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The delicate flowers on this thread are definitely not made of the same stuff as the people who put their families and all their worldly belongings in covered wagons and went West, that's for damn sure.
I would be ashamed to make a fuss if I got nipped by a dog. Stupid. |
| Doesn't matter if it was a "nip" OP. It's a bite. You simply cannot trust your dog around strangers, period. You know this. |
NP here. Last poster is absolutely clueless, and saying that someone is "on notice" (WTH? LOL) would not change any of it. First poster here is absolutely spot on, as is the poster who mentioned having adequate homeowner's insurance. OP, you are in over your head. |
Correct. It was a joke. |
PP again. I was joking when I said "You are on notice" -- I thought that was obviously tongue in cheek -- but I wasn't joking about conter-suing. I would sue your company so hard they'd wish they hadn't gone after me for a nip that didn't even bother the recipient. If you've ever been on a jury, you know that most people are supportive of the regular people involved, not the companies who make life hard for us. You required the person file to file for worker's comp? That would not look good. I would win. You would be sad. |
Nobody anywhere is supportive of your dog's 'right to bite'. You may have been mislead. |
You can file a claim without making a claim for benefits. If you knew anything about workers' comp in a large organization, you would know that it is to the employer's benefit to know of injuries when they occur or as soon as practicable thereafter. And, what in the world would you counter sue for?! As an employer, I am entitled to recover for losses caused by your negligence and I would pursue a dog bite case in a second. There may be home owner's insurance to cover my losses and, if not, there are likely wages and assets. It's just business. |
Not if the owner produces a valid rabies vaccine tag. |
What losses would you incur? The dog didn't even break the skin, but you would REQUIRE your employee to file a worker's comp claim. Sorry, that is ridiculous. You're just interested in making a profit off of some stupid interaction that happens every day, all over the planet. Your attitude is why America is screwed. These are called nuisance claims and they're just fraud, a way of moving money around. I'm not OP BTW. |
I would just show that the company PP works for is using this as an excuse to make a buck. People do this with fender benders and all kinds of other insurance issues. They're scam artists. |
Maybe not if the owner HAD produced a valid rabies vaccine tag. That interaction didn't occur. You don't give it a few days after getting bit by a strange dog to figure out the paperwork. You go to urgent care or the ER and you get one ASAP. |
And yes, this happened to me. I was walking down the streets on NYC when I felt a sharp bite at my calf from behind. Some Jack Russel had just gone for my leg like it was pouncing on a rat. Yelped "WTF?!" and the owner was just like, "come on Pookie, move along, don't bite the nice lady!" as she high-tailed it down the street and I stood there in utter shock. I had two places where it had pierced the skin and drew a good deal of blood. I called my Dr. and was told to get a rabies shot at the ER immediately. |
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I think people are being hard on OP. She was in her own garage with her dog leashed and clearly visible. Weird for the delivery person to enter into a garage with a dog in it.
I personally hate when delivery people put stuff in my garage as its a mess. I once found something a year later that I had reported as lost in delivery. |
You really don’t get this at all. There is no profit. If an employee is injured due to someone else’s negligence and the company incurs expenses for their medical care, lost time and costs of administering the claim, they are entitled to recover. Companies get nothing more than they pay out. And the only reason they would pay in this case, if they do, is because of the dog bite. Here no one knows the extent of the injuries. Maybe nothing. Maybe skin got broken and later serious infection occurs requiring Emergency care, IV antibiotics, weeks off work and physical therapy due to reconditioning given the heavy nature of this type of work - which infection, with early reporting and first aid, might have been preventable. Maybe driver has a preexisting condition that worsens and the bite causes serious medical issues keeping the driver out of work for six months and resulting in six figures of medical bills. Maybe the driver twisted a leg trying to get away from the dog and will need knee surgery. Maybe the driver had a previous serious dog bite and this one results in a flare up of PTSD. And maybe the driver came to work with an injury that they couldn’t afford to take time off to treat and the dog bite presents an opportunity to make a fake claim. Point is you don’t know. And many of these issues don’t show up immediately. Time is not your friend when it comes to gathering evidence. That’s why you need to know day one. Late reports result in loss of evidence. |
| OP said “She’s 35lbs not some pit bull “. That’s an ignorant statement if I ever heard one. Border Collies are bred to bite the rear ends of animals. They’re herding dogs. Yours sounds aggressive and you do not sound like a responsible owner at all. |