost case review with a Newcastle, OK dog attack injury lawyer who will hold the negligent dog owner accountable.

Settlements Won
0 +
Million Dollars Won
0 +
Google 5 Star Reviews
0 +
Dog Bite Lawyer in Newcastle, OK | McKay Law

Dog Bite Attorney in Newcastle, OK | McKay Law

Understanding Dog Bite Claims

Dog bite injuries are often dismissed as minor — but they’re frequently devastating. Beyond the visible wounds, dog bites can cause permanent scarring, nerve damage, disfigurement, infection, and lasting psychological trauma. Children are bitten more often than adults, and their injuries are often the most severe. The state’s dog bite statute gives victims significant legal rights (Okla. Stat. tit. 4, § 42.1). McKay Law represents dog bite victims in Newcastle and across the state.

Oklahoma Dog Bite Law

Oklahoma is a strict liability state for dog bites (Okla. Stat. tit. 4, § 42.1). This rule means:

  • Dog owners are liable for bites without proof of prior knowledge of dangerous behavior
  • Unlike some states, Oklahoma doesn’t require proof of prior bites
  • No proof of owner knowledge is required
  • Liability applies when the victim is in a place they have a lawful right to be
  • Provocation can defeat the claim

Strict liability makes recovery easier than in many other states.

How Dog Bites Happen

  • Dogs running loose
  • Dogs not leashed in public
  • Owners failing to secure aggressive or known dangerous dogs
  • Owners not preventing risky interactions
  • Resource guarding
  • Dogs with prior bite history
  • Poor fencing
  • Failure to follow leash laws
  • No muzzle on aggressive dogs
  • Inadequate training
  • Children left unsupervised with dogs

What Dog Bites Do to Victims

  • Puncture wounds and lacerations
  • Tearing and avulsion injuries
  • Facial injuries
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Nerve injuries
  • Damage to tendons and ligaments
  • Broken bones
  • Vision damage
  • Facial feature damage
  • Serious infections from bite wounds
  • Rabies exposure
  • Tetanus and other infections
  • Lasting psychological injuries, especially fear of dogs
  • Fatal dog attacks

Children and Dog Bites

Kids face higher dog bite rates and worse outcomes:

  • Kids’ heads are bite-height
  • Kids miss aggression warnings
  • Children may approach unfamiliar dogs
  • Children lack the strength or speed to escape
  • Facial injuries often require multiple surgeries
  • Psychological trauma can affect children for life

Who Pays

  • The dog owner
  • The property owner or landlord
  • A dog walker or pet sitter
  • A kennel or boarding facility
  • Dog breeders
  • A landlord

Building the Evidence

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

  • The defendant owned the dog
  • The Dog Bit the Victim
  • Lawful Presence
  • No Provocation
  • Damages

You don’t have to show:

  • That the owner knew the dog was dangerous
  • Prior bite history
  • Owner negligence

Defenses Dog Owners Try to Use

  • Provocation defense
  • Claiming the victim was on the property unlawfully
  • Comparative fault
  • Statute of limitations
  • Dog ownership disputes

These defenses usually fail.

What Strengthens a Dog Bite Case

  • Photographs of injuries
  • Pictures of where the bite happened
  • Documentation of medical care
  • Animal control records
  • Reports filed with police
  • Dog’s veterinary records
  • Testimony from people who saw the attack
  • Dog’s history
  • What the owner said about the dog
  • Insurance covering the bite
  • Vaccination records

Insurance Coverage for Dog Bites

Dog bite cases typically draw on:

  • The dog owner’s homeowner’s insurance
  • Renter’s insurance
  • Umbrella insurance
  • Landlord insurance

Breed restrictions exist with some insurers, which can complicate claims.

Recovery for Dog Bite Victims

  • Medical bills, past and future
  • Costs for cosmetic and reconstructive procedures
  • Scar treatment
  • Costs for post-exposure and infection care
  • Physical therapy and rehabilitation
  • Lost income and loss of earning power
  • Non-economic damages
  • Diminished quality of life
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Mental health treatment
  • Damages for impact on relationships
  • Wrongful death compensation in fatal attacks
  • Exemplary damages where the owner knew of the dog’s danger and ignored it

Time Limits to Be Aware Of

The deadline in Oklahoma is 2 years from the date of the bite to file (Okla. Stat. tit. 12, § 95). For minors, the limitations period may extend until adulthood.

What Working With Us Looks Like

We get to work immediately to determine ownership and aggression history, pull animal control and police reports, capture the full extent of injuries, coordinate with treating providers for surgery, scar revision, and mental health, map available coverage, address scar revision and reconstruction needs in case valuation, and treat each matter as trial-ready.

Common Questions

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

A: Definitely not. Oklahoma is a strict liability state — no prior bite required.

Q: What does it cost to hire McKay Law?

A: Nothing. 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. True provocation is hard to prove — we routinely defeat these defenses.

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

A: Usually no — homeowner’s or renter’s insurance typically covers it.

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

A: Excellent position. Lawful presence triggers full strict liability.

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

A: Don’t. Call us first.

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

A: We work to identify the dog and owner through animal control, neighbors, and other sources.

Q: What is the deadline to file?

A: 2 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 Newcastle, OK

Hundreds of thousands of dog bite injuries require medical attention annually. Kids are disproportionately bitten. These wounds can be devastating physically and emotionally. A local attorney experienced with dog attack cases knows how to navigate the unique liability frameworks dog bite cases involve.

Why Dog Bite Cases Aren’t Like Other Injury Cases

Strict Liability vs. Negligence Frameworks

Dog bite liability operates differently than most injury claims. States generally fall into one of two main categories.

Strict Liability States

Strict liability states hold owners responsible automatically. The plaintiff doesn’t need to show owner fault. Owner responsibility is essentially automatic.

One-Bite Rule States

In one-bite rule jurisdictions require proof that the owner knew or should have known of the dog’s dangerous tendencies. This historic framework allows recovery even on a first bite if the owner had reason to know the dog was dangerous.

Hybrid Approaches

Some states have specific statutes that modify common-law rules. 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 can support negligence per se claims.

Negligence Generally

General negligence claims can be brought 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 dog teeth penetrating skin are the obvious category. Bite injuries often penetrate to muscle, tendon, or bone.

Crush Injuries

Compression injuries from dog jaws can cause significant soft tissue damage.

Lacerations and Tearing Injuries

Many attacks involve shaking after the initial bite, producing avulsion injuries. These tearing wounds can be disfiguring.

Knock-Down Injuries

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

Infections

Dog mouths contain bacteria that frequently cause wound infections. Bite-related infections include bacterial infections from streptococcus or staphylococcus.

Rabies Exposure

Unknown vaccination status may require rabies post-exposure prophylaxis.

Nerve Damage

Nerve damage from bites may need specialty surgery.

Disfiguring Scars

Bite injuries often leave permanent scars. Facial scars in particular can have lifelong psychological effects.

Psychological Trauma

Post-traumatic stress disorder 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

Kids’ faces are closer to dog mouths resulting in face and head injuries.

Children may not recognize warning signs. Children’s behavior is sometimes a contributing factor.

Special Damages Considerations

Pediatric injuries often carry higher damages:

  • Future medical care over a much longer expected lifespan
  • Multiple revision surgeries as the child grows
  • Long-term psychological treatment
  • Long-term emotional effects

Who Can Be Held Liable?

The Dog Owner

The owner is typically the primary defendant.

Property Owners

Where the attack occurred on someone else’s property can share liability. Real property owners with notice can carry premises liability exposure.

Parents and Guardians

Pet ownership by minor children may transfer liability to parents.

Dog Walkers and Sitters

When a third party was handling the dog can be defendants for the attack.

Animal Control and Government Entities

Where animal control was on notice of a dangerous animal and failed to act, claims may exist against government entities — with specific procedural overlays.

Kennels and Boarding Facilities

For attacks involving boarded or kenneled dogs involve commercial liability claims.

Insurance Considerations

HO and renters policies usually cover dog bite claims. There’s typically a coverage source.

Coverage Issues to Watch For

Breed Exclusions

Breed-based exclusions are common. If the relevant breed is excluded, recovery may need to come from other sources.

Multiple-Incident Exclusions

Where the dog has a prior bite history, coverage may be excluded or limited.

Policy Limit Issues

Catastrophic dog bite damages may exceed available coverage, requiring identification of additional defendants.

Common Insurance Defenses

“Provocation”

Provocation defense is the most common dog bite defense. Provocation typically requires conduct beyond simple proximity. Simple movement, walking by, or other normal behavior typically doesn’t constitute provocation.

“Trespassing”

Defense argues the victim was trespassing has limited application. This defense has narrow application, particularly to children.

“Comparative Fault”

Defense argues the victim contributed to the attack. How OK handles shared fault allows recovery to continue.

“Assumption of Risk”

Knowing voluntary exposure. It’s a limited defense.

Critical Steps After a Dog Attack

Get Medical Attention Immediately

Bite injuries should be treated immediately. Even bites that seem superficial need medical evaluation.

Identify the Dog and Owner

Get the owner’s name and contact information. Describe the dog completely. Document the dog’s vaccination history.

Report the Attack to Animal Control

Report the bite to local animal control. The report becomes evidence. This step protects others.

Photograph the Injuries

Photograph wounds over time. Imagery becomes important for damages.

Photograph the Attack Scene

Visual documentation of the scene can preserve scene evidence.

Identify Witnesses

Other people who saw the attack may make or break the case.

Don’t Sign Anything From the Owner or Their Insurer

Documents from the owner or insurer require careful review.

Damages Available

Recoverable losses include:

  • Initial medical treatment
  • Plastic and reconstructive procedures
  • Long-term surgical needs
  • Infection-specific medical costs
  • Rabies prophylaxis if needed
  • Psychological care
  • Earnings affected by the attack
  • Non-economic damages
  • Long-term cosmetic damages
  • Effects on family relationships
  • Exemplary damages where the owner deliberately allowed risk

Attorney Costs

Dog bite attorneys earn fees only on recovery. First meetings carry no charge.

Don’t Wait

Owner and dog information becomes harder to track over time. Documentation of the injury timeline happens in the moment. Filing deadlines controls. Connecting with a Newcastle dog bite attorney quickly preserves every angle of the claim.

McKay Law Is Your Newcastle Advocate After A Dog Bite Incident

A dog bite happens in an instant, but the fallout can last a lifetime. What might begin a friendly approach or a routine walk through the neighborhood can become puncture wounds, torn muscle, nerve damage, deep lacerations, broken bones from being knocked down, and infections that call for aggressive antibiotic treatment. Children are uniquely vulnerable — most bites to kids land on the face and head, leaving scars and emotional trauma that stay with them long after the wound heals. At McKay Law, we take on dog bite claims with the seriousness they deserve, teaming up with treating physicians, plastic surgeons, mental health professionals, and animal behavior experts to verify 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 handle dog bite claims, but the carriers behind those policies work hard to limit payouts, often targeting the victim for “provoking” the animal or arguing the bite wasn’t as severe as it really was. When you join the McKay Law family, we refuse those tactics. We chase 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, time away from work for working parents and adult victims, future medical needs, and the lasting impact of scarring, disfigurement, and the fear that often stays long after the bite. Contact us as soon as you can at (866) 679-9651 or reach out online to set up your free consultation and place a firm that takes dog bite injuries seriously on your side.

Video Testimonials

The McKay Law Difference

See why so many others choose McKay Law, PLLC

With over 300 five-star reviews, McKay Law, your local Personal Injury Law Firm has earned the trust and gratitude of our clients. Every case we handle is unique, and every client’s story matters. Don’t just take our word for it—hear directly from our clients about their experiences and why they confidently recommend us to others.

All Our Practice Areas

Scroll to Top