Slip and fall accidents in Phoenix and Peoria can cause serious injuries: broken hips, spinal damage, head trauma, torn ligaments, and permanent disabilities. Property owners—whether businesses, landlords, or homeowners—have a legal duty to maintain safe premises and warn visitors of hazards. When they fail in this duty and someone gets hurt, they can be held liable for medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and more.
Our network includes attorneys who specialize in premises liability cases. They know how to prove property owner negligence, overcome common defenses, and fight for maximum compensation even when businesses try to deny responsibility.
Our attorneys handle cases involving all types of dangerous property conditions.
Grocery stores, restaurants, and malls must clean up spills immediately and place warning signs. Failure to do so creates liability when customers slip and fall.
Cracked steps, loose handrails, poor lighting on stairways—property owners must maintain safe conditions and make repairs promptly.
Cracked sidewalks, potholes in parking lots, torn carpeting, and threshold height differences cause serious trip and fall injuries.
Inadequate lighting in stairwells, parking lots, and walkways creates dangerous conditions, especially at night.
While rare in Phoenix, rain creates slippery surfaces. Property owners must address water accumulation and provide adequate drainage.
Active construction or maintenance areas must be properly marked, cordoned off, and made safe for pedestrians.
Grocery stores, department stores, and malls have high foot traffic and frequent spills. We hold retailers accountable for maintaining safe shopping environments.
Wet floors, grease spills, and cluttered walkways in Phoenix and Peoria restaurants create serious hazards for customers and staff.
Commercial property owners must maintain safe lobbies, stairwells, elevators, and parking structures for tenants and visitors.
Landlords and hotel operators have a duty to maintain safe common areas, walkways, pools, and parking lots.
Hospitals, clinics, and nursing homes must maintain safe environments for patients who may have mobility challenges.
Homeowners who invite guests onto their property have a duty to warn of dangerous conditions or make repairs.
Property owners often try to blame the victim. Our attorneys know how to prove negligence by establishing:
We prove the owner knew (or should have known) about the dangerous condition through maintenance logs, employee testimony, and previous complaints.
We demonstrate the hazard existed long enough that the property owner had reasonable opportunity to discover and correct it.
If the hazard couldn't be immediately fixed, the owner had a duty to warn visitors with signs, barriers, or other precautions.
We show the dangerous condition wasn't open and obvious to a reasonable person exercising ordinary care.
Notify the property owner, manager, or staff and insist they create an official incident report. Get a copy.
Take photos of the hazard, your injuries, and the surrounding area. Get contact information from witnesses.
See a doctor immediately even if you feel okay. Some injuries like concussions and internal bleeding aren't immediately apparent.
Keep the shoes and clothing you were wearing. Don't give statements to property owners or their insurance companies.
Premises liability cases are complex. Property owners have legal teams—you need one too. Call (928) 538-9508.
Insurance companies monitor social media. Anything you post can be used to devalue or deny your claim.
Property owners must be held accountable. Get connected with experienced premises liability attorneys who fight for your rights.
Free consultations. No fee unless we win. Available 24/7.