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Pueblo, Colorado neighborhood. CGH Injury Lawyers represents dog bite victims in Pueblo and Pueblo County from our Denver office.
Pueblo, Colorado

Pueblo Dog Bite Lawyers Who Build Your Claim Under Colorado's Strict-Liability Statute

A dog bite in a Pueblo neighborhood, on a riverside path, or at a local park can produce wounds and scarring that follow you for years. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Pueblo dog bite victims from our Denver office, pursues the owner's homeowner or renter insurance, and files in Pueblo County District Court when insurers refuse to be fair. You pay nothing unless we win.

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Serving Pueblo from our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • Pueblo dog bite cases that exceed the county-court jurisdictional limit are filed at the Pueblo County District Court, 320 W. 10th St., Pueblo, CO 81003, in the 10th Judicial District of Colorado. CGH Injury Lawyers handles Pueblo County dog bite cases directly from our Denver office.
  • Colorado's dog bite statute, C.R.S. 13-21-124, creates two separate liability tracks. A bite causing serious bodily injury triggers strict liability for economic damages with no need to prove the owner had prior knowledge. For less serious bites and for pain and suffering, you proceed under a negligence theory that the statute expressly preserves (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • The deadline to file most Colorado dog bite lawsuits is two years from the date of the bite (C.R.S. 13-80-102). When the victim is a child, the clock generally does not begin until the child turns 18, though evidence should be preserved immediately regardless of that rule.

Pueblo is a city of 111,876 people (2020 US Census) in Pueblo County, Colorado. Its residential neighborhoods, parks along the Arkansas River corridor, and community gathering spaces are places where dogs and people share close quarters every day. When a bite in Pueblo produces serious injuries, the owner's homeowner or renter insurance is typically the source of recovery. CGH Injury Lawyers manages the insurance claim, the negotiation, and the Pueblo County lawsuit when an insurer refuses to pay fairly. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

The law that governs your case

Colorado's dog bite statute and what it means for a Pueblo victim

Colorado does not follow the traditional "one bite rule" that would let an owner escape liability simply because the dog had never bitten before. The Colorado dog bite statute, C.R.S. 13-21-124, sets up a specific framework that determines how much you need to prove, and what you can recover, based on the severity of your injury.

The core of the statute states that a person who suffers serious bodily injury or death from being bitten by a dog while lawfully on public or private property may bring a civil action to recover economic damages against the dog owner, regardless of the viciousness or dangerous propensities of the dog or the owner's knowledge of them (C.R.S. 13-21-124(2)).

For a Pueblo victim, two things have to be true to trigger that strict-liability path: the injury must meet Colorado's definition of serious bodily injury, and the victim must have been lawfully on the property where the bite occurred. When both are met, the dog's clean history is irrelevant. A first-time bite by a family pet carries the same strict liability as a bite from a dog with a prior attack on record.

Separately, the statute expressly preserves all other theories of negligence against a dog owner (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)). That preservation is the route to non-economic damages like pain and suffering, emotional distress, and permanent scarring, which are not recoverable on the strict-liability track alone.

Strict liability vs. negligence

Two liability tracks, one injury: how Pueblo County dog bite cases are built

Which track your Pueblo case sits on determines what you must prove, what you can recover, and how hard the insurer will fight. The dividing line is the severity of your injury, not the dog's history.

Track 1: Strict liability (serious bodily injury)

  • Applies when the bite causes serious bodily injury or death (C.R.S. 13-21-124(2)).
  • You do not have to prove the owner was negligent or knew the dog was dangerous.
  • A dog's first bite carries full liability for economic losses when the injury is serious enough.
  • The owner's good intentions and the dog's history are not a defense.
  • Recovery on this track is limited to economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages.

Track 2: Negligence (non-economic damages and less serious bites)

  • Applies to less serious bites and to all non-economic harm like pain and suffering, PTSD, and scarring.
  • You must show the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous.
  • Prior bites, growling incidents, or complaints filed with Pueblo animal services are the kind of evidence that proves it.
  • The statute expressly preserves this path alongside the strict-liability track (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • In serious injury cases, both tracks are typically pursued at the same time.

What qualifies as serious bodily injury in a Pueblo dog bite case?

Colorado's dog bite statute borrows its definition of serious bodily injury from the criminal code at C.R.S. 18-1-901(3)(p). It covers injuries that carry a substantial risk of death, serious permanent disfigurement, or protracted loss or impairment of a body part, as well as certain fractures and burns. Facial scarring that does not fade, nerve damage in an arm or hand, and broken bones from a dog attack are the kinds of injuries that frequently meet this threshold.

Whether your specific injury crosses that line is a legal judgment, not something to assume on your own. We review your medical records from UCHealth Parkview Medical Center, St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center, or any other Pueblo treating facility against the statutory definition before we tell you which track your Pueblo County case sits on.

Where Pueblo bites occur

The Pueblo settings behind the most serious dog bite claims

The location of a bite matters legally: the statute protects people lawfully on public or private property. Understanding where the attack happened helps identify the right defendant and whether you were lawfully present under the statute.

  1. Residential neighborhoods throughout Pueblo

    The majority of dog bites across Colorado happen on private residential property, and Pueblo is no different. Mail carriers, delivery workers, and invited guests are each lawfully present at a private home under C.R.S. 13-21-124(4), which means the strict-liability threshold applies when the injury is serious enough. Neighbors who cross property lines to return a stray ball, children visiting a friend's house, and meter readers are all in the same position. Apartment complexes and rental properties throughout Pueblo introduce a secondary question about whether a landlord who knew about a dangerous dog also bears responsibility. We investigate every entity that may share liability before settling on the claim structure.

  2. Arkansas River Trail and riverside recreation corridors

    The Arkansas River runs through Pueblo and the city's riverside trail system draws walkers, joggers, and cyclists throughout the year. People using public trails and recreation corridors are unambiguously lawful users of public space. That means the strict-liability track applies if a dog attack on the trail produces serious bodily injury, regardless of whether the dog had ever shown aggression before. Off-leash incidents on shared-use paths are a documented source of dog bite claims in Colorado communities with active trail systems. When the attack happens in a posted on-leash zone or where the owner has lost control of the animal, the liability picture strengthens further.

  3. Pueblo's public parks and open spaces

    Pueblo operates public parks and open green spaces throughout the city where dogs and people share the same ground. Children and adults visiting these parks are lawfully present, meaning the strict-liability threshold applies without any need to prove the owner had advance notice the dog was dangerous. Bites at parks are often witnessed by multiple people, which creates valuable evidence on both the attack itself and whether the owner had effective control of the animal at the time. We treat park bite cases as among the stronger liability scenarios a Pueblo dog bite victim can present.

  4. Commercial and retail corridors near US-50 and Northern Avenue

    Dog-friendly businesses, patios, and commercial properties along US-50 (Pueblo Blvd.) and Northern Avenue (SH-45) bring unfamiliar dogs and people into close quarters at retail and restaurant settings. Customers and pedestrians in these spaces are lawful entrants. When an owner brings a dog into a commercial area and the animal bites a customer or passerby, liability attaches under the same statutory framework that applies in parks and neighborhoods. Commercial property owners may also carry liability under Colorado's premises liability statute if the property conditions contributed to the incident.

  5. Community events and Pueblo County fairgrounds

    Pueblo hosts community events, fairs, and outdoor gatherings where dogs are sometimes present in large crowds of unfamiliar people and children. People attending these events are lawfully on the property. When a bite at an event venue involves a property owner or event operator who allowed a dangerous animal on the premises, that operator may carry separate liability beyond the individual dog owner's own homeowner or renter insurance. We identify every potentially responsible party before structuring the claim.

After the bite

What to do after a dog bite in Pueblo

The steps you take in the hours after a Pueblo dog bite shape what you can prove later. These actions protect your health and preserve the evidence an insurer will try to minimize in Pueblo County court.

  1. Get medical care at UCHealth Parkview or St. Mary-Corwin

    UCHealth Parkview Medical Center is Pueblo's Level II Trauma Center, equipped to handle serious injury presentations around the clock without transfer to Denver. St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center also serves the Pueblo community and provides additional care options. Dog bites carry a serious infection risk and nerve damage may not be fully apparent for hours. Getting examined promptly creates a medical record that ties your injuries directly to the attack and documents the severity against the serious bodily injury threshold that drives which legal track applies to your case.

  2. Photograph the bite and the scene

    Take photographs of your injuries, the dog, the location where the bite occurred, and any relevant conditions such as a lack of warning signs, an open gate, or the absence of a leash. At a Pueblo park or trail, note whether posted leash rules were in place and whether other people witnessed the attack. Photographs taken within hours of the bite are among the most valuable evidence in a dog bite case because wounds and the surrounding environment both change quickly.

  3. Identify the dog and the owner

    Get the owner's name, address, and contact information. Ask whether the dog is licensed and current on rabies vaccination. Collect the names and contact details of any witnesses to the attack. Identify the dog visually and note any markings or distinctive features. All of this feeds both the insurance claim and the Pueblo animal services report. If the owner refuses to identify themselves, note any available identifying details about the animal and call Pueblo animal services immediately.

  4. Report the bite to Pueblo animal services

    File a report with Pueblo animal services even if the owner asks you not to. An official report creates a permanent record that can feed the local dangerous-dog process and establish whether the animal had a prior history of aggression or complaints. That history matters if your case proceeds under a negligence theory, where prior incidents help establish that the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous. Do not skip this step because you know the owner. The report protects you legally and protects the next person the dog may bite.

  5. Do not give a recorded statement to the insurer

    The owner's homeowner or renter insurer will likely call within days. Do not agree to a recorded statement before speaking with a lawyer. Adjusters are trained to ask questions that produce answers useful to the insurer, not to you. A single misstated description of how the bite happened can be used to argue provocation or trespass, both of which are statutory defenses that can reduce or eliminate recovery under C.R.S. 13-21-124(5).

  6. Contact a Pueblo dog bite attorney

    Colorado's two-year filing deadline under C.R.S. 13-80-102 means evidence preservation starts now. We review medical records, confirm the owner's insurance coverage, check for prior animal control complaints in Pueblo County, and identify every viable path to full recovery. A free consultation with CGH Injury Lawyers costs you nothing.

Compensation

What you can recover after a dog bite in Pueblo

Colorado law recognizes two broad categories of damages in dog bite cases. Which ones you can reach depends on the track your case sits on, and in many serious cases both tracks are pursued simultaneously to capture every available category of harm.

Economic damages (no cap under Colorado law)

  • Emergency care at UCHealth Parkview Medical Center or St. Mary-Corwin, including wound cleaning, repair, and infection treatment
  • Reconstructive and cosmetic surgery for facial or other serious scarring
  • Ongoing medical treatment including physical and occupational therapy
  • Lost wages from time away from work during recovery
  • Lost future earning capacity when a bite injury limits long-term work ability
  • Out-of-pocket expenses directly caused by the attack

Non-economic damages (pursued through the negligence track)

  • Pain and suffering from the attack and the recovery process
  • Emotional distress and PTSD, which are common long-term consequences of serious dog attacks
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement, which carries no cap under Colorado law
  • Loss of enjoyment of life when the attack restricts daily activities the victim valued before

For claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, Colorado caps non-economic damages such as pain and suffering at $1,500,000 under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages carry no cap at all. Physical impairment and disfigurement damages are also uncapped, which matters enormously in serious dog bite cases involving facial scarring or permanent nerve damage. The strict-liability track under C.R.S. 13-21-124(2) reaches economic damages only. Non-economic and disfigurement damages are accessed through the negligence theory preserved at C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a). In a serious Pueblo dog bite case, we structure the claim to pursue every available category so that no harm you suffered is left on the table.

Fault and coverage

Owner defenses, comparative fault, and the insurance behind the claim

Dog owners and their insurers use specific defenses to limit or eliminate recovery. Understanding each one, and what it actually requires, is how we keep a valid Pueblo dog bite claim from being shut down by an insurer's early narrative.

  1. "You were trespassing"

    The statute protects people lawfully on the property. Colorado defines lawful presence broadly to include anyone performing a legal duty and anyone there by the owner's express or implied invitation (C.R.S. 13-21-124(4)). A Pueblo mail carrier, delivery worker, or invited guest qualifies. The statute bars liability where property is clearly posted with "no trespassing" or "beware of dog" signs, so the facts of how you entered and what signage was present matter significantly. An open gate or an invitation to visit can defeat this defense entirely. We examine the entry facts from the first call.

  2. "You provoked the dog"

    An owner is not liable when the person knowingly provoked the dog (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)(d)). Knowingly is the critical word. Reaching down to pet a friendly-seeming dog, walking past a dog in a Pueblo park, or reacting to a sudden lunge is not provocation under that standard. We use witness accounts, any available video footage from Pueblo parks and commercial areas, and your own account to prevent ordinary conduct from being recast as provocation in the insurer's favor.

  3. "The dog was working"

    The statute carves out exemptions for dogs used by peace officers or military personnel on duty, dogs working as hunting, herding, farm, ranch, or predator-control animals on the owner's property, and bites against veterinary workers, groomers, and handlers acting in their professional duties (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)). These are narrow exemptions that rarely apply to a household pet biting a visitor in a Pueblo neighborhood, a person on the Arkansas River trail, or a child at a Pueblo park.

  4. Comparative fault under Colorado law

    Colorado follows modified comparative fault under C.R.S. 13-21-111. If the insurer argues you share some blame for the bite, you can still recover as long as your fault is less than 50 percent, though your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. We evaluate the specific facts of every Pueblo dog bite to challenge any fault assignment the insurer tries to attach to the victim.

  5. Filing against the insurance, not your neighbor

    Most Pueblo dog bite claims are paid by the owner's homeowner or renter liability coverage, not out of the owner's personal savings. Many people hesitate to file a claim when the owner is a neighbor or acquaintance. In nearly every case, the insurance company is the party that actually pays. Some Colorado policies exclude certain breeds or cap coverage, so we confirm policy terms before assuming coverage. Having counsel is how you make the insurer meet its obligation rather than minimize your claim with an early lowball offer.

Local knowledge

Pueblo courts. Pueblo trauma care. Pueblo dog bite settings.

A Pueblo dog bite claim lives in Pueblo: the neighborhood or park where the attack happened, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where the lawsuit is filed if the insurer refuses to be fair.

Courthouse

Pueblo County District Court (10th Judicial District)

Pueblo dog bite lawsuits above the county-court jurisdictional limit are filed in the 10th Judicial District of Colorado at the Pueblo County District Court, 320 W. 10th St., Pueblo, CO 81003. Unlike many Colorado cities where residents must file at a court some distance away, Pueblo has its own dedicated district court in the city center. That means the jury pool is drawn from Pueblo County residents, the local defense firms your claim faces have 10th Judicial District experience, and the procedural rhythms reflect a community that knows Pueblo's neighborhoods, its parks, and its roads. We file and try Pueblo County dog bite cases directly from our Denver office at no additional charge to Pueblo clients.

Trauma Care

UCHealth Parkview Medical Center (Level II Trauma) and St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center

UCHealth Parkview Medical Center is Pueblo's primary trauma facility, designated a Level II Trauma Center, meaning it is equipped to handle serious injury presentations around the clock without transfer to Denver. When a dog attack in Pueblo produces deep tissue wounds, nerve damage, fractures, or facial injuries requiring surgical repair, Parkview's trauma records, imaging studies, and operative notes become the backbone of the damages claim. St. Mary-Corwin Medical Center also serves the Pueblo community and provides additional medical care options for injured Pueblo residents. We work directly with hospital records and billing systems from the start of every serious Pueblo dog bite case, building a complete medical picture that documents the severity of your injuries and supports the full damages claim through every stage of litigation.

Local Dog Bite Settings

Neighborhoods, River Trails, Parks, and Commercial Corridors

Pueblo's character as a community with strong residential neighborhoods and active outdoor spaces means dogs and people share close quarters throughout the city year-round. The Arkansas River corridor and the riverside trail system draw walkers, joggers, and cyclists alongside dog owners daily. Residential neighborhoods throughout Pueblo, from those near the I-25 corridor to areas adjacent to US-50 (Pueblo Blvd.) and Northern Avenue (SH-45), are dense with dogs at close quarters with visitors, mail carriers, and delivery workers. Commercial areas along US-50 include dog-friendly businesses and patios where unfamiliar animals and people interact. Pueblo's public parks and community gathering spaces add further density to the settings where dog bites occur. Each of these Pueblo settings creates documented lawful-entry conditions under C.R.S. 13-21-124, and we use specific local geography to build the liability picture from the first call.

Your team

The Pueblo dog bite team behind your case

CGH Injury Lawyers is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly Cheney Galluzzi and Howard. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA) and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized by Best Lawyers every year since 2023. Every Pueblo dog bite case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney who files and tries cases in the 10th Judicial District, not by a paralegal.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict 10th Judicial District experience Bilingual EN / ES Free consultation No fee unless we win

One thing we will tell you upfront: CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Pueblo office. We serve Pueblo dog bite clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We file at the Pueblo County District Court at 320 W. 10th St. and try cases in the 10th Judicial District. What you get is the work and the result, not a storefront on Pueblo Boulevard.

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Frequently asked questions

Pueblo dog bite frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a dog bite claim in Pueblo?

The deadline for most Colorado dog bite lawsuits is two years from the date of the bite (C.R.S. 13-80-102). That clock runs from the date of injury, not from when treatment ends. If the victim is a child, the deadline is tolled and the clock generally does not begin until the child turns 18. Even with that extension, animal control reports and wound photographs should be preserved immediately. Do not wait to speak with an attorney about your Pueblo case.

Does the dog have to have bitten someone before for me to have a case in Pueblo?

No. Colorado rejects the pure "one bite rule" for serious injuries. Under C.R.S. 13-21-124(2), a dog's prior history is entirely irrelevant when the bite causes serious bodily injury and you were lawfully on the property where the bite occurred. The owner is liable for your economic damages even if the dog had never shown aggression before. For a less serious bite, the dog's history matters because you would proceed under a negligence theory where prior incidents help establish that the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous.

Can I recover pain and suffering after a dog bite in Pueblo County?

Often yes, but not through the strict-liability track alone. C.R.S. 13-21-124(2) limits the strict-liability claim to economic damages. To recover non-economic damages such as pain and suffering, emotional distress, and loss of enjoyment of life, you pursue a negligence theory, which the statute expressly preserves at C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a). In a serious injury case both paths are commonly pursued together so that every category of harm is captured. Non-economic damages are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Permanent scarring and disfigurement damages are not capped at all.

Where would my Pueblo dog bite lawsuit be filed?

A Pueblo dog bite case above the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed in the 10th Judicial District of Colorado at the Pueblo County District Court, 320 W. 10th St., Pueblo, CO 81003. Pueblo has its own dedicated district court in the city center, meaning the jury pool is drawn from Pueblo County residents. CGH Injury Lawyers files and tries 10th Judicial District dog bite cases directly, with no additional charge for Pueblo clients.

The owner says I provoked the dog. Does that end my claim?

Not automatically. The statute bars liability only when the person knowingly provoked the dog (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)(d)). Petting a dog that appeared friendly, walking past a dog at a Pueblo park, or reacting to a sudden lunge is not provocation under that standard. We use witness statements, any available video footage from Pueblo parks and commercial areas, and your own account to prevent ordinary behavior from being mischaracterized as knowing provocation. The insurer has every incentive to reframe the facts, and our job is to hold them to the actual legal standard.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have an office in Pueblo?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers has one office, at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, (303) 209-9395. We serve Pueblo and Pueblo County dog bite clients from that office, file cases at the Pueblo County District Court, and meet you wherever is most convenient. There is no additional charge for Pueblo clients. We are available in English and Spanish.

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Read next: Colorado dog bite law: the complete statewide guide

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205 · Serving Pueblo and Pueblo County