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Lafayette, Colorado neighborhood street. CGH Injury Lawyers represents dog bite victims across Lafayette and Boulder County from our Denver office.
Lafayette, Colorado

Lafayette Dog Bite Lawyers Who Make Negligent Owners Pay

A dog attack in a Lafayette neighborhood, park, or on a trail along Coal Creek can leave you with permanent scarring, nerve damage, and medical bills that pile up fast. Colorado law holds the dog owner strictly liable for serious injuries even if the dog had never bitten before. We serve Lafayette and all of Boulder County from our Denver office. You pay nothing unless we win.

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Serving Lafayette 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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A dog attack anywhere in Lafayette, from a residential neighborhood near Coal Creek to a trail off Arapahoe Road, can leave you facing emergency surgery, reconstructive procedures, and lasting psychological trauma. Colorado law does not require you to prove the dog had a history of biting. If the injury was serious enough, the owner is strictly liable.

  • Colorado runs two liability tracks under C.R.S. 13-21-124. If a dog bite causes serious bodily injury or death and you were lawfully on the property, the owner is strictly liable for your economic losses with no need to prove they knew the dog was dangerous (C.R.S. 13-21-124(2)).
  • For less serious bites, and for non-economic damages such as pain and suffering in all cases, you recover under a negligence theory by proving the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • The deadline to file a Lafayette dog bite lawsuit is generally two years from the date of the bite under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If the dog was owned or controlled by a Lafayette city employee or Boulder County employee acting in their official capacity, the CGIA notice deadline of 182 days from discovery of the injury applies instead (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)).

CGH Injury Lawyers represents dog bite victims across Lafayette and all of Boulder County. We serve Lafayette clients from our Denver office, handle all communication with the owner's homeowner or renter insurer, and prepare every case for trial in Boulder County Combined Court when a fair settlement is not on the table. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

The law that governs your case

Colorado's dog bite statute and how it applies in Lafayette

Colorado is not a pure "one bite" state and it is not a pure strict-liability state. The dog bite statute sets up two separate tracks, and which one applies to your Lafayette case depends almost entirely on how seriously you were injured.

The core of the statute: 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)). Two conditions must both be met: your injury must qualify as serious bodily injury under Colorado law, and you must have been lawfully present on the property where the bite occurred.

In a Lafayette context, lawful presence includes being on a public sidewalk, a city park, or a trail, as well as being on private property with the owner's express or implied permission, such as visiting a neighbor's home or accepting a delivery at their door. The dog's clean history is irrelevant under the strict-liability track. A first-time bite still triggers the statute when the injury is serious enough.

Strict liability vs. negligence

The two-track liability system in Colorado dog bite cases

The single most important question in your Lafayette dog bite case is which liability track applies. The answer turns on the severity of your injury and what the owner knew about the dog.

Track 1: Strict liability

  • 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 careless or that the dog had bitten before. The bite itself establishes liability.
  • Recovery under this track covers your economic damages: medical bills, surgery, lost wages, and future care.
  • A dog's clean history does not shield the owner when the injury is serious. First-time attacks count.

Track 2: Negligence standard

  • Applies when the injury does not meet the serious bodily injury threshold, or when pursuing non-economic damages such as pain and suffering.
  • You must prove the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)).
  • A prior bite, known aggressive behavior, or a warning from a neighbor can supply the necessary evidence of the owner's knowledge.
  • In serious cases both tracks are pursued together so that no category of your harm is left on the table.

What qualifies as serious bodily injury in Colorado?

Colorado's dog bite statute borrows the definition of serious bodily injury from the criminal code (C.R.S. 18-1-901(3)(p)). It generally covers injuries carrying a substantial risk of death, serious permanent disfigurement, protracted loss or impairment of a body part, and certain fractures and burns. Facial scarring that does not resolve, nerve damage leaving lasting weakness in a hand or arm, and broken bones from a knockdown attack are examples that frequently meet the threshold. Whether your specific injuries cross that line is a legal judgment we make after reviewing your medical records.

Local context

Lafayette courts. Lafayette trauma care. Lafayette neighborhoods and trails.

Your dog bite case lives in Lafayette: the neighborhood or trail where it happened, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where your case may be filed. Here is the ground we work on.

Courthouse

Boulder County Combined Court

A Lafayette dog bite lawsuit is filed in the 20th Judicial District at Boulder County Combined Court, 1777 6th St., Boulder, CO 80302, phone (303) 441-3750. Lafayette sits entirely within Boulder County, so every civil case arising from a bite here goes to that courthouse. The local jury pool, the judges, and the defense counsel representing homeowner insurers in Boulder County all differ from what you encounter in Denver or Jefferson County. We appear directly in Boulder County Combined Court on behalf of Lafayette clients and do not need additional admission to represent you there.

Trauma Care

Intermountain Health Good Samaritan Hospital

Intermountain Health Good Samaritan Hospital at 200 Exempla Cir, Lafayette, CO 80026 is a 234-bed acute-care hospital and a designated Level II Trauma Center. It sits directly at the US 287 and Dillon Road interchange, making it the closest major trauma facility for dog bite victims injured across the Lafayette area. The hospital handles the wound care, reconstructive consultations, and follow-up that a serious attack requires. Those records document the injury scope and become the backbone of a damages claim. The American College of Surgeons recertified it in February 2025.

Where Attacks Happen

Neighborhoods, parks, and trails across Lafayette

Lafayette's residential neighborhoods, the Coal Creek Trail, the trails and open space around Waneka Lake, and the public sidewalks along Arapahoe Road and Baseline Road are all locations where dog owners bring animals into contact with other people. Dog owners in Lafayette exercise their pets in these shared spaces daily. Where the attack occurred matters legally: the lawful-presence element of C.R.S. 13-21-124 is satisfied by being on a public trail, a city park, or a neighbor's property you were invited onto. We investigate every fact of where and how you were present when the bite occurred.

After the attack

What to do after a dog bite in Lafayette

The steps you take in the hours and days after a Lafayette dog bite shape the strength of your claim. These actions protect your health and preserve the evidence a homeowner insurer will later try to dispute.

  1. Get medical care right away

    Intermountain Health Good Samaritan Hospital at 200 Exempla Cir in Lafayette is a Level II Trauma Center and the primary facility for serious bite injuries in the area. Go even if the wound looks minor. Dog bites carry a significant infection risk, and nerve or tendon damage under the skin can be less visible than the surface wound suggests. A gap in your medical timeline weakens your claim later.

  2. Report the bite to Lafayette animal control

    Report the bite to the City of Lafayette or Boulder County animal control even if the owner asks you not to. An official report creates a record and can initiate the local dangerous-dog process. That record may matter significantly if the dog had prior incidents that the owner never disclosed. Do not let the owner's social pressure stop you from filing a report.

  3. Document everything about the scene and the injury

    Photograph your wounds, the location of the attack, any fencing or lack of fencing, and the dog if it is safe to do so. Get the owner's full name, address, and insurance information. Collect names and contact information for anyone who witnessed the attack. Photograph the injury again in the days that follow as bruising, swelling, and scarring develop. These images are critical when non-economic harm like disfigurement is at issue.

  4. Identify the dog's owner and their insurance

    In most Lafayette dog bite cases the money comes from the owner's homeowner or renter liability policy, not from the owner personally. Ask for the owner's insurance information at the scene. Do not accept their word that there is no coverage without verifying it. We track down the policy, check for breed exclusions or coverage limits, and confirm what is actually available before we begin negotiating your claim.

  5. Do not give a recorded statement to the insurer

    The dog owner's homeowner insurer will contact you quickly. Do not agree to a recorded statement, sign any release, or accept a fast settlement without an attorney reviewing it first. Early offers rarely reflect the full cost of a serious bite injury, particularly where reconstructive surgery or psychological treatment is needed down the road.

  6. Call a Lafayette dog bite attorney

    Colorado's two-year filing deadline (C.R.S. 13-80-102) means the clock on your claim started the day of the bite. Evidence fades: witness memories, animal control records, and the owner's insurance documentation all need to be secured early. A free consultation costs you nothing and lets us tell you exactly which track your case sits on.

Compensation

What can a Lafayette dog bite victim recover?

A dog bite is rarely just a wound. Colorado law recognizes two broad categories of harm, and the liability track your case runs on determines which ones you can reach.

Economic damages

  • Emergency care, wound treatment, and surgery at Good Samaritan Hospital or another facility
  • Reconstructive and cosmetic procedures for scarring or tissue loss
  • Lost wages during treatment and recovery
  • Lost earning capacity when the injury is permanent
  • Future medical costs, including ongoing scar treatment or physical therapy
  • Out-of-pocket expenses tied directly to the attack

Non-economic damages

  • Pain and suffering, which dog attacks produce at a level most people underestimate
  • Emotional distress and PTSD, which are well-documented outcomes of serious dog attacks
  • Permanent scarring and disfigurement
  • Loss of enjoyment of life, including activities the injury prevents

The strict-liability track covers economic damages only

Here is a distinction that matters in Lafayette dog bite cases. The strict-liability claim under C.R.S. 13-21-124(2) reaches your economic damages: medical bills, lost wages, future care costs. To reach non-economic damages such as pain and suffering or compensation for scarring and disfigurement, you must pursue a negligence theory, which the statute expressly preserves (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)). In a case involving serious injuries, both tracks are pursued together so that no category of your harm goes uncompensated.

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. Physical impairment and disfigurement damages are not subject to that cap at all. Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages are never capped regardless of the size of the claim. In bite cases producing permanent facial scarring or lasting nerve damage, the impairment and disfigurement component alone can be substantial.

Fault and defenses

Owner defenses and Colorado's comparative fault rule

Dog owners and their insurers raise specific defenses built into C.R.S. 13-21-124(5). Understanding what those defenses actually require is how we keep your claim alive when an insurer pushes back.

  1. "You were trespassing"

    The statute requires that you were lawfully on the property (C.R.S. 13-21-124(4)). Colorado defines lawful presence broadly. It includes anyone performing a legal duty such as a mail carrier or utility worker, and anyone on the property by the owner's express or implied invitation. In Lafayette neighborhoods where people walk through open gates, visit neighbors, or enter properties that are not visibly posted, the lawful-presence bar is often easy to meet. The statute also bars liability only when the property is clearly posted with "no trespassing" or "beware of dog" signs, which means the absence of such signs works in your favor.

  2. "You provoked the dog"

    An owner is not liable when the victim knowingly provoked the dog (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)(d)). The word knowingly is doing significant legal work. Reaching out to pet a friendly-looking dog, walking past a dog on a trail, or reacting in fright after an animal approaches is not knowing provocation. We use witness statements, your account, and any available video to prevent ordinary, reasonable behavior from being mischaracterized as provocation by an insurer looking for a way out.

  3. Colorado's comparative fault rule

    Colorado applies modified comparative fault under C.R.S. 13-21-111. You can recover damages in a Lafayette dog bite case as long as you were less than 50 percent at fault for the incident. Your award is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you are found 50 percent or more at fault, you cannot recover. In practice, insurers sometimes argue that a victim's own behavior elevated their percentage of fault. A trial-ready attorney changes the calculus of that argument.

  4. "The dog was working"

    The statute exempts dogs used by peace officers or military on duty, and dogs working as hunting, herding, or farm animals on the owner's property (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)). Veterinary workers, groomers, and similar professionals also fall outside the statute when bitten during their duties. These carve-outs are narrow and rarely apply to an ordinary household pet biting a guest or a passerby on a Lafayette trail.

Deadlines that matter

The Colorado law that controls your Lafayette dog bite claim

A few statutes quietly decide whether your Lafayette dog bite case stays alive and what it can ultimately be worth. Know the deadlines before the clock runs out.

Deadlines that can end a claim

  • Most dog bite personal injury claims must be filed within two years of the date of the bite (C.R.S. 13-80-102).
  • When the victim is a minor, Colorado law tolls the deadline. The limitations clock generally does not start until the child turns 18. Evidence does not wait for the clock, so early legal involvement still matters.
  • If a government-owned dog, such as a police K-9, caused the injury, a written notice of claim must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). Miss this deadline and the claim against a public entity is barred.
  • The 2026 CGIA caps for claims against government entities are $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 per occurrence (C.R.S. 24-10-114).

What the law lets you recover

  • Economic damages such as medical bills, surgery costs, lost wages, and future care are never capped.
  • Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5).
  • Physical impairment and disfigurement damages are not capped. In bite cases producing permanent facial scarring, nerve damage, or tissue loss, this distinction can be worth significant money.
  • Colorado's modified comparative fault rule allows recovery as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible. At 50 percent or more, recovery is barred (C.R.S. 13-21-111).

Homeowner insurers in Lafayette know these rules well. The 50 percent fault bar is exactly why they try to argue that a bite victim did something to provoke the animal or was somewhere they should not have been. Understanding the defenses and the damages caps before you negotiate is the difference between leaving a claim on the table and recovering everything the law allows.

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How it works

How we handle your Lafayette dog bite claim

A Lafayette dog bite claim moves through clear stages from a free case review to trial when an insurer will not be fair. Most cases resolve before a courtroom, but we prepare every case as if it will be tried in Boulder County Combined Court.

  1. Free case evaluation

    We review the facts of the bite, your injuries, and where it happened, then tell you honestly which liability track applies and what your claim is worth. This costs you nothing.

  2. Investigation and the animal control record

    We confirm the bite was reported to Lafayette or Boulder County animal control, identify the dog and owner, pull any prior incident records, and document whether the property was posted. A dog with a prior complaint history can shift the entire case strategy.

  3. Build the complete injury record

    We gather Good Samaritan Hospital records, specialist consultations for nerve or tendon injuries, reconstructive surgery estimates, and mental health documentation for PTSD. Non-economic harm is real harm that insurers routinely try to minimize with early, undervalued offers.

  4. Identify and confirm the insurance coverage

    We locate the owner's homeowner or renter policy, check for breed exclusions or coverage limits that affect how the claim is handled, and verify the available limits before beginning negotiations. We also check whether a landlord's policy may provide additional coverage in certain situations.

  5. Demand and negotiate

    We send a documented demand covering all economic and non-economic losses and negotiate from a position of trial readiness. We do not accept the insurer's first offer as a ceiling.

  6. File suit and try the case in Boulder County

    If the insurer refuses a fair resolution, we file in the 20th Judicial District at Boulder County Combined Court, 1777 6th Street, Boulder, CO 80302, and present your case to a Boulder County jury when that is what full recovery requires. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney has tried over 25 cases to verdict.

Your team

The team handling your Lafayette dog bite case

CGH Injury Lawyers is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly Cheney Galluzzi & 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 Lafayette dog bite case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney, not a paralegal. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Lafayette office. We serve Lafayette clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, and travel to you when your case requires it.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict Boulder County Combined Court Bilingual EN / ES Free consultation No fee unless we win

Frequently asked questions

Frequently asked questions about Lafayette dog bite cases

Does Colorado require the dog to have bitten before for me to recover?

No. Colorado rejects the one-bite rule for serious injuries. Under the strict-liability track in C.R.S. 13-21-124(2), the dog's history of prior bites is irrelevant if your injury qualifies as serious bodily injury. A first bite at a Lafayette neighborhood or trail still triggers owner liability for your economic damages. For less serious injuries the dog's history matters, because you proceed under negligence and need to show the owner knew or should have known the dog was dangerous.

How long do I have to file a dog bite lawsuit in Lafayette?

The general deadline for personal injury claims including dog bites is two years from the date of the bite under C.R.S. 13-80-102. If the victim is a minor, the clock is tolled and generally does not start until the child reaches age 18. If a government-owned dog caused the injury, a separate written notice of claim must be filed within 182 days of discovering the injury under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1). Missing the government notice deadline bars the claim entirely. Evidence fades well before any deadline, so contacting an attorney early is always the right move.

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

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 PTSD, you pursue a negligence theory, which the statute expressly preserves (C.R.S. 13-21-124(6)(a)). In serious bite cases both paths are commonly pursued together. For claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, the non-economic cap is $1,500,000 under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5. Physical impairment and disfigurement are not capped at all.

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

Not automatically. The statute bars recovery only where the victim knowingly provoked the dog (C.R.S. 13-21-124(5)(d)). The word knowingly is critical. Petting a dog, walking past it on a Lafayette trail, or reacting in fear when a dog approaches is not knowing provocation. We use witness statements, your account, and any available footage to prevent ordinary, reasonable behavior from being mischaracterized as provocation by an insurer trying to reduce or eliminate your claim.

Who actually pays in a Lafayette dog bite case?

In most cases the payment comes from the dog owner's homeowner or renter liability insurance, not from the owner personally. Most Colorado homeowner and renter policies include this coverage, though some insurers exclude certain breeds or cap the available limits. We confirm the policy terms before any negotiation begins so we know exactly what is available. If the owner carries no insurance, we evaluate whether the owner's personal assets or a landlord's policy can provide recovery instead.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have a Lafayette office?

No. Our single office is at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We serve Lafayette and all of Boulder County as a service area from that location. We file cases directly in Boulder County Combined Court in the 20th Judicial District, travel to Lafayette clients when the case requires it, and handle the full matter without a local storefront. You pay for legal work, not overhead on a branch office.

It's More Than Money.

You were bitten in Lafayette. We handle everything else.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Serving Lafayette and all of Boulder County in English and Spanish.

Prefer to read first? See how Colorado dog bite law works.

CGH Injury Lawyers, serving Lafayette · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205