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“Texas Tough” McKay Law
Reno Dog Bite Attorney
A dog bite can leave lasting physical and emotional scars — and in many cases, the damage goes beyond what’s visible. At McKay Law, we stand with dog bite victims throughout Reno, fighting for families harmed when someone’s dog causes preventable injuries. Whether the attack happened on a neighbor’s property, a walking trail, or a business, our committed trial lawyers are here to take on the insurance company — so you can focus on healing.
Our firm pursues dog bite and animal attack claims throughout Reno and the surrounding East Texas communities, representing adults, children, and families harmed by owners who failed to control their animals. We pursue claims involving deep tissue damage, disfigurement and reconstructive surgery needs, crush injuries, long-term treatment needs, and the emotional trauma that so often follows an attack — particularly for children. Backed by a deep understanding of the legal doctrines that apply when an animal causes harm in Texas, we build cases designed to identify every responsible party. Texas dog bite law can be more complex than people realize — and homeowners’ and renters’ insurance policies is frequently how these claims are resolved. With a reputation for substantial settlements for bite victims, we work tirelessly to help you heal and move forward. Let our family help yours.
Do You Have A Claim?
Reno Dog Bite Law Firm | McKay Law
A vicious dog encounter can alter your life in a single moment. One moment you’re visiting Reno, TX, and moments later you’re confronting serious injuries, mounting hospital bills, wound care appointments, aggressive insurance adjusters, time away from work, and questions you never imagined having. McKay Law advocates for animal attack survivors and their families across Texas, leading them through every phase of the personal injury claims process with skill and determination. Whether your attack occurred in a neighborhood, on a sidewalk or street, at a friend’s house, while performing your job, during a home invitation, or involved a known aggressive dog, our attorneys meticulously review the evidence—local authority documentation, medical records, bite mark documentation, witness accounts, and the breed and behavior records—to show exactly how the dog owner led to your injuries.
Effective legal advocacy demands more than trial skills—especially when handling the complexities of animal liability cases that can be nuanced. At McKay Law, we understand the full weight a vicious animal encounter imposes on your body, your finances, and your family’s sense of security—especially the psychological impact that often follows such an attack. That’s why we blend strong legal advocacy with heartfelt care, walking with you from your first consultation through the final settlement or verdict. Homeowner’s insurance companies and dog owners are practiced at reducing settlements, claiming the attack was provoked, and deflecting responsibility—we are just as adept at pushing back. Our firm holds negligent dog owners, property owners, landlords, and insurance carriers fully accountable under Texas law, giving injured people in Reno, TX the outcomes and peace of mind they deserve.
Every client we represent deserves the fullest recovery the law allows—more so when dog bite injuries can cause lifelong emotional trauma. That means fighting for compensation for emergency care, ongoing medical treatment, cosmetic repair, post-exposure medical care, mental health treatment, lost income, diminished earning capacity, permanent scarring, pain and suffering, and the enduring impact of your injuries. While we handle the investigation, negotiation, and litigation—including identifying all liable parties—you focus on getting better. If a dangerous dog has left you with lasting injuries in Reno, TX, call McKay Law—we’ll fight for your rights and help you heal and rebuild with confidence.
Understanding Dog Bite Claims in Reno, TX
Dogs occupy a peculiar place in our lives. We bring them into our homes, trust them around our children, and think of them as family — then mostly forget that any dog, under the right circumstances, can bite and injure someone. And when a dog attack happens, the fallout is rarely just a bandaged hand. Puncture injuries can cause nerve damage, scarring, disfigurement, and infection — and the emotional trauma, especially for children, can last far longer than the physical injury. If you or a family member has been bitten or attacked by a dog in Reno, TX, the steps you take now can shape whether a recovery is possible at all.
What Sets Dog Bite Claims Apart
From the outside, a dog bite claim might look like any other personal injury case — someone was careless, someone was hurt, and the injured person deserves compensation. Legally speaking, these cases operate in a much more nuanced world than a typical auto or slip-and-fall claim.
Texas Doesn’t Have a Strict Dog Bite Statute. Unlike many states that impose automatic liability on dog owners, Texas follows a modified version of the “one-bite rule” established in the 1974 case Marshall v. Ranne. In practical terms owners are not automatically liable for a first bite — the injured person generally must show the owner knew, or should have known, the dog had dangerous tendencies. The flip side is that negligence-based claims remain available even for a first-bite scenario.
Homeowner’s Insurance Is Often in Play. Most dog bite claims are resolved through the owner’s homeowner’s or renter’s insurance policy — rather than out of the owner’s pocket. That alters the dynamic of the case in ways that surprise many people bringing a claim for the first time.
Children Are Frequent Victims. More than half of serious dog bite injuries involve children, often on the face, head, or neck. These cases raise particular issues around scarring, future reconstructive surgery, psychological trauma, and the protection of minors’ legal interests.
How Texas Law Approaches Dog Bite Claims
A dog bite claim in Reno, TX generally proceeds along one or both of two theoretical paths:
Path One: The Marshall v. Ranne Standard. To recover under this theory, the injured person must establish that the dog had previously shown dangerous or vicious tendencies, and that the owner knew or should have known about them. Support of prior bites, prior aggressive incidents, warnings from neighbors or delivery workers, signs like “Beware of Dog,” or official complaints to animal control can all help establish this knowledge.
Path Two: Ordinary Negligence. Even without proof of prior aggression, an owner can be held liable for not exercise reasonable care in managing the dog — such as leaving a gate open, walking a large dog without a leash, violating a local leash law, or failing to warn visitors of a known risk. A violation of a city leash ordinance can be especially powerful evidence of negligence per se.
Premises Liability. If the bite occurred on property owned or controlled by someone other than the dog’s owner — a landlord, a business, an apartment complex — premises liability may provide an additional avenue of recovery.
Modified Comparative Fault. Texas applies its “51% bar rule.” If the injured person is found more than 50% at fault — for example, for provoking the dog or entering a clearly marked restricted area — recovery is barred. Below that, damages are reduced by the injured person’s percentage of fault.
Damage Caps. Most compensatory damages in dog bite cases are uncapped. Punitive damages are subject to statutory limits, and they become available in cases where the owner’s conduct rose to the level of gross negligence — such as knowingly keeping a dog with a documented history of attacking humans.
The Compensation Available
Dog bite injuries often run much deeper than the initial wound. A full recovery should include both the immediate and long-term consequences:
Emergency room and hospital costs. Reconstructive and plastic surgery — commonly required multiple times over years, especially for facial injuries and scarring in children. Rabies prophylaxis and infection treatment. Physical therapy and rehabilitation. Mental health treatment for PTSD, anxiety, and fear of dogs (especially for child victims). Lost wages and lost earning capacity. Pain and suffering. Permanent disfigurement and loss of enjoyment of life.
For child victims, courts often call for structured settlements or court-supervised trust arrangements to protect the minor’s recovery until adulthood.
Who May Be Held Responsible
A dog bite case rarely has just one defendant. Depending on the facts, liability may extend to the dog’s owner, a non-owner who had custody or control of the dog at the time (a pet sitter, a dog walker, a houseguest), a landlord who knew about a dangerous dog on the property and failed to act, a business that allowed a dangerous dog on its premises, an apartment complex with inadequate enforcement of pet policies, a kennel or boarding facility, or a veterinary clinic where the bite occurred. Identifying every potentially liable party — and locating the insurance coverage that backs each — is often the difference between a modest settlement and a full recovery.
Common Dog Bite Scenarios
After representing clients in dog bite cases for families across East Texas, a handful of patterns show up repeatedly: attacks on mail carriers, delivery drivers, and utility workers doing their jobs, children bitten at a friend’s or relative’s home, joggers and cyclists attacked by dogs running loose in neighborhoods, visitors bitten by a dog the owner insisted was “friendly,” attacks in apartment complexes and condo communities where leash rules are poorly enforced, off-leash incidents at parks and on trails, dog park conflicts, and bites that occur when a dog is improperly chained or fenced in a front yard accessible to the public.
Steps to Take After a Bite
The steps taken in the first hours after a dog attack can significantly impact both recovery and any eventual claim. To the extent you can:
Seek medical attention immediately — even for bites that look minor, because infection risk is significant. Identify the dog’s owner and get their contact and insurance information. Document the dog’s rabies vaccination status. Report the bite to local animal control and the police, which creates an official record. Photograph the injuries at each stage of healing. Photograph the location of the attack, including any broken fencing, open gates, or posted signs (or absence of them). Collect witness names and contact information. Preserve torn or bloody clothing. Keep every medical bill, receipt, and prescription record.
Filing Deadlines
Texas generally imposes a two-year statute of limitations on dog bite claims, measured from the date of the attack. Miss that deadline, and the right to recover is almost always gone — permanently. When the victim is a minor, the statute is typically tolled until the child turns 18, meaning they generally have until age 20 to file — but waiting that long is nearly always wise, because evidence degrades, witnesses scatter, and insurance policies can lapse.
What the Right Lawyer Brings to Your Case
Dog bite claims look straightforward from the outside — until you try to navigate one. Homeowner’s insurers have teams of adjusters whose entire job is to minimize payouts on dog bite claims, and they know most victims don’t know the law. Some insurers try to deny coverage under animal exclusions. Others contend the injured person provoked the dog or was trespassing. Still others quickly offer lowball settlements before the full medical picture — including future scar revision surgery or psychological treatment — has come into focus.
An experienced Reno dog bite attorney changes that dynamic. The right lawyer will investigate the dog’s bite history and gather evidence of prior aggression, identify every source of insurance coverage, pursue every potentially liable party, bring in medical, plastic surgery, and mental health experts to document the full extent of the harm, calculate the true long-term cost of the injuries — especially for children who may need decades of treatment — and refuse to accept a settlement that doesn’t account for the true value of the case.
If you or someone you are close to was bitten or attacked by a dog in Reno, TX, the time to act is now. Call an experienced dog bite attorney today for a evaluation of your case — before evidence disappears and critical deadlines slip by.
Dog Attack Attorney in Reno: Committed Legal Representation from Lindsey McKay
Just seconds can upend everything. When a dog lunges without provocation, those bitten almost never escape without lasting effects. Medical bills start arriving before the wounds close. A once-confident child now reacts with fear to every passing dog. Wages stop flowing while recovery continues for weeks or even months. And behind all of it is the unspoken, wearying load of psychological trauma that does not show up on any X-ray.
For those across Reno dealing with this sort of sudden life change, the journey ahead often feels unmanageable on their own. They deserve someone fighting for them who truly comprehends what they are going through, sees them as a human being rather than a file number, and will work tirelessly for the recovery they are owed. Lindsey McKay has founded her legal work on this very approach to representation, serving dog bite victims throughout Reno with a mix of authentic compassion and formidable legal capability.
Client-First Legal Representation
Many law firms promote themselves as client-centered. What truly sets Lindsey McKay’s practice apart is how consistently that promise holds up in practice. She approaches each case knowing that behind all the paperwork, medical charts, and insurance documents, there is an actual person working to rebuild their life. The individual across her desk could be a parent whose child was attacked in a neighbor’s yard, a mail carrier or delivery driver bitten while doing their job, or a senior whose quiet routine has been shattered by an attack they never saw coming.
Rather than rushing through intake and pushing a generic strategy onto every file, McKay takes time to listen. She wants to learn the facts, what damages her client has suffered, and what justice requires for that individual family. Only then does she construct a legal roadmap fitted to those specific circumstances.
That client-first orientation also shapes how she communicates. Clients should never feel in the dark about their case or hunt for their own attorney to get information. McKay updates her clients during every stage of the case, explaining developments in plain language and ensuring every question receives a response. That kind of consistent, honest dialogue creates the confidence that sustains a case across months, even years, of legal work.
The Complete Range of Harm from a Dog Bite
Dog attacks happen in many ways. Some involve pets that without warning bite someone in the home. Others involve stray or loose dogs roaming neighborhoods, where a breakdown in containment causes a brutal attack. Incidents in public parks, on walkways, at dog runs, and in apartment complexes each bring their own specific hazards. Their common feature is the brutal damage a capable animal can do in moments. A sizable, muscular dog can bite with enough power to shatter bone, tear muscle, and inflict devastating wounds, and when an attack happens, the consequences are typically severe — especially when the victim is a child.
Puncture wounds, muscle and nerve damage, fractures, facial disfigurement, and lasting scars are among the injuries dog attack victims commonly face. Infection hazards — ranging from rabies to staph and other bacterial problems bring further medical risks. But the initial emergency room charge is almost never the last expense. Healing often extends for months or years, requiring reconstructive operations, skin grafts, scar treatment, physical therapy, and continued treatment. Some people face years of reconstructive surgery to deal with permanent disfigurement. Others experience lasting loss of function in a body part that was mauled.
McKay takes the time to catalog the entire extent of her clients’ damages. That means considering more than just current expenses to account for future medical needs, cosmetic surgery and scar minimization costs, diminished ability to earn, physical and emotional distress, and the broader diminishment of quality of life. Texas law allows recovery for all of these categories of damages, but only when they are adequately chronicled and presented. Her thorough approach is designed to make sure nothing gets overlooked.
The mental consequences deserve the same diligent focus. Lasting fear of dogs, stress in public settings, depression, post-traumatic stress, and strained relationships are all common among dog attack survivors. Children who survive dog attacks often carry psychological effects for years. These are not trivial or secondary wounds. They are genuine injuries that warrant genuine recovery, and McKay makes sure they are adequately valued in each case she takes.
Navigating a Complex Legal Landscape
Dog attack claims in Texas are not straightforward. Unlike certain states that impose strict liability, Texas generally follows a version of the “one bite” doctrine combined with negligence theory. This means winning the case often requires showing the owner had knowledge or should have had knowledge of the animal’s dangerous propensities, or demonstrating that the owner failed to properly handle, restrain, or supervise the dog. Looking into earlier complaints, past bite events, neighborhood accounts, and the owner’s awareness of the dog’s conduct takes meticulous research.
On the other side, homeowners insurers and defense attorneys tend to respond aggressively. They often have investigators and legal teams assembling their case within days, striving to develop an account that shifts blame to the victim for provoking the dog or being on the property without permission. At the same time, those hurt are often still in treatment or at the start of a long healing process. The urgency to resolve quickly, before the true scope of injuries is understood, can be enormous. Lowball offers often arrive dressed up as generosity.
Pushing back against that pressure requires counsel who understands the field. McKay is well-versed in Texas dog bite law, premises liability, and the insurance coverage that typically applies in these cases. She understands how to find the correct insurance policies to pursue — home policies, rental insurance, umbrella coverage, and at times business liability plans. She is skilled at developing a case that proves prior dangerous behavior, insufficient fencing or monitoring, and breaches of municipal leash regulations and animal control rules. She stays current on legal developments that might affect her clients’ cases.
Her investigative approach is methodical. She works with healthcare providers, reconstructive surgeons, canine behaviorists, and employment economists to construct cases that withstand examination. Evidence gets preserved carefully, ranging from animal services records and past grievance histories to scene images, medical files, and bystander testimony. When settlements come through, that preparation is what increases the numbers. When a case has to go to trial, that same preparation is what wins verdicts.
A Community Lawyer with Community Insight
Reno has its own local rules when it comes to animal control. Each city and county enforces its own leash regulations, registration requirements, and dangerous dog policies, and infractions of these laws can support a negligence finding in a bite matter. McKay’s familiarity with the area means she understands how community ordinances, animal control processes, and nearby courts work.
Local knowledge counts. So does her commitment to candid, ethical representation. McKay gives clients the truth about their claims, including the obstacles. She does not guarantee outcomes she cannot ensure. What she offers instead is truthful analysis, diligent preparation, and tireless work for her clients.
Prompt Action Matters
If you or a relative has been attacked by a dog in Reno, the choices made in the initial days following the incident can define the whole matter. Texas imposes strict time limits on personal injury claims, and key proof can be lost rapidly. Wounds heal and become harder to document accurately. The animal could be relocated, given away, or euthanized. Owners revise their accounts or deny prior bite history. Witnesses move away or forget details.
Meanwhile, the insurance company’s team is already at work building their side of the story. The earlier you have your own lawyer investigating, securing evidence, and notifying those at fault, the more solid your case becomes.
Lindsey McKay offers sympathetic, skilled legal advice to help dog bite victims learn their rights and weigh their options. Approaching a case properly means more than processing paperwork and waiting for a settlement proposal. It means battling for the respect, welfare, and economic stability of the injured person. With McKay handling the legal fight, clients can focus on healing while she directs her efforts at making negligent dog owners and their insurance carriers accountable for the harm they caused.
Six Most Frequent Reasons Dog Bite Incidents in Reno
Dog bite injuries are more common than most people realize. Even seemingly friendly, well-behaved dogs can bite under the right circumstances, and the injuries can range from minor punctures to devastating nerve damage, scarring, infections, and lasting fear. Children are particularly affected, often suffering bites to the face and neck that can lead to lifelong consequences. Regardless of whether you’re a longtime resident of Reno or new to the area, knowing what causes most dog bite incidents can help you stay alert, protect your family, and know what to do if you’re ever attacked. Here are the six most common causes dog bite incidents in Reno.
#1 Irresponsible Ownership
The most frequent cause of dog bite injuries in Reno is careless handling. Owners who fail to properly train, socialize, restrain, or supervise their dogs create unnecessary risks for everyone around them. Dogs left to roam freely, kept chained up for long periods without attention, or allowed off-leash in public spaces are substantially more likely to bite. Under Texas law, owners can be held accountable when their dog bites someone, particularly if the dog has bitten before or shown aggressive tendencies.
Protect yourself: Always ask before approaching someone else’s dog, and if you own a dog, invest in proper training, secure fencing, and consistent leash use.
#2 Lack of Proper Restraint
Dogs that are unrestrained in public areas — parks, trails, sidewalks, and unfenced yards — are behind a sizable percentage of bite incidents in Reno. Even well-trained dogs can bolt after a squirrel, react to another dog, or feel threatened by a stranger without warning. Broken fences, open gates, and inadequate kennels also allow dogs to escape property and encounter unsuspecting neighbors, delivery drivers, or passing joggers.
Stay safer: Keep dogs on a leash in public at all times, maintain secure fencing at home, and don’t assume a friendly-looking loose dog is safe to approach.
#3 Rough Handling
Dogs bite when they feel scared, and provocation — typically unintentional — is a major factor in many bite incidents. Teasing, pulling a dog’s tail or ears, disturbing a dog while it’s eating or sleeping, getting between a mother and her puppies, or making sudden movements near an unfamiliar dog can all trigger defensive biting. Children most often fall into this category because they often miss warning signs like a stiff posture, bared teeth, or a low growl.
Stay safe: Teach children to approach dogs calmly, never disturb a dog while it’s eating or resting, and learn to recognize the warning signs that a dog is uncomfortable.
4. Scared or Anxious Dogs
Many bites come from dogs that are anxious rather than aggressive. Dogs that have been abused, poorly socialized as puppies, or placed in overwhelming situations are more likely to bite out of fear. Fireworks, thunderstorms, crowded events, trips to the vet, and unfamiliar visitors can all push an otherwise calm dog past its tolerance point. Rescue dogs with unknown histories are often at higher risk for fear-based reactions.
Stay safe: Give unfamiliar dogs space, avoid forcing interactions, and watch for body language signs of fear — tucked tail, flattened ears, lip licking, or whale eye (showing the whites of the eyes).
5. Guarding Behavior
Dogs are territorial by nature, and many bites occur when a dog feels it needs to defend its home, food, toys, owner, or offspring. Postal workers, delivery drivers, meter readers, utility workers, and visitors are often bitten when they enter a dog’s territory — particularly if the dog hasn’t been properly socialized to strangers. Mother dogs with puppies and dogs guarding food bowls or favorite toys can also react suddenly even if they’re normally gentle.
Stay safer: Respect a dog’s space around its food, toys, and puppies, and always signal yourself before entering someone’s property where a dog may be present.
#6 Inadequate Training and Socialization
Dogs that aren’t properly trained as puppies often grow into adults who react poorly to unfamiliar people, animals, or environments. Without early exposure to different sights, sounds, and interactions, dogs may perceive routine events as threats and respond with biting. Owners who fail to invest in basic obedience training also leave their dogs without the tools to manage stressful moments appropriately.
Protect yourself: If you’re a dog owner, prioritize socialization and training from puppyhood, and if you adopt an adult dog, work with a professional trainer to address any behavioral issues early.
If a Dog Bites You
Dog bite injuries can be deceptively serious, even when the wound looks minor. Puncture wounds can drive bacteria deep into tissue, leading to serious infections, and nerve or tendon damage isn’t always visible on the surface. If you’re bitten: seek medical attention as soon as possible, report the bite to the local health department, get the owner’s contact information and proof of the dog’s vaccination status, take photos of your injuries, and preserve any torn clothing. Texas law allows dog bite victims to pursue compensation from owners in many circumstances — particularly when the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous.


What rights do I have in Reno after a dog bite
Right to seek compensation. If someone else’s negligence caused your injury, you can pursue damages for medical bills (past and future), lost wages and lost earning capacity, property damage, pain and suffering, mental anguish, and in some cases punitive damages if the conduct was grossly negligent.
Statute of limitations. Texas generally gives you two years from the date of the injury to file a lawsuit (Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code §16.003). Miss it and you usually lose the right to sue entirely. Claims against government entities have much shorter notice deadlines — often six months or less.
Modified comparative fault (the “51% bar rule”). Texas reduces your recovery by your percentage of fault, and if you’re found more than 50% at fault, you recover nothing.
Right to refuse to give a recorded statement to the other party’s insurance company. You’re not obligated to, and it’s often wise not to without legal advice.
Right to your own medical care and records, and to choose your own doctor (outside of workers’ comp situations, where rules can differ).
Right to negotiate or reject settlement offers. Initial insurance offers are typically low; you’re not obligated to accept.
If it’s a car accident: Texas is an at-fault state, so the at-fault driver’s insurance is primarily liable. Minimum liability coverage is 30/60/25.
If it’s a work injury: Texas is unusual in that employers can opt out of workers’ comp. If your employer carries it, your remedies are generally limited to the WC system; if they don’t, you may be able to sue them directly.
The Texas Tough Difference
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