Slips and Falls in Shopping Malls
Slips and Falls in Shopping Malls

Slips and Falls in Shopping Malls

The holidays are a time when more shoppers are out and about. This increased traffic in shopping malls, along with often wet conditions that customers track into stores can lead to more slips and falls in retail stores than usual. A slip and fall in a shopping mall or other store can be more serious than a trip at home because of the extremely hard surfaces that stores use as flooring. Waterhog Masterpiece mats

If you have suffered an injury from a slip and fall in a retail space, you may be wondering if you would be eligible for a personal injury claim. Each slip and fall case is different and you should contact a personal injury attorney who can examine the strength of your individual case. That being said, there are some general parameters concerning slips and falls that may make them eligible for a personal injury claim.

Negligence on the part of the property owner

For the shopping mall to be responsible for your slip and fall injury, you must be able to prove that the responsible party was negligent in maintaining a safe shopping environment. The responsible party may be the retail group, the shopping mall, or an outside management group. Your attorney can help you determine exactly who would be liable for your injury. For the responsible party to be liable, you must be able to prove that the management was aware of a potential hazard and failed to rectify the situation or that they otherwise failed in their duty to maintain a safe environment.

• If the store or shopping mall had a cleaning schedule, such as checking bathroom floors or entry ways for puddles, that it did not maintain (often these cleaning schedule are posted and must be initialed by employees when they have completed their cleaning round).

• The store did not maintain a safe entryway. Appropriate lighting is reasonable and if light bulbs were out and not replaced, the business might be liable for an entryway injury. Or if the store had entry mats that were very worn with rough edges sticking up, they might be liable.

• The store had unfinished displays, precariously stacked products, or other products that it was aware were a danger to pedestrians but that it failed to fix.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *