Premises liability cases arise when property owners fail to maintain safe conditions for visitors and guests. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we represent injured individuals throughout Asotin, Washington who have suffered harm due to hazardous property conditions. Whether your injury occurred at a business, residential property, or public facility, our legal team is prepared to pursue compensation on your behalf. We understand the physical, emotional, and financial toll these injuries can have on your life and work diligently to hold negligent property owners accountable.
Pursuing a premises liability claim protects your rights and ensures property owners maintain safe environments for the public. When negligent property maintenance causes injury, you deserve compensation for medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, and disability. Legal representation levels the playing field against well-funded property owners and insurance companies. Our firm advocates aggressively for fair settlements and, when necessary, takes cases to trial. We handle all aspects of your claim, allowing you to focus on healing and recovery while we pursue justice.
Premises liability law requires property owners to exercise reasonable care in maintaining safe conditions. This includes regular inspections, prompt repairs, proper warnings of hazards, and adequate security measures. Property owners may be held liable when they knew or should have known about a dangerous condition and failed to remedy it. The injured party must demonstrate that the property owner’s negligence directly caused their injury. Common scenarios include slippery floors without warning signs, broken stairs, inadequate lighting, falling objects, or failure to prevent foreseeable criminal acts on the property.
The legal obligation a property owner has to maintain safe premises and warn visitors of known hazards. This duty exists to prevent foreseeable injuries and protect public safety.
The failure to exercise reasonable care that results in injury to another person. In premises liability cases, this means the property owner failed to maintain safe conditions or provide adequate warnings.
A property condition that poses an unreasonable risk to children who might trespass. Property owners may face liability if they fail to protect children from known dangers like unfenced pools or abandoned equipment.
A legal doctrine allowing partial fault assignment to both the property owner and injured party. Washington law permits recovery even if the injured person bears some responsibility, though this reduces the final award amount.
Photograph the hazardous condition that caused your injury, including lighting, signage, and floor conditions. Collect contact information from any witnesses who observed the danger or your fall. Medical records documenting your injuries and treatment provide crucial evidence linking your condition to the property owner’s negligence.
Notify the property owner or management of your injury and request written acknowledgment. Keep copies of all reports, emails, and correspondence related to the incident. Written documentation establishes when the property owner knew about the condition and strengthens your liability claim.
Do not sign insurance documents or provide recorded statements without legal counsel. Preserve any physical evidence and avoid discussing your case on social media. Let our attorneys handle communication with insurance adjusters and defense counsel to protect your interests.
Severe injuries like spinal cord damage, brain injuries, or permanent disability require thorough investigation and aggressive advocacy. Insurance companies often undervalue serious injury claims and employ teams of adjusters and lawyers. Our comprehensive approach ensures your future medical needs, lost earning capacity, and pain and suffering receive appropriate compensation.
When property owners contest responsibility or argue you contributed to your own injury, skilled legal representation becomes critical. Insurance adjusters may falsely claim you were negligent to reduce their payout obligations. We conduct independent investigations, retain expert witnesses, and build compelling evidence to establish clear liability.
Some cases involve obvious negligence and minor injuries with straightforward medical expenses. When liability is undisputed and damages are modest, settlements often resolve quickly. However, we recommend legal review before accepting any offers to ensure fair valuation.
Occasionally, insurers acknowledge fault and offer reasonable settlements without litigation. Even in these scenarios, having an attorney review terms protects your interests and ensures nothing is overlooked. Our firm handles these efficient resolutions while maintaining your legal protections.
Falls on wet floors, broken stairs, or uneven surfaces are among the most common premises liability cases. We investigate whether proper warnings, maintenance, or cleaning protocols could have prevented your fall.
Property owners may face liability when foreseeable criminal activity occurs due to poor lighting, broken locks, or absent security measures. We establish that the owner knew of security risks but failed to implement reasonable protections.
Collapsing ceilings, defective railings, exposed electrical hazards, or structural defects causing injury warrant full investigation. We document the property owner’s knowledge of dangerous conditions and their failure to make repairs.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd brings decades of combined legal experience to every premises liability case we undertake. Our attorneys understand Washington property law, insurance tactics, and the negotiation strategies needed to maximize your recovery. We maintain relationships with investigators, medical professionals, and engineers who provide critical evidence in complex cases. From initial consultation through trial, we provide personalized attention and clear communication about your case’s progress. You benefit from our thorough, aggressive approach without bearing the financial burden of litigation costs upfront.
We genuinely care about your recovery and work tirelessly to hold negligent property owners accountable. Our track record includes successful resolution of slip and fall cases, inadequate security claims, and structural injury cases throughout Asotin and Washington. Insurance companies know our reputation for thorough preparation and courtroom competence, which often leads to favorable settlements. We handle all communications with adjusters, experts, and opposing counsel, protecting you from statements that might harm your case. Let us transform your injury into justice and fair compensation for your suffering.
Washington law allows three years from the date of injury to file a premises liability claim. This deadline, known as the statute of limitations, is strict and applies to most personal injury cases. Once this period expires, you lose the right to pursue compensation regardless of the strength of your claim. However, certain circumstances may extend or toll this deadline. For example, claims involving minors may have different limitations periods. We recommend consulting with an attorney immediately after your injury to ensure all deadlines are met and your rights are fully protected.
Yes, Washington follows comparative negligence rules allowing recovery even if you bear partial responsibility for your injury. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. For instance, if you were 20% at fault and awarded $100,000, you would receive $80,000. Insurance companies often exaggerate the injured person’s negligence to minimize payouts. Our attorneys investigate thoroughly to establish the property owner’s primary responsibility for creating or failing to remedy the hazardous condition. We present compelling evidence that shifts blame appropriately to the negligent property owner.
Premises liability damages include past and future medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, permanent disability, and loss of enjoyment of life. In cases of severe or catastrophic injury, damages can reach hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars. Punitive damages may also be available if the property owner’s conduct was particularly reckless or intentional. Each case’s damages depend on injury severity, treatment costs, lost earning capacity, and impact on quality of life. We work with medical professionals and economic experts to quantify all losses accurately. Insurance adjusters often undervalue pain and suffering and future medical needs, making skilled negotiation essential.
Property owners have a duty to inspect their premises and know about dangerous conditions affecting their property. We establish knowledge through multiple methods: surveillance footage, maintenance records, prior incident reports, and witness testimony about how long the hazard existed. A wet floor that just appeared moments before your fall presents a different liability picture than one existing for hours. If the dangerous condition should have been obvious through reasonable inspection, we argue constructive knowledge—that the owner should have known even without direct notice. Documentation of your injury report, photographs of the condition, and witness statements all contribute to establishing the owner’s knowledge of the hazard.
Different duty levels apply based on property type and visitor status. Business owners have heightened responsibilities to maintain safe premises and warn customers of hazards. Residential property owners have lesser duties to social guests but greater ones to invitees conducting business. Public property claims often involve governmental immunity defenses requiring specialized legal knowledge. Your status—customer, employee, social guest, or other—affects your claim’s strength. We analyze the specific circumstances and applicable law to determine the property owner’s duty in your situation. Regardless of location, we aggressively pursue compensation when negligence causes injury.
The decision to settle or litigate depends on your case’s strength, injury severity, and the insurance company’s willingness to offer fair compensation. Early settlement saves time and legal costs but may result in undercompensation. Litigation takes longer but often yields better results when liability is clear and damages are substantial. We evaluate settlement offers against potential trial outcomes and recommend the best course for your specific situation. If insurers refuse reasonable settlement proposals, we proceed to trial aggressively. Our litigation experience ensures you receive strong representation at every stage of your case.
Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd handles premises liability cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for you. Our fee is a percentage of your settlement or judgment, typically around 33% depending on case complexity and whether trial is necessary. You also don’t pay for investigators, medical experts, or other litigation costs—we advance these expenses upfront. This arrangement aligns our interests with yours and removes financial barriers to quality legal representation. You focus on recovery while we pursue justice without requiring upfront payment. Discuss specific fee arrangements during your free initial consultation.
Critical evidence includes photographs of the hazardous condition, surveillance footage, maintenance records, and witness statements. Medical documentation connecting your injuries to the fall or incident is essential. Prior incident reports showing the property owner knew about similar dangers strengthen your claim significantly. Security records, inspection reports, and building code violations demonstrate the property owner’s knowledge or negligence. Our investigation team gathers this evidence systematically and preserves it before it’s destroyed. We also retain engineers or safety professionals to review conditions and provide expert testimony about the property owner’s liability.
Worker injury claims typically fall under workers’ compensation rather than premises liability. However, exceptions exist if a third party property owner created the dangerous condition. For example, if you were injured on a client’s premises due to their negligence, you might pursue both workers’ compensation and a third-party claim against the property owner. We evaluate your employment status and circumstances to identify all available compensation sources. Some cases involve both workers’ compensation benefits and personal injury claims against negligent third parties. Understanding these distinctions maximizes your total recovery.
Premises liability cases typically resolve within six months to two years depending on injury severity and liability disputes. Clear liability cases often settle within months, while cases involving serious injuries or contested fault may require extensive investigation and discovery. Court schedules and case complexity also affect timeline. We manage every stage efficiently while ensuring thorough preparation. We keep you informed of progress and explain the strategic reasons for the timeline. Even during litigation, settlement remains possible and often occurs just before trial when all evidence has been exchanged.
Personal injury and criminal defense representation
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