Types of Defective Designs on the Road

While driving, people expect for the conditions of the road to be safe and well maintained. Unfortunately, all too often this is not the case and defective road designs lead to tragic accidents. State and local authorities are responsible for the conditions of the road and if they are negligent in doing so, they can be sued for the poor maintenance. This responsibility is meant to encourage an increased effort to keep the roads and highways safe for drivers. If you have suffered from an injury due to an accident caused by defective road designs or poor maintenance, retain the legal guidance of a Phoenix personal injury attorney right away. Some of the types of defective designs that can cause an injury include:

  • Faulty traffic signals
  • Lack of stoplights
  • Faulty guard rails
  • Dangerous speed limits
  • Inadequate shoulder areas
  • Unsafe percentage of grade on hills
  • Dangerous barricades
  • Lack of protection for pedestrians
  • Dangerous design of road curves
  • Defective curbs
  • Invisible road signs
  • Unmarked dips in the road
  • Inadequate water drainage

If you are involved in an accident due to any of the above road defects you may be able to receive compensation for your injuries. A skilled lawyer from Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo may be able to help you recover damages for your vehicle damage, bodily harm, emotional and psychological trauma and all other financial hardships from the hospital bills and lost income.
Contact a Phoenix personal injury lawyer from our firm if you have suffered due to the negligence of another party. Our firm has over 150 years of experience helping clients fight for compensation
in their personal injury cases! Do not hesitate to call today to schedule your free case evaluation and see how we may be able to help you in your case!

 

Four Seriously Injured in Phoenix Truck Accident

In Avondale, West Phoenix, four people were injured after a serious rollover accident occurred on 1-10. The accident was so serious that the freeway had to be closed going both directions. It occurred last Sunday morning at 1 a.m. and the exact location of the accident was going east near the Sarival Avenue exit. According to the Highway Patrol officers who were investigating, one 18-wheeler truck driver lost control of the vehicle. As a result, the truck collided with two other trucks.

 

One of the trucks involved in the collision rolled over the middle freeway divider and was left lying on its side in oncoming traffic. So far, four people were seriously injured and two had to be extracted from their vehicles. It remains to be seen what the exact cause of the accident was and an investigation is underway. If some type of impairment was part of the reason the accident occurred, then the driver may be held liable for their part in the accident.

 

When there is a collision involving large vehicles likes 18-wheelers, the results of the accident could be much more serious. Not only is there size and sheer weight involved, but the drivers themselves can pose a certain risk. Truck drivers are required to spend long hours on the road every day and, in some cases, federal regulations are not upheld or enforced.

 

If you were injured in a truck accident, and you believe that negligence was a factor in the case, you could be entitled to compensation. For a free case evaluation regarding your accident,
please do not hesitate to contact our personal injury lawyers at Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo. We are ranked as the number one personal injury specialty law firm in Phoenix and will do everything possible to protect your rights and best interests. Call today!

 

Three Killed in Vegas Strip Drive-By

Half of the Las Vegas Strip was closed off when a shootout resulted in a massive car fire claiming the lives of three people, including aspiring rapper known as Kenny Clutch. Police believe the rapper was the target of the shooting, which affected a number of innocent victims in the mix. The culprits have yet to be tracked down but investigations are currently underway by local authorities.

Kenny Clutch was driving north on the Strip in his Maserati, which had been featured in his latest music, video, when a black Range Rover Sport SUV pulled alongside him and began shooting towards him. The drive-by shooting led Clutch to lose control of his car and he ended up colliding with a taxi, which caught fire and killed the taxi driver and passenger immediately. Four others were injured in the massive pile up in the middle of the intersection, including a passenger of the Maserati. The injured victims and other witnesses are help police to understand the incident, whose first priority is to find the group of men that sped off in Range Rover after the shooting.

Friends and family of Clutch are shocked at the violent death of their love one, who had no criminal record and was dearly loved by those around him. The family of the deceased taxi driver has also expressed their sorrow. The driver and his passenger were truly innocent victims of the accident, who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. The sheriff in charge of the investigation has sworn to bring the men responsible for this to act to justice.

The shooting and subsequent accident took place just two blocks from the location where rapper Tupac Shakur was shot and killed in 1996. This incident is the fifth violent incident reported on the popular Las Vegas strip since December.

As long as there is violence in the world, there will be innocent bystanders made victim involuntarily. At Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo, we are committed being a voice on legal platform for innocent injury victims and their families. While money will not erase the pain that comes with your injury or even losing a loved one to a tragic accident, but it can help you in recovering from the damages that come with such a tragic incident. Our hearts go out to the victims of this terrible event and we want to offer our services to anyone who has been made victim to injuries because of someone else’s negligence or wrong doing. If you or a loved one is an innocent injury victim,
contact a personal injury lawyer in Phoenix who can help you get the compensation you deserve.

 

Another Defective Drug – NECC’s Contaminated Steroid

On October 6, 2012, New England Compounding Pharmacy, Inc. d/b/a New England Compounding Center (NECC) recalled all of its products that were compounded at and distributed from its Framingham, Massachusetts facility. The recall can be found at http://www.neccrx.com/

The recall was prompted by an outbreak of fungal (aspergillus) meningitis throughout the United States believed to have been caused when NECC’s contaminated steroid was injected into patients undergoing spinal epidural injections. These injections are a common treatment for back pain. It is estimated that as many as 13,000 people may have been exposed to the contaminated NECC steroid. Eight deaths have been reported as of October 9, 2012.

 

Early symptoms of fungal meningitis include headache, fever, dizziness, nausea and slurred speech. If not treated appropriately, fungal meningitis  can cause permanent neurological damage and death. If you are concerned that you have been exposed to NECC’s contaminated steroid product, contact your doctor immediately.

If you or your loved one has been diagnosed with fungal (aspergillus) meningitis due to expose to NECC’s contaminated steroid, please feel free to contact Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo for a free consultation.

 

Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo, located in Phoenix, Arizona, is an accident and personal injury law firm that works on behalf of clients who have become victimized by the negligence of others, particularly through catastrophic injuries and wrongful deaths. The firm operates on more than 150 years of combined experience between its trial attorneys in the areas of personal injury and medical negligence litigation. Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo has received many recognitions for its high-quality service. The firm was ranked as the #1 Plaintiff’s Personal Injury Specialty Law Firm throughout Arizona by the Arizona Business Journal. It also ranked as one of the best law firms in both Arizona and the United States for plaintiff’s personal injury litigation, medical malpractice law and product liability litigation by the U.S. News & World Report and Best Lawyers®. Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo offers free case analysis to those interested in obtaining compensation for their losses. The firm also operates on a contingency fee basis for serious accident and catastrophic personal injury cases, which means a fee is only paid if a financial statement or judgment is obtained.

Why Should You Hire Our Firm in Your Personal Injury Case?

Have you even been involved in any sort of accident in which the fault was likely due to the negligence or irresponsibility of another person? For example, were you in a car accident that caused you different levels of injuries and totaled your car? Car accidents are one of the many examples that fall into personal injury cases; they also include medical malpractice, on site injuries, dog attacks, wrongful death, and many more. Know that you are not alone in this unfortunate situation, at Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo we are a team of personal injury attorneys that are committed to coming alongside our clients in the event of an accident.

As a Phoenix personal injury law firm, we have a group of six qualified trial attorneys that are ready and willing to do what it takes to fight for the rights that our clients deserve. Our team includes graduates from various prestigious schools such as the University of Notre Dame Law School, Arizona State Law University, Golden Gate University School of Law in San Francisco, and more! With years of experience we are confident in our ability to fight for your legal needs. Our confidence in our work allows our firm to promise that no fees will be charged to our clients unless we are able to win your case. A
contingency fee enables our clients to pursue justice for themselves or their loved ones without the stress of coming up with legal fees if the case is not successful.

Our firm has been acknowledged by U.S. News and World Report as one of the Best Lawyers, and we are also members of the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum. Personal injury claims can be difficult, not only for the individual but also for the family. We understand these hardships and the various forms they take, and want to walk with you and your family through the process to fight for the compensation that you deserve. Don’t spend any more time wondering what to do after a horrible accident, contact our offices today for legal representation that is committed to the wellbeing of their clients. We care about you, don’t wait; call us today!

 

 

Medical Tort Reform Does Not Result in Healthcare Cost Savings

A new study out of Texas proves what we at Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo have known all along – medical tort reform does not result in healthcare cost savings. Instead, medical tort reform is simply a guise for insurance companies to increase their profit margins at the expense of everyday Americans like you.

In 2003, Texas voters approved a constitutional amendment to cap damages in medical malpractice/negligence lawsuits. Although the proponents of the tort reform measure touted it as a model for all other states to adopt as a way to control health care costs, the study shows that Texas’ medical tort reform hasn’t resulted in any such savings. What a shocker!

The study, which included research by University of Texas law professor Charles Silver, showed that there was no reduction in healthcare fees for seniors and disabled patients between 2002 and 2009. This was in line with the finfindgs of Public Citizen that showed that Medicare spending in Texas GREW must faster than the national average AFTER the draconian tort reform measure was implemented in 2003.

The Texas strudy also showed that although malpractice suits dropped following the tort reform, doctors did not flock to practice in Texas because of the new law (a ficticious benefit touted by the tort reformers).

 

 

 

 

Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo Secures $990,633 Verdict For A Client Injured by Cab Company

This case arises from a traffic collision that occurred on June 6, 2009. On that day, the plaintiff was a middle seat passenger in a 1995 Ford Ranger truck that was traveling in the number one southbound lane of 43rd Avenue in Phoenix, Arizona, past the Bell Road intersection,when a Discount Enterprises, Inc./Total Transit, Inc. (“Discount Cab”) van, operated by Discount Cab’s agent/employee, failed to yield the right of way and exited from a private drive and collided with the truck. Discount Cab admitted it was legally responsible for the cab driver’s negligence.

Discount Cab claimed that the driver of the truck was travelling 63 miles per hour, in a 40 mph zone, prior to the collision. The truck driver denied that he was speeding.

Discount Cab claimed that the plaintiff enhanced or caused her damages by failing to use an available and operational seat belt. The plaintiff denied that there was a seatbelt available for her use. The plaintiff also claimed that even if there was a seat belt for her use, as it would only have been a lap belt, she would have sustained similar, if not more severe, injuries.

In the collision, the plaintiff was seriously injured, including facial lacerations and injuries to eyebrow and eyelid.

The plaintiff underwent multiple procedures to repair her injuries. She is scheduled for one future surgery.

The plaintiff’s past medical expenses totaled $147,041.35. Her future medical bills totaled $98,884. As the plaintiff was a full time student, she sustained no lost wages.

The plaintiff called her treating plastic surgeon to testify regarding his treatment of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff also called Patrick Hannon, EdD, to offer biomechanical opinions relating to the plaintiff’s likely movements within the vehicle had she been wearing a lap belt.

The plaintiff called automobile consultant Mark Allen to testify that he did not believe there was a seat belt available to the plaintiff on the date of the crash.

The defendant Discount Cab/Camara called Robert Anderson as their accident reconstruction, biomechanical, human factors, and automobile inspection expert. Mr. Anderson testified that it was his opinion that defendant Hammond was speeding (63 mph in 40 mph zone). He also testified that he believed there was a lap belt available for the plaintiff to wear on the date of the crash and, had she worn that belt, the plaintiff would have only sustained a bruise on her forehead and a laceration on her tongue. He also testified that the Discount Cab driver, Camara, did not act unreasonably in failing to yield to defendant Hammond’s vehicle.

Past Medical Expenses were $147,041.35 and Future Medical Expenses were estimated at $98,884. As Ms. Walsh was a full time student at the time of the crash, no claim was made for lost wages.

At the start of litigation, the plaintiff entered into a covenant not to execute with the truck driver for an undisclosed amount. Prior to trial, the plaintiff demanded $325,000 from Camara/Total Transit/Discount. Camara/Total Transit/Discount offered $305,000.

After 6 days of trial, during closing argument, the plaintiff asked the jury to find Discount Cab/Camara 100% at fault, award past and future medical expenses of $246,633, $744,000 in general damages, and no reduction in damages for the plaintiff’s nonuse of a seatbelt. The Discount Cab defendants asked the jury to find the plaintiff’s damages to be $250,000 and apportion fault as follows: 90% to the plaintiff; 8% to truck driver defendant; and 2% to Discount Cab/Camara.

The jury retired for 1 hour and returned a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor in the amount of $990,633, with 100% fault to Discount Cab/Camara,  and no reduction in damages for the plaintiff’s alleged nonuse of a seatbelt.

The plaintiff was represented by Scott I. Palumbo of PALUMBO WOLFE & PALUMBO, P.C. and Brett L. Slavicek of TREON AGUIRRE NEWMAN & NORRIS, P.C.

 

2012 Lien Seminar Materials – Balance Billing

TO: 2012 LIEN SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS
FROM: Scott I. Palumbo, Esq.
SUBJECT: Balance Billing: Who Would Have Thought This Would Be The Easy Part of the Liens Seminar?
DATE: January 27, 2012
I. WINTERS et al. v. BANNER HEALTH INC., et al.
AHCCCS payment to a medical provider constitutes “payment in full” and preempts A.R.S. § 33-931, et seq., liens. Lizer v. Eagle Air Med Corp., 308 F.Supp.2d 1006 (D.Ariz. 2004) (holding that, Medicaid statute (i.e., AHCCCS) and related regulation providing that acceptance of Medicaid payments constitutes “payment in full,” preempted state healthcare provider lien statute to extent state law permitted a healthcare provider to recoup the balance of its customary charges after provider had already accepted Medicaid payment); 42 U.S.C. § 1396a(a)(25)(C).
Given the prohibition against balance billing after receipt of AHCCCS payment, Geoff Trachtenberg and Lance Entrekin, recently filed a federal court class action entitled Winters, et al. v. Banner Health Inc., et al., 2-11-CV-01537-SRB, seeking declaratory judgment and injunctive relief, legal and equitable relief, breach of contract and unjust enrichment against many of the Arizona hospital corporations that have asserted, and collected, balance billing liens after accepting AHCCCS payment.
II. BALANCE BILLING = HIPAA VIOLATION PART DEUX.
In July 2004, I published an article in the Advocate entitled Balance Billing = HIPAA Violation. The article is attached and represents my original thoughts on the subject. Basically, I was confused how a medical provider could legally file a document with a county recorder, that is then available anywhere in the world to anybody with an internet connection, without violating the patient’s privacy rights. My conclusion was that the lien was an absolute violation of State and Federal privacy rights.
I briefly litigated the privacy violation issue with Gammage & Burnham in late 2007, but was unable to maintain the claim after Gammage & Burnham successfully moved to dismiss it. The issue became dormant until a few months ago when Gammage & Burnham asserted in the Winters litigation that HIPAA prevented it from releasing certain balance billing liens during discovery – even though the liens had previously been released to the public when they were filed with the county recorders.
Gammage & Burnham’s current position seems to acknowledge the protected nature of patient protected health information contained in balance billing liens. This should give rise to a new challenge to the legality of such liens. Should you be so inclined to attack the validity of the liens, here are some arguments that can get you started (taken from my response to Gammage & Burnham’s 2007 motion to dismiss):
The defendant medical provider violated the plaintiff’s privacy rights when it publicly disclosed the plaintiff’s protected health information by filing two A.R.S. § 33-931, et seq. “balance billing” liens with the Maricopa County Recorder.
The allegation that the defendant’s liens violate patient privacy rights is a complex legal issue requiring a deep understanding of the purposes and principles behind the Federal and State laws that regulate the disclosure and dissemination of patient medical information. The issue cannot be dealt with on a cursory level as the defendant has done in its motion. As shown below, there are sufficient grounds upon which the plaintiff’s privacy right allegations can be granted. Thus, the motion to dismiss should be denied.
The defendant maintains that its liens “disclose no protected information.” Motion at 4. This is incorrect. The defendant’s attorney, Richard Burnham, admits that balance billing liens are part of a hospital’s “payment activities.” See Burnham letter, attached as Exhibit B. A.R.S. § 12-2291(6) defines “payment records” as “Payment records” means all communications related to payment for a patient’s health care that contain individually identifiable information.
As the two liens at issue in this matter contain many portions of the plaintiff’s individually identifiable information, including: (1) the patient’s name and address, (2) dates of medical service, (3) location of medical service, (4) the name of the medical provider, and (5) the amount charged for the medical services, the liens constitute a “payment record” under A.R.S. § 12-2291.
A.R.S. § 12-2292 protects a patient’s privacy rights by making “payment records” privileged and confidential:
A. Unless otherwise provided by law, all medical records and payment records, and the information contained in medical records and payment records, are privileged and confidential. Therefore, by filing the liens, the defendant has violated A.R.S. § 12-2292 and the plaintiff’s privacy rights.
The defendant’s argument that the “otherwise provided by law” provision found in A.R.S. § 12-2292 allows it to violate its patients’ privacy rights is contrary to logic. The “otherwise provided by law” provision refers to instances where a medical provider is required to disclose privileged health information, i.e. child abuse, adult abuse, HIV, child births, social security admissions, etc. Medical providers are not required by law to file balance billing liens. Instead, once the medical provider exercises its option to file a balance billing lien, it is required to follow the guidelines outlined in A.R.S. § 33-932(A). To read the “otherwise provided by law” provision in A.R.S. § 12-2292 as bestowing medical providers with unbridled and unilateral authority to disclose protected health information would violate the spirit for which the privacy protection was enacted. City of Phoenix v. Superior Court In and For Maricopa County, 101 Ariz. 265, 267, 419 P.2d 49, 51 (1966) (“It is the well settled law of this state that in construing a statute the spirit of the enactment must be considered and, if possible, the statute will be construed consistent therewith. . . . When the literal language of a statute will result in an absurdity, an impossibility, or a meaning which is clearly at variance with the legislative intent, courts may and well alter, modify, or supply words to the statute in order to give effect to the manifest intention of the Legislature.’)
Finally, although the plaintiff does not ask for a declaratory ruling that the liens violate the Health Insurance Privacy and Accountability Act (“HIPAA”), the Hospital’s argument that the “otherwise provided by law” provision allows it to freely violate its patients’ privacy rights is further frustrated by the constraints HIPAA places on debt collections. HIPAA was enacted on April 13, 2004. HIPAA precludes health care providers from disclosing “individually identifiable health information.” 42 U.S.C. § 1320d(6). “Individually identifiable health information” is that which combines the identity of a patient with “information . . . created or received by a health care provider . . . [that] relates to the past, present, or future physical or mental health or condition of an individual, the provision of health care to an individual, or the past, present, or future payment for the provision of health care to an individual.” Id. HIPAA provides a Federal floor of privacy protections for individuals’ individually identifiable health information where that information is held by a covered entity or by a business associate of the covered entity. 45 C.F.R. § 160.202. States are preempted from enacting laws that lower HIPAA’s privacy protections, but are allowed to create laws that provide “more stringent” privacy protections. Id. Subsequent to the enactment of HIPAA, the Arizona legislature did just that by amending A.R.S. § 12-2291, et seq. to make “payment records” privileged and confidential. See Laws 2004, Ch. 191, § 2. Thus, even if one were to assume, for purposes of this motion only, that HIPAA allows the hospital to release protected health information under its “payment activity” provision, the only permissible interpretation of the Arizona’s legislature’s subsequent decision to make HIPAA more stringent is that it intended to provide more protection to patients’ privacy expectations, not only when receiving care, but also during the medical providers’ attempts to collect payment for the care. The defendant’s position would render the legislature’s addition of “payment records” as privileged and confidential meaningless.

 

III. WHAT’S ON THE HORIZON?

 

The brain trust in the Arizona Legislature is at it again. The Fiftieth Legislature is expected to introduce a bill to amend Title 12, Chapter 7, Article 2 of the Arizona Revised Statutes to add 12-824, relating to actions against public entities where the claimant asserts the right to recover medical expenses incurred as a result of bodily injury. The new law would limit the right of anyone injured by a public entity to recover more than the “amount actually paid in full satisfaction of the services.” It is rumored that the brain trust is considering expanding this new law to all bodily injury claims, not just claims against public entities.
If either of these laws are enacted, it would wipe out decades of Arizona common law allowing injured plaintiffs to claim billed charges. It would also drastically affect or eliminate balance billing because if the injured party is only able to recover the amount actually paid, then equitably there would be nothing for the medical provider to balance bill against. Hopefully Geoff Trachtenberg’s best friends at Gammage & Burnham are on top of this issue and will help us fight it.

 

IV. DON’T BE BASHFUL.
Oftentimes balance billing liens are not properly perfected. The statute makes clear that such liens “are invalid and may not be enforced.” When liens are not filed properly, don’t just give in and compromise the lien, but consider sending a letter such as this:
Dear _________:

 

 

We represent _________for injuries she sustained in a March 10, 2010 car crash. Upon searching the Maricopa County Recorder, we noticed that you filed a A.R.S. § 33-931, et seq., balance billing lien against _________ on May 27, 2010. This letter is to request that the lien be immediately released from the Maricopa County Recorder because it is invalid and may not be enforced.

 

 

_________ first received treatment from Arrowhead Health on March 11, 2010. A.R.S. § 33-932 requires balance billing liens to be recorded “before or within thirty days after the patient has received any services relating to the injuries.” The failure to record a lien within thirty days makes the lien void as a matter of law – “If a health care provider other than a hospital or ambulance service does not record the claim, lien or assignment as provided in this section, the claim, lien or assignment is invalid and may not be enforced by the cause of action provided in section 33-934.” As Arrowhead Health did not file the lien against _________ until May 27, 2010, more than 60 days after it first provided treatment, the lien is not valid and must be withdrawn.

 

 

Please file a lien release with the Maricopa County Recorder and provide us with those releases by October 26, 2011.

 

 

Thank you.

 

 

If the provider does not release the lien, file a declaratory judgment action and seek your costs and fees. A form complaint for declaratory judgment is attached.

 

WHAT TO DO AFTER A CAR OR MOTORCYCLE CRASH

WHAT TO DO IF YOU ARE INVOLVED IN A CAR OR MOTORCYCLE ACCIDENT

1) At the scene of the crash, cooperate with the police, but only tell the police what you saw or were able to observe. Do not guess about what happened.

2) Seek whatever medical attention is required for you and every passenger in your vehicle.

3) DO NOT SPEAK WITH ANY CAR INSURANCE REPRESENTATIVE ABOUT YOUR INJURIES.

The automobile insurers will likely contact you very quickly to obtain a statement from you about what happened and the injuries you believe you sustained.

Do not provide a statement until you have spoken with an attorney

4) You may speak with health insurance representatives, or property damage insurance representatives, but you are under no immediate obligation to speak to any auto insurance representative about your injuries.

5) Do whatever is necessary to get your life back together.
6) After you are back on your feet, contact an attorney who specializes in auto accident claims. The attorneys at Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo have over 150 years specializing in representing auto and motorcycle collision injury victims. We offer free consultations and can be contaced at 602-265-5777. Do not be fooled by advertisements offering a “discount fee.” Remember – you get what you pay for.

7) If you decide to retain an attorney, let the lawyer handle your claim. That is their job.

8) Get better.

 

__________________________________________________

 

Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo has been ranked by US News & World Report and Best Lawyers as one of the

best plaintiff specialty law firms
, not only in Arizona, but in the country


We are the only Arizona law firm who has received top ranking in the areas of plaintiff’s personal injury, medical malpractice and product liability law. Our firm has achieved an “AV” rating (the highest possible) under Martindale-Hubbell’s peer review ratings system* of legal ability and general ethical standards. Attorneys at our personal injury law firm have been elected to the prestigious American College of Trial Lawyers, which represents the top 1% of all trial lawyers in North America. Several of our trial attorneys have been named in the Best Lawyers in America
publication every year since 1993. Elliot Wolfe and Anthony Palumbo have held the recognition of being the #1 plaintiff medical malpractice lawyers in Arizona for 2010, 2011 and 2012. The National Trial Lawyers Association has named Scott Palumbo as one of the Top 100 trial attorneys in Arizona for 2009, 2010 and 2011. We are also members of the prestigious Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum, which recognizes trial lawyers who have successfully handled cases in excess of two million dollars.

Arizona Dog Owners Are Strictly Liable For Dog Bites

We all love dogs. Unfortunately, many dogs bite for no apparent reason. When a dog biteswithout being provoked and the bite causes harm, the dog’s owner is strictly responsible for the damages caused by the bite.

In Arizona, “dogs do not get ‘one free bite’.” Massey v. Colaric, 151 Ariz. 65, 66, 725 P.2d 1099, 1100 (Ariz. 1986).

Owners are held strictly liable for injuries caused by their dogs’ actions and liability is imposed without regard to an owner’s knowledge of the dog’s viciousness. The owner is virtually an insurer of the dog’s conduct. Id. Provocation is the only defense permitted in strict liability dog bite
cases per A.R.S. § 11-1027, which states:

Proof of provocation of the attack by the person injured shall be a defense to the action for damages. The issue of provocation shall be determined by whether a reasonable person would expect that the conduct or circumstances would be likely to provoke a dog.

There is a one year statute of limitations for strict liability dog bite claims, so if you or a loved one were seriously injured because someone else’s dog bit you, you should contact our office immediately 602-265-5777.

DISCLAIMER

The information on this website is for general information purposes only. Nothing on this site should be taken as legal advice for any individual case or situation. This information is not intended to create, and receipt or viewing does not constitute, an attorney-client relationship.

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Palumbo Wolfe & Palumbo
Phoenix Personal Injury Lawyer
2800 N Central Ave, Ste 1400 Phoenix, AZ 85004

602-265-5777

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