Yes. In North Carolina, you can pursue the dog owner for negligence if their failure to control the dog reasonably caused you to flee and get hurt. You must show the owner breached a duty (for example, letting a dog run loose or violating a leash rule), that your injuries were a foreseeable result of the dog’s actions, and that you suffered damages like medical bills and lost wages. North Carolina’s strict contributory negligence rule can be a defense the owner raises.
In North Carolina, can you recover medical expenses and lost wages from a neighbor after you were injured while fleeing their loose, charging dog? The actor is the injured pedestrian; the relief sought is compensation for medical bills and missed work; the trigger is the dog charging and the fall that followed; and the question is whether state negligence rules allow recovery.
North Carolina allows recovery when a dog owner’s negligence proximately causes injury. Key routes include proving the owner failed to use reasonable care to restrain or control the dog; proving a violation of a local leash/containment ordinance (often supporting negligence per se); or, in limited situations, showing the dog met the legal definition of “dangerous” under state or local law. Claims are brought in civil court, and most personal injury claims must be filed within three years of the injury. North Carolina follows contributory negligence, which can bar recovery if the injured person was also negligent.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: The neighbor’s dog was loose and charged. That supports a breach of reasonable care and may involve a local leash-law violation, strengthening negligence. Your injuries flowed from a reasonable flight response to the charging dog, satisfying causation. You have recoverable damages in medical treatment and lost time from work, which you must document. The owner may raise contributory negligence, but running from a charging dog is typically a reasonable response.
Under North Carolina law, you can seek medical bills and lost wages if a dog owner’s negligence caused you to flee and get injured. Prove duty and breach (such as letting a dog run loose), causation from the flight, and documented damages. Watch North Carolina’s three-year filing deadline. Next step: gather medical and wage records, get the animal control report and any leash ordinance, and file a civil Complaint with the Clerk of Superior Court before the deadline.
If you were hurt while fleeing a charging dog and face medical bills and missed work, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.