Hawaii Injuries

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i'm in Kahului and they say the dog policy is only $20,000

“child got bitten in the face by a dog at a friend's house in Kahului and the insurance adjuster says that's the most available is that true”

— Eleanor K., Kahului

A child was bitten in the face at a friend's house in Kahului, and the insurer may be lowballing the case by lying about how much coverage exists.

The adjuster may be lying.

That's the first thing to understand if a child was bitten in the face by a dog at a friend's house in Kahului and the insurance company is suddenly acting like the case is capped at some suspiciously low number.

A retired grandparent living on Social Security or a pension hears "the policy only has $20,000" and thinks that's the end of it. Maybe the dog owner is a friend. Maybe nobody wants to ruin a relationship. Maybe the child already had stitches at Maui Memorial and now there's talk about plastic surgery, infection risk, or scar revision later. The adjuster knows all of that. Low numbers sound final when people are scared.

They often aren't.

A dog bite at a friend's house usually lands on homeowner or renter insurance

In Kahului, that usually means a claim against the homeowner's insurance policy, sometimes a renter's policy, and sometimes an umbrella policy sitting on top of both. Here's where it gets ugly: the adjuster may talk only about one policy and stay very quiet about the rest.

If the bite happened in a yard, driveway, living room, or garage near places like Maui Lani, Kaahumanu Avenue, or a neighborhood off Dairy Road, the house insurance is usually the first place money comes from.

And if the injury is to a child's face, this is not a small claim just because the first hospital bill looks manageable. Facial injuries on children can mean future treatment as the face grows. Scar care can drag on. A "quick settlement" is exactly what the insurance company wants before the full damage is clear.

Hawaii law is not great for dog owners in this situation

Hawaii has a dog bite statute that generally makes the owner liable when the dog bites someone who is lawfully on the property and not teasing, tormenting, or abusing the dog.

That matters because the insurance company may try to shift blame onto the child anyway.

They'll say the child got too close to the dog's face. The child startled the dog. The child ignored a warning. The child was rough. The grandparents should have been watching better. Same script every time.

Hawaii also uses comparative negligence. That means if the insurer can pin some percentage of fault on the injured person, it reduces the payout by that percentage. With a child, especially a younger child, that argument can get a lot weaker. A six-year-old is not judged like an adult. Even with an older child, "the dog got nervous" is not magic legal protection for the owner.

And if this happened during a family visit or birthday get-together, the fact that everyone knew the dog had a temper, snapped before, or was put away around guests becomes a huge deal.

"That's all the coverage" is often a negotiation move, not a fact

Most people don't realize adjusters are not required to volunteer every possible source of insurance in a friendly, transparent way.

They may mention one limit and hope you sign a release.

That release is the trap. Once it's signed, you usually can't come back later when someone admits there was another policy or higher limits.

A few things may exist even when the adjuster acts like the case is tiny:

  • a higher homeowner policy limit
  • an umbrella policy
  • a renter policy if the dog owner was not the homeowner
  • coverage through another insured resident in the house

If the dog belonged to an adult child living with the homeowner, or the house was owned by one person and occupied by another, coverage can get layered fast.

Why the fixed-income pressure makes people settle cheap

In Kahului, money stress is relentless. Rent is brutal. Groceries at Foodland or Safeway aren't getting cheaper. If you're 72 and helping raise or care for a grandchild, a fast check can feel like survival.

The insurance company knows that.

So they'll send a "final offer" while the child is still healing. They'll act sympathetic. They'll say they're trying to help. Then they'll claim the scar "looks good" from cellphone photos taken two weeks after the bite.

That's nonsense. Facial scar severity is not settled in two weeks. Not in a child.

Fault fights get nastier when the dog owner is someone you know

At a friend's house, people hesitate to push back because they think they're suing the friend directly. Usually, the real fight is with the insurance carrier. But the insurer uses the friendship to soften you up.

They may say the homeowner is elderly too. They may say a bigger claim could affect premiums. They may imply everyone should just move on.

Meanwhile, they're building a blame case against the child.

If the dog was loose when guests arrived, if no one warned that the dog was reactive, if the dog had access to the child in a common area, those facts matter more than the insurer wants to admit.

And if weather or road closures complicated care, that matters too. On Maui, delays are real. Flash floods in narrow windward valleys can shut roads fast and trap drivers without warning. Even though Kahului is central, anyone who has dealt with island medicine knows treatment doesn't always happen on some insurer-friendly timeline. Follow-up care can take longer than mainland adjusters expect, and they love using delay as an excuse to discount injury.

The number you hear on the first call is not the number that controls the case

That's the bottom line.

If an adjuster says the policy limit is low, treat that as a claim tactic, not gospel. Especially in a child facial dog bite case. Especially when the child was lawfully at a friend's home. Especially when the insurer is already floating blame and rushing a release.

Once they realize someone actually understands shared fault, policy stacking, and how ugly a child facial scar claim can become over time, the whole tone usually changes.

by Brandon Silva on 2026-03-29

This article is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Every case is different. If you or a loved one was injured, talk to an attorney about your situation.

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