• FireTower@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Might dependsl on your jurisdiction. But I wouldn’t be worried they’d probably need to prove you had a duty of care to them which you acted outside of which resulted in injuries that could have been avoided by you acting with a reasonable level of care.

    Also if you did have a duty of care to them and knowingly had a dangerous dog not warning someone of known dangers (the dog) might constitute a break of your duty of care.

    Tldr: It depends, you get what you pay for get your advice from actual local lawyers not random people on the street or the internet (like me).