Last Updated on March 16, 2026

Do I Have a Premises Liability Lawsuit?

You didn't expect to get hurt. Maybe you slipped on a wet floor at a grocery store, fell down a broken staircase at your apartment building, or were injured on someone's property because of something that should have been fixed a long time ago. Now you're dealing with medical bills, missed work, and a lot […]

You didn't expect to get hurt. Maybe you slipped on a wet floor at a grocery store, fell down a broken staircase at your apartment building, or were injured on someone's property because of something that should have been fixed a long time ago. Now you're dealing with medical bills, missed work, and a lot of uncertainty about what comes next. The first question most people ask is a simple one: do I actually have a case?

Premises liability law exists for exactly this reason. When a property owner fails to maintain reasonably safe conditions and someone gets hurt because of it, the law holds them accountable. But not every accident on someone's property automatically leads to a lawsuit. Whether or not you have a viable claim depends on a specific set of facts, and understanding those facts is the first step toward figuring out your options.

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This article walks you through what premises liability actually means, what you need to prove, and how to honestly assess whether your situation gives you legal grounds to take action.

Quick Checklist: Do You Have a Premises Liability Claim?

Before getting into the details, here's a plain-language checklist. If you can answer yes to all of these, it's worth speaking with a personal injury attorney.

  • You were lawfully on someone else's property (a store, apartment building, workplace, restaurant, or someone's home)
  • There was a specific, dangerous condition on that property, not just a random misstep or bad luck
  • The property owner, landlord, or manager either created that hazard or knew about it (or should have known about it) for a sufficient period of time to do something
  • That specific hazard directly caused your injury
  • You suffered real, documentable harm: medical treatment, lost income, lasting pain, or other damages
  • You are still within the legal deadline to file a claim

If you're unsure about any of these, keep reading. Each one is explained in detail below.

What Is Premises Liability, Exactly?

Premises liability is not a separate category of law so much as it's how ordinary negligence law applies to property. Any property owner or occupier has a legal duty to keep their space reasonably safe for the people who come onto it. When they fail to do that and someone gets hurt, they can be held responsible.

This applies to an enormous range of properties: retail stores, apartment buildings, private homes, restaurants, hotels, parking garages, construction sites, office buildings, and public parks, among others. The type of property matters less than whether the person responsible for it acted with reasonable care. If they didn't, and you were hurt because of it, premises liability law may give you a path to compensation.

It's also worth knowing that liability doesn't only fall on the owner of a property. Tenants, property managers, and even contractors can be responsible if they were the ones in control of the area where the hazard existed. The key legal concept is control, not just ownership.

What Do You Actually Have to Prove?

Like any negligence case, a premises liability lawsuit requires you to establish four things. Think of them as four doors you have to walk through before a court will award damages.

The first is duty. The person who owned or controlled the property owed you a legal obligation to keep it reasonably safe. This almost always exists if you were lawfully on the property.

The second is breach. That person failed to live up to their duty. Maybe they didn't fix a known problem, didn't inspect their property regularly, or didn't warn visitors about a hazard they were aware of. A reasonable property owner would have done something; this one didn't.

The third is causation. The unsafe condition must be the one that actually caused your injury. This is where cases can get complicated. It's not enough that there was a dangerous condition somewhere on the property. That specific condition has to be what hurt you.

The fourth is damages. You suffered real harm because of it. Medical expenses, lost wages, physical pain, and emotional distress all count. Without actual damages, there's nothing to recover.

What Counts as a Dangerous Condition?

This is one of the most common points of confusion. A dangerous condition is not just anything that made you fall or trip. Courts look for conditions that created an unreasonable risk of harm, meaning something that a reasonable person maintaining that property should have recognized and addressed.

A cracked sidewalk that has been deteriorating for months is a dangerous condition. A patch of black ice in an unshoveled parking lot is a dangerous condition. A broken railing on a staircase, a recurring puddle from a known leak, missing lighting in a hallway where people regularly walk at night: all of these qualify.

Compare that to something like tripping over your own feet on a perfectly maintained floor. That's an accident, but it's not the result of a dangerous condition the owner created or allowed to exist. The distinction matters enormously in court.

For cases involving stores or retail environments specifically, the rules around what counts as a dangerous condition and how long it has to exist before liability kicks in are especially nuanced. Slip and fall cases in stores and public spaces follow their own patterns worth understanding in depth.

Did the Property Owner Know About the Hazard?

Even if there was a dangerous condition, you still need to show that the property owner knew about it or should have known about it. This is called the "notice" requirement, and it's one of the central battlegrounds in most premises liability cases.

Actual notice means the owner or their employees had direct knowledge of the problem. A tenant complained in writing about a broken step. A manager saw water leaking from the ceiling. Staff walked past a spill repeatedly before someone fell. Any of these creates actual notice.

Constructive notice applies when the hazard existed for long enough, or recurred often enough, that a reasonably attentive property owner should have found it during regular inspection or maintenance. If a puddle forms in the same corner of a store every time it rains, the owner can't claim ignorance just because no one handed them a written complaint.

This is why evidence matters so much. Surveillance footage, time-stamped photos, maintenance logs, and witness statements all help establish how long a condition existed and whether the owner had a realistic opportunity to fix it. If you're ever hurt on someone's property, document everything you can, as soon as you can.

Where You Were and Why It Matters

Traditionally, premises liability law assigned different levels of protection depending on why you were on the property. The three categories were invitees (like customers in a store), licensees (like social guests at someone's home), and trespassers.

Customers and other business visitors historically received the highest level of protection, including a duty from owners to actively inspect for hazards and warn about risks. Social guests were owed a duty to be warned about known dangers, though owners weren't necessarily required to go looking for problems. Trespassers were generally owed very little, except that owners couldn't intentionally harm them.

In practice, New York courts today focus less on these rigid categories and more on whether you were lawfully on the property and what a reasonable owner would have done to protect people in your position. If you had any legitimate reason to be where you were, you likely had some level of protection under the law.

What If You Were Partly at Fault?

Property owners frequently argue that an injured person was careless too. Maybe you were looking at your phone, ignored a posted warning sign, or were wearing shoes that weren't appropriate for the conditions. These arguments don't automatically end your case.

New York follows a legal rule called pure comparative negligence. Under this rule, fault is assigned as a percentage. If a jury finds that the property owner was 80% responsible and you were 20% responsible, your compensation is reduced by your percentage. You can still recover even if you were significantly at fault.

That said, comparative negligence arguments are real and they do reduce what people receive. An experienced attorney can help you anticipate these arguments and build a case that addresses them directly.

What Kinds of Injuries Typically Lead to These Cases?

Falls are by far the most common source of premises liability claims. The CDC reported 47,026 deaths from unintentional falls in the United States in 2023 alone, with a rate of 14.0 per 100,000 people. For adults 65 and older, that rate jumps to 69.9 per 100,000, which is why property safety is treated so seriously under the law, especially in places frequented by older adults.

Beyond falls, premises liability cases also arise from negligent security situations where someone is assaulted because a property owner failed to maintain working locks, adequate lighting, or basic security measures in an area with foreseeable criminal activity. Pool accidents, toxic exposure to mold or chemicals, and injuries from falling objects or structural failures are also common.

The average premises liability settlement varies widely depending on the severity of the injury, the clarity of the owner's negligence, and the strength of the evidence. Minor injuries with shared fault tend to result in lower settlements. Severe injuries with clear evidence of long-standing neglect can result in significantly higher compensation. Speaking with an attorney is the only way to get a realistic picture of what your case might be worth.

How Long Do You Have to File?

In New York, the general statute of limitations for a personal injury claim, including premises liability, is three years from the date of the injury under CPLR Section 214(5). Missing this deadline almost always means losing your right to sue entirely, regardless of how strong your case is.

There is an important exception. If the property involved belongs to a government entity, such as a city, transit authority, or public school, the rules are significantly stricter. You may be required to file a Notice of Claim within 90 days of the incident before you can even pursue a lawsuit. This shorter window catches many people off guard, which is one of the most important reasons to speak with an attorney quickly after a government-property injury.

Even when the deadline seems far away, waiting works against you. Evidence disappears, witnesses forget details, and surveillance footage gets overwritten. The sooner you start the process, the better positioned you are.

What Evidence Strengthens Your Case?

Photos and video of the dangerous condition as it existed at the time of the incident are invaluable. If the property has surveillance cameras, an attorney can often send a preservation letter to prevent that footage from being deleted.

Incident reports filed at the scene, prior complaints made to the property owner or manager, and maintenance or cleaning logs showing that no one inspected the area are all powerful pieces of evidence. Witness statements from people who saw the condition or saw the accident happen help establish both the existence of the hazard and how long it had been there. Medical records that connect your injuries directly to the incident round out the picture.

The average premises liability settlement is influenced heavily by how well the case is documented. A claim supported by video showing a hazard that existed for hours before someone was hurt looks very different from a claim with no documentation at all.

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What Should You Do If You Think You Have a Case?

The honest answer is that you should talk to a personal injury attorney before drawing any firm conclusions. Premises liability cases look straightforward on the surface but involve layers of legal analysis around notice, control, causation, and comparative fault that aren't always intuitive.

At the Porter Law Group, we work with people across New York who have been injured on someone else's property and aren't sure where to turn. We can help you evaluate your situation, understand what your claim may be worth, and figure out the best path forward, without any pressure or obligation. If you were hurt in a store, a building, or any other property and something about it didn't feel right, it's worth a conversation. Reach out to us today. Fill out our online form, or call 833-PORTER9. You can also email info@porterlawteam.com to schedule your free consultation.

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Originally from Upstate New York, Mike built a distinguished legal career after graduating from Harvard University and earning his juris doctor degree from Syracuse University College of Law. He served as a Captain in the United States Army Judge Advocate General’s Corps, gaining expertise in trial work, and is now a respected trial attorney known for securing multiple million-dollar results for his clients while actively participating in legal organizations across Upstate NY.
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Eric, with nearly three decades of experience in personal injury litigation, holds a law degree with honors from the University at Buffalo School of Law and a Bachelor's Degree from Cornell University. His extensive career encompasses diverse state and federal cases, resulting in substantial client recoveries, and he actively engages in legal associations while frequently lecturing on legal topics.
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