Slip and fall accidents can happen anywhere, leaving victims with serious injuries and mounting medical expenses. At Law Offices of Greene and Lloyd, we understand the physical pain and financial burden these incidents create. Our team is dedicated to helping Prosser residents navigate their personal injury claims with compassionate guidance and thorough legal representation. Whether you slipped on a wet floor, tripped on a broken walkway, or fell due to poor maintenance, we’re here to fight for your rights and fair compensation.
Slip and fall cases require understanding property liability laws and insurance negotiation tactics. Without proper legal representation, victims often settle for far less than their claims are worth. Our attorneys protect your interests by documenting injuries, calculating true damages, and countering insurance company tactics designed to minimize payouts. We provide essential guidance on statute of limitations, liability standards, and comparative fault rules. Having skilled legal representation significantly increases your chances of obtaining fair compensation and holding negligent property owners accountable for their failures.
Slip and fall claims are governed by premises liability law, which holds property owners and managers responsible for injuries caused by unsafe conditions. To establish liability, your case must demonstrate that the owner knew or should have known about the hazard, failed to fix it or warn visitors, and this negligence directly caused your injury. Evidence is critical—photographs of the accident scene, maintenance records, witness statements, and medical documentation all strengthen your claim. Understanding these legal elements is essential for building a compelling case that demonstrates negligence.
The legal responsibility property owners have to maintain safe premises and protect visitors from foreseeable hazards. This includes repairing dangerous conditions, maintaining flooring, removing obstacles, and warning of existing dangers.
The failure to exercise reasonable care that results in injury to another person. In slip and fall cases, negligence occurs when a property owner fails to maintain safe conditions or warn of dangers.
The legal obligation property owners have to maintain their premises in reasonably safe condition. This duty varies depending on whether the injured person was an invitee, licensee, or trespasser.
A legal principle that determines how liability is split between parties when both share responsibility for an accident. Your recovery may be reduced by your percentage of fault in Washington.
Take photographs and videos of the accident scene from multiple angles, capturing the hazardous condition and surrounding area. Preserve your clothing and shoes as evidence, and obtain written statements from witnesses with their contact information. Keep detailed records of all medical treatment, prescriptions, and expenses related to your injury.
Notify the property owner or manager immediately and request a formal incident report be filed. Request copies of this report and any surveillance footage from the location. Formal documentation creates an official record of the accident and establishes the property owner’s knowledge of the incident.
Even if injuries seem minor, obtain medical evaluation to document the extent of harm. Medical records establish the direct connection between the fall and your injuries. Early medical documentation also supports your claim against insurance company arguments that injuries developed later.
Slip and falls resulting in broken bones, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, or requiring surgery demand comprehensive legal representation to secure adequate compensation. Medical costs, ongoing therapy, lost earning capacity, and diminished quality of life require detailed damage calculations that insurance adjusters typically undervalue. Our attorneys engage medical professionals and economic experts to establish the true cost of your injuries.
When property owners dispute their responsibility or argue comparative fault, thorough investigation and skilled negotiation become critical to your case’s success. Complex scenarios involving multiple potential hazards, unclear maintenance responsibility, or ambiguous warning signs require legal analysis and presentation. Our team uncovers evidence that clearly demonstrates negligence and counters defense arguments.
Falls resulting in minor bruises or sprains with obvious liability—such as ice buildup in winter or clearly unmarked wet floors—may settle more quickly. When the property owner’s negligence is obvious and injuries are minor, insurance companies often settle faster. However, even minor falls can develop into serious conditions, so careful medical evaluation remains important.
Some property owners and insurers promptly acknowledge responsibility and process claims fairly, requiring less legal intervention. When all parties cooperate and damages are straightforward, claim resolution may occur without extensive litigation. Still, having legal guidance ensures you understand settlement offers and don’t accept inadequate compensation.
Wet floors from mopping, spilled products, and inadequate warning signs are common in retail and food service establishments. Broken tiles, loose carpet, and poor lighting in storage areas also create hazardous conditions.
Ice and snow accumulation on sidewalks, parking lots, and building entrances cause numerous falls in winter months. Property owners must maintain these areas or warn of dangers—failure to do so creates liability.
Cluttered walkways, broken stairs, torn flooring, and inadequate handrails in workplaces and rental properties lead to serious injuries. Landlords and employers have clear duties to maintain safe conditions.
Our firm brings years of experience handling personal injury cases throughout Benton County and the greater Washington region. We understand local property liability laws and have established relationships with medical professionals, investigators, and expert witnesses essential to building strong cases. Our attorneys combine aggressive advocacy with compassionate client service, ensuring you receive both legal excellence and personal attention during difficult times.
We work on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay nothing unless we recover compensation for your injuries. This approach aligns our interests directly with yours—we succeed only when you receive fair settlement or verdict. Our commitment includes thorough investigation, skilled negotiation with insurance companies, and willingness to litigate when necessary to protect your rights.
Premises liability is a legal principle requiring property owners to maintain safe premises and protect visitors from foreseeable hazards. This duty extends to fixing dangerous conditions, regularly inspecting property, and warning visitors of existing dangers. In your slip and fall case, premises liability law establishes that the property owner is responsible for the hazardous condition that caused your injury. To win a premises liability claim, you must prove four elements: the property owner owed you a duty of care, they breached this duty by failing to maintain safe conditions or warn of dangers, this breach directly caused your fall, and you suffered damages as a result. Our attorneys gather evidence demonstrating each element and build compelling cases that hold negligent property owners accountable.
Washington imposes a three-year statute of limitations for personal injury lawsuits, meaning you must file your case within three years of the accident date. However, acting quickly is essential—evidence deteriorates, witnesses’ memories fade, and surveillance footage is often deleted. Prompt action allows us to preserve critical evidence and file claims with property owners’ insurance before deadlines.
You can recover compensatory damages including medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, lost wages, pain and suffering, permanent disability, disfigurement, and reduced quality of life. In cases involving gross negligence or intentional conduct, punitive damages may also be available. Our attorneys calculate damages comprehensively, ensuring insurance companies understand the full scope of your losses.
Most slip and fall cases settle through negotiations with insurance companies before reaching trial. Settlement allows faster resolution and guaranteed compensation. However, if insurance companies refuse fair offers or deny liability, we’re prepared to litigate aggressively. Our trial experience ensures property owners and insurers take our cases seriously during settlement negotiations.
Proving negligence requires demonstrating the property owner knew or should have known about the hazardous condition and failed to address it. Evidence includes photographs of the hazard, maintenance records, prior complaints, witness statements, and security footage. Expert testimony often shows industry standards requiring property maintenance and inspection protocols.
Washington follows a comparative fault system where recovery is reduced by your percentage of fault. If you were 20% at fault and entitled to $100,000, you’d recover $80,000. Our defense of comparative fault claims involves demonstrating the hazard was not obvious, you exercised reasonable care, and the property owner’s negligence was the primary cause.
We represent slip and fall clients on a contingency fee basis, meaning there are no upfront legal fees. We’re paid from settlement or verdict funds, typically receiving a percentage of recovered compensation. This arrangement ensures you pay nothing unless we successfully recover damages for your injuries.
Critical evidence includes photographs and videos from the accident scene showing the hazard, your injuries immediately afterward, medical records documenting treatment and diagnosis, witness contact information and statements, incident reports filed with the property owner, and expert analysis of the hazard and industry standards.
While immediate reporting strengthens claims significantly, you can still pursue cases even if you delayed reporting. However, delays allow property owners to clean hazardous conditions and dispute what existed when you fell. Prompt action preserves evidence and supports your account of what caused the accident.
Seek immediate medical attention to document injuries, even if they seem minor. Take photographs and videos of the accident scene from multiple angles. Report the incident to the property owner or manager and request an incident report. Obtain witness contact information and written statements. Preserve your clothing and shoes as evidence. Document all expenses related to medical treatment and recovery.
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