How We Will Win Your Premises Liability Claim

We have literally completed hundreds of premises liability cases to a successful conclusion. A premises liability case or claim is an accident that occurs on property of any type. These types of accidents occur in a residential or office building, stores, restaurants, theatres, garages, vacant land, driveways, elevators, stairways, parks, schools, airports, etc.

Most premises cases or trip and fall/slip and fall cases occur due to poor maintenance, faulty plumbing, faulty electrical wiring, design defects, and negligently creating a dangerous condition.

The Law Offices of Nadrich & Cohen has a proven track record concerning premises accidents. Remember, the most common kinds of accidents are a slip and fall or a trip and fall, a fall in a disguised hole or oil slick, bad carpets, gap in tiles or a sidewalk, etc. Do not delay in seeking out a qualified law firm such as ours as otherwise the valuable time needed to investigate the claim while the dangerous condition is still present will be removed or rectified. Some property owners have surveillance cameras that may have videotaped your accident. We could obtain that videotape to show their responsibility. But, video files are only kept for a short period of time.

Therefore, we need to move quickly to preserve the video or the video evidence will be lost.

When we begin a premises liability case, we immediately obtain the name of the owner or management company or tenant notify them to establish a record of the accident.


We prove a premises case (slip and fall or trip and fall) as follows:

a. We show the nature of the condition that caused your accident.

b. We show whether or not the property owner had actual or constructive notice of that condition. Actual notice is when the property owner is directly aware that the dangerous condition existed. Constructive notice is an inference that the property owner should have become aware or became aware of the dangerous or defective condition because of the passage of sufficient time so that, in the exercise of reasonable case, the property owner should have discovered the condition.

c. Whether the property owner was responsible for the dangerous condition.