When you suffer an injury on someone else’s property in Aberdeen, Washington, you deserve legal representation that understands the complexities of premises liability. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we help injured individuals navigate these claims with clarity and confidence. Property owners have a legal responsibility to maintain safe conditions for visitors, and when they fail to do so, you may be entitled to compensation. Our team carefully evaluates the circumstances surrounding your injury to build a compelling case on your behalf.
Pursuing a premises liability claim requires understanding Washington’s negligence laws, proving duty of care, and demonstrating how a property owner’s negligence caused your injuries. Medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and ongoing treatment costs can quickly become overwhelming. Legal representation ensures you’re not pressured into accepting inadequate settlements from insurance companies. Our team handles negotiations and litigation, allowing you to focus on recovery while we pursue maximum compensation for your damages and losses.
Premises liability law holds property owners accountable when their negligence causes injury to visitors or guests. In Washington, property owners must maintain reasonably safe conditions and warn visitors of known dangers. This includes maintaining floors free from hazards, ensuring adequate lighting, repairing broken stairs, and properly maintaining equipment. The owner’s liability depends on the visitor’s classification—whether they’re a business invitee, licensee, or trespasser—and what duty of care applies. Understanding these legal distinctions is crucial for building a strong claim.
The legal obligation property owners have to maintain safe conditions and protect visitors from foreseeable hazards. This duty varies based on the visitor’s status—business invitees receive the highest level of protection, while trespassers receive the least.
The failure to exercise reasonable care that results in injury to another person. In premises liability, negligence occurs when a property owner fails to maintain safe conditions or warn of known dangers.
A person invited onto property for business purposes, such as customers in a store. Property owners owe invitees the highest duty of care, requiring them to inspect premises and warn of hidden dangers.
Washington’s legal rule allowing injured parties to recover damages even if partially at fault, with compensation reduced by their percentage of responsibility. This applies to premises liability claims where both parties may share some blame.
Preserve evidence by taking photographs of the hazardous condition that caused your injury from multiple angles and distances. Request written incident reports from property management and obtain contact information for any witnesses who saw what happened. These records create a clear timeline and establish that the dangerous condition existed at the time of your injury.
Visit a healthcare provider promptly and inform them exactly how your injury occurred and where it happened. Medical records establishing the connection between the premises hazard and your injuries are essential for your claim. Delaying medical treatment can weaken your case and may be used against you during settlement negotiations.
Do not post details about your injury or claim on social media, as insurance companies actively monitor these platforms. Refrain from speaking with insurance adjusters without legal representation, as they may use your statements against you. Allow your attorney to handle all communications regarding your injury and claim.
Multiple parties may bear responsibility for your injury, including the property owner, maintenance company, or building manager. Identifying all liable parties requires thorough investigation and understanding of property management structures. Our team conducts comprehensive discovery to ensure all responsible parties are included in your claim.
When your injuries result in substantial medical expenses, permanent disability, or lost earning capacity, maximizing your recovery becomes critical. Insurance companies often underestimate damages in serious injury cases, making skilled negotiation necessary. Our team uses medical evidence, economic analysis, and testimony to establish the full value of your claim.
If your injuries are minor with straightforward medical documentation and the property owner clearly bears responsibility, a more limited approach might suffice. These cases often resolve quickly through insurance settlements without extensive litigation. However, ensuring you receive fair compensation for all damages still requires careful claim preparation.
Sometimes property owners or insurers recognize liability quickly and offer reasonable settlements early in the process. When evidence clearly establishes negligence and damages are well-documented, prompt resolution is possible. Our team evaluates whether early settlement proposals adequately compensate you or if further negotiation is necessary.
Wet floors, spilled liquids, or unsecured rugs in retail stores, restaurants, and offices frequently cause slip and fall injuries. Property owners must address hazards promptly or post adequate warnings to prevent these foreseeable accidents.
Broken stairs, cracked sidewalks, faulty railings, and poor lighting create dangerous conditions that lead to falls and injuries. Negligent property maintenance violates owners’ duty to provide safe premises for visitors.
Inadequate security measures, broken locks, and insufficient lighting enable criminal assaults and theft on commercial properties. Property owners must implement reasonable security precautions when dangers are foreseeable.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd brings years of experience handling premises liability cases throughout Aberdeen and Grays Harbor County. We understand the local property owners, commercial establishments, and the specific hazards common to our community. Our team conducts thorough investigations, identifies all liable parties, and builds compelling cases that stand up to insurance company scrutiny. We’re committed to achieving the best possible outcomes for our clients.
Our approach combines meticulous case preparation with strong negotiation skills and courtroom confidence. We handle all aspects of your claim while you focus on healing and recovery. From gathering evidence and obtaining medical records to presenting your case to a jury if necessary, we provide comprehensive legal support every step of the way. Your satisfaction and successful recovery are our primary goals.
A premises liability claim holds property owners responsible for maintaining safe conditions and compensating visitors injured due to negligence. This includes slip and falls, inadequate maintenance, security failures, and other hazards resulting from the owner’s failure to exercise reasonable care. Washington law establishes that property owners owe different duties depending on the visitor’s status. Business invitees receive the highest protection, requiring owners to inspect premises and warn of hidden dangers. The owner’s negligence in creating, maintaining, or failing to warn about hazardous conditions forms the basis for your claim.
In Washington, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims, including premises liability, is generally three years from the date of injury. This means you have three years to file a lawsuit in court, though settlement negotiations may occur within or outside this timeframe. It’s important to act promptly because evidence degrades, memories fade, and witnesses become harder to locate as time passes. Contacting our office immediately after your injury ensures we can preserve evidence and begin building your case while details are fresh and investigations are most effective.
In a successful premises liability case, you may recover economic damages including all medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, lost wages, and reduced earning capacity. Non-economic damages compensate for pain and suffering, emotional distress, and reduced quality of life resulting from your injuries. If the property owner’s conduct was particularly reckless, you might also pursue punitive damages intended to punish the defendant and deter future negligence. Our team evaluates all available damages to ensure your settlement or judgment fully compensates you for everything you’ve endured.
You must prove the property owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition through reasonable inspection. This includes actual knowledge—when the owner directly saw the hazard—or constructive knowledge when the hazard existed long enough that reasonable inspection would have discovered it. For example, if a grocery store’s floor remained wet for hours without warning signs, management should have known through regular inspections. Our investigation examines maintenance records, employee schedules, and inspection protocols to establish what the property owner knew or should have known about the hazard.
Washington’s comparative negligence rule allows you to recover damages even if partially at fault, with your compensation reduced by your percentage of responsibility. If you’re found 30 percent at fault and damages are $100,000, you’d recover $70,000. However, you cannot recover if you’re found more than 50 percent responsible. This makes it crucial to have legal representation establishing that the property owner bears primary responsibility. Insurance companies often exaggerate your role in the accident to minimize their liability, so skilled advocacy is essential to protect your rights.
The most important evidence includes photographs and videos of the hazardous condition, the location, and surrounding area from multiple angles. Medical records documenting your injuries and their connection to the accident, witness statements from people who saw what happened, and the property owner’s maintenance and inspection records all support your claim. Security camera footage, incident reports, prior complaints about the same hazard, and expert testimony about safety standards further strengthen your case. Our team systematically gathers and organizes this evidence to present a compelling narrative of the property owner’s negligence.
Early settlement offers should be carefully evaluated with your attorney before accepting. Insurance companies often make low initial offers hoping you’ll accept quickly without understanding your claim’s true value. Rejecting an inadequate offer and continuing negotiations often results in substantially higher settlements. Our team evaluates whether proposed settlements adequately cover your medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and future treatment needs. We negotiate aggressively to maximize your recovery while maintaining flexibility to reach fair agreements that serve your interests.
Washington law limits property owners’ liability to trespassers, but it doesn’t eliminate it entirely. While owners owe trespassers less duty than business visitors, they still cannot intentionally injure them or create hidden dangers with intent to harm. If a property owner maintained a property knowing trespassers would cross it and created a dangerous trap, liability may still exist. However, the burden of proof is significantly higher for trespasser cases. Our team evaluates the specific circumstances to determine what duty applies and whether you can successfully establish the property owner’s liability despite your trespassing status.
Security negligence occurs when property owners fail to provide reasonable security measures, enabling assaults, robberies, or other criminal acts on their premises. This includes inadequate lighting, broken locks, insufficient staff, and failure to address known security risks or past criminal activity. If you were assaulted at a business with notoriously poor security or a residential property with broken locks despite known break-ins, the property owner may be liable for failing to provide reasonable protection. These cases require detailed investigation into the property’s history and the foreseeability of criminal acts.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd handles premises liability cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no upfront legal fees. We only collect a percentage of your settlement or judgment if we successfully recover compensation for you. This arrangement ensures you can pursue your claim without financial burden while recovering from your injuries. Our fee structure is transparent and established in writing before we begin work. You’ll understand exactly what percentage we’ll receive if successful, and we’ll discuss all costs and expenses associated with your case upfront.
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