She Reported Her Neighbor’s Dog After It Lunged At Her, And Now The Whole Building Is Divided Over It

Living in an apartment usually comes with a basic understanding. You share walls, you share hallways, you try not to make life harder for the people around you.

For one woman, that balance broke the moment she nearly got bitten by her neighbor’s dog.

It wasn’t a small dog either. A large Cane Corso that she says lunged at her in a hallway so fast she only realized later how close it came. The owner blamed her. Said she startled the dog.

She didn’t agree. And she reported it.

Now the neighbor is being evicted, and suddenly she’s being treated like she caused all of this.

She Reported Her Neighbor’s Dog After It Lunged at Her, and Now the Whole Building Is Divided Over It
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it all unfolded:'AITAH for getting my neighbor evicted?'

I live in an apartment, and one f my neighbors has a very big dog.

You can't miss it when they come down the hallway to go out in the community yard.

I think someone told me it is a Cane Corso? I don't know dogs so I am trying to get it right.

The dog is always on a leash, but last month the dog lunged at me. If the man wasn't holding the leash tightly it would have bitten me.

The owner yelled at me and told me I startled his dog. I hadn't made any sudden movements, and the dog could clearly see me.

I did nothing to make it do that. I think the dog weighs omore than me because I am a very small Asian woman.

I told the landlord about the dog trying to bite me, and he looked over the hallway cameras.

He told me that I didn't startle the dog, it had just attacked for no reason.

He spoke with the neighbor and the dog was very hostile with him as well.

He had been causing problems, so he has bene told he has to leave.

A few other neighbors said it was time for him to leave, but a few others with dogs are mad at me because

if a dog jumped towards me would I turn them in too. I don't own dogs, and so I don't know if I overreacted?

AITAH for telling the landlord?. Also sorry English is my second language. If something doesn't make sense please let me know!

The moment everything changed in the hallway

She lives in a shared apartment building. Normal setup, people come and go, everyone knows each other a little but not too much.

One neighbor stands out though, because of his dog.

A big one. Cane Corso, according to her. Always on leash, but still… hard to miss.

Then one day in the hallway, things go wrong.

She says she didn’t do anything unusual. No sudden movement, no loud noise. Just a normal encounter in a shared space.

But the dog lunged at her anyway.

Not a playful jump. Not excitement. Something aggressive enough that if the owner hadn’t pulled hard on the leash, she believes she would’ve been bitten.

The owner didn’t apologize. He yelled at her instead, saying she startled the dog.

She didn’t see it that way. She’s a small woman, and the situation genuinely scared her.

Reporting it and what came after

She went to the landlord.

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Not to get anyone in trouble. Just to report what happened.

The landlord checked the hallway cameras.

And that’s where things shifted.

From what she was told, the footage showed the dog wasn’t startled. It was aggressive. And apparently, this wasn’t the first issue involving the dog or the owner.

After speaking with the neighbor and reviewing things, the landlord made the decision to evict him.

For her, it felt like a safety issue being taken seriously.

For others in the building, it didn’t feel that simple.

Why this situation split the building

Now there are two sides.

Some neighbors agree with her. They’ve had concerns too, apparently. They see it as a safety issue that was just waiting to escalate.

Others, especially people with dogs, are upset.

Their argument is basically, if you report one dog for reacting badly, where does it stop? What if their dog jumps, or gets excited, or behaves unpredictably?

And that’s where things get emotionally messy.

Because dog owners see behavior differently. Not always as danger. Sometimes as misunderstanding.

But for someone who nearly got bitten, it doesn’t feel like a misunderstanding at all.

What experts say about situations like this

Animal behavior specialists often point out that aggression in large dogs in shared spaces is not something to ignore.

According to guidance from American Veterinary Medical Association, dog owners are responsible for ensuring their pets are properly controlled in public and semi-public environments, especially in confined spaces like apartment hallways.

They also stress that even leashed dogs can still pose risks if they show repeated signs of aggression or poor socialization. Size matters too, because the consequences of a single incident can be severe.

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In this case, the key issue isn’t just the dog reacting once. It’s the combination of severity, environment, and prior concerns noted by management.

From that perspective, reporting it isn’t about punishing a dog. It’s about preventing escalation in a shared living space where people can’t easily avoid each other.

And that’s the part that often gets lost in heated neighbor disputes.

Reddit Had Plenty to Say About This One:

Most people said she was not in the wrong, especially after the landlord reviewed footage and found additional issues.

benny_lopez − NTA. A large dog lunging at someone in a hallway is a serious safety issue.

You didn’t exaggerate the landlord checked the cameras and confirmed the dog acted aggressively and had other problems too.

That decision wasn’t made just because of you. Responsible dog owners know their dogs must be safe and under control in shared spaces.

Reporting a genuine safety concern isn’t sumn anti-dog …it’s reasonable.

Straight_Caregiver27 − OP - 25 years ago a Bay Area woman was killed by a neighbor's dog in her hallway.

It was a horrible story. I am glad that you have a landlord who took your concerns seriously and took action.

CommaFactor − NTA, dogs are not a right. You either get one you can handle in an appropriate living space for them

(hint- cane corsos arent meant for apartment living), train them right, or provide them the protection they need to account for their behavior or trauma.

This person and anyone else who is being pissy about a dangerous dog going after you are the a-holes, not you.

Many pointed out that apartment hallways are high-risk spaces for poorly controlled large dogs.

Zealousideal-House19 − NTA You know you didn't startled that dog!

And even if you had startled it lunging is not acceptable behaviour.

Like nobody knows if a dog is jumping for joy or jumping to rip your face off.

Some dog owners just don't understand that dogs are not always harmless and need ro be kept under control.

Our they will just blame you for whatever the dog does. You are not reporting all dogs for jumping. Just the one that made you feel unsafe.

clkinsyd − NTA- the landlord investigated and the dog was aggressive with him too.

A dog can behave that way as a one off but this was clearly a pattern.

Important-Put1865 − NTA! That dog was not made for apartment living.

His owner could not adequately control him. They needed to go. You may have saved one of your neighbors lives, or yours!

Some dog owners in the comments tried to add nuance, saying not all jumps or lunges are aggression, but even they agreed that if the behavior looked threatening, it needed to be addressed.SuspiciousCod1090 − NTA. The neighbors are correct, and you SHOULD turn in the owner of any dog that you can't control it.

That behavior is not acceptable and dangerous. We're not talking about a shihtzu here; a cane is a serious dog that could really hurt you.

KittiesRule1968 − NTA, tell the others to go f__k themselves.

Silversong_0713 − Cane Corso need training and an apartment isnt the best place for such a big dog unless you have lots of time for exercise.

When a dog that could maul you to death tries to attack you its OK to report them. NTA

Careless_Ocelot_4485 − NTA. I'm a dog owner and it is up to me to keep other people and my dog safe. Your neighbor doesn't sound very responsible

She didn’t set out to get someone evicted. She reported what she experienced. The landlord made the final call based on more than just her complaint.

But now she’s stuck in the middle of a community argument about dogs, responsibility, and what counts as “overreacting.”

Maybe the real issue isn’t whether she was right to speak up.

Maybe it’s that shared spaces only work when everyone agrees on one thing, safety comes first, even when it’s uncomfortable.

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