In many dog bite incidents, the dispute isn’t whether you were hurt—it’s whether the dog owner had reasonable control and acted responsibly under the circumstances.
In Rosenberg, common fact patterns we see include:
- Bites at residences where a visitor entered the yard, walkway, or driveway area and the dog wasn’t properly restrained.
- Delivery and service-related incidents where the dog reacted to normal activity at the property.
- Dog access through openings (gate left ajar, unsecured fencing, or a dog allowed to roam) that made an encounter more likely.
- Incidents involving prior behavior—neighbors may have noticed aggressive tendencies before, but no formal report was made.
Those details matter because Texas claims frequently come down to liability evidence: what the owner knew or should have known, whether warnings were present, and how the dog was handled before and during the bite.


