Lawsuits When Someone is Injured in Your Home

What happens in these personal injury claims, according to New York attorneys

By Trevor Kupfer | Reviewed by Canaan Suitt, J.D. | Last updated on August 7, 2023 Featuring practical insights from contributing attorneys Sharon A. Scanlan and Cheryl Eisberg Moin

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Several years ago, an elderly woman who was staying at her daughter’s house slipped on the floor, which her daughter had mopped, and broke her hip. So she did what one does in such situations: She sued. 

“Sometimes it’s a little uncomfortable—I would say it’s a lot uncomfortable—because you don’t want to sue your child, your parent, or your friend,” says personal injury attorney Cheryl Eisberg Moin, at Hill & Moin, who represented the elderly woman in the lawsuit. “But that’s why people get insurance.”

Whether someone slips on an icy sidewalk, trips over an item atop basement stairs, or tumbles onto debris, an injury on private property falls under premises liability.

The injured party should seek medical assistance, then consult a personal injury lawyer or law firm. They may be able to collect for medical costs, plus damages like lost earnings and pain and suffering.

Meanwhile, as soon as they know about the accident, the property owners should notify their homeowner’s insurance company.

They look at the totality of the circumstances. If it’s a foot of snow, that takes time for a homeowner to clear. But if it’s a commercial building with a parking lot, they’d have less time to treat that condition because they know employees and shoppers are coming. What’s reasonable is on a case-by-case basis.

Sharon A. Scanlan

Document What You Can for Yourself (or Loved One)

“Evidence collection should be done early by the homeowner in order to protect themselves,” says Sharon A. Scanlan, a plaintiff’s attorney at Jacoby & Meyers. “After the lawsuit is started, oftentimes, the insurance company assigns an outside attorney to represent the homeowner.”

Now that cameras are more common outside properties, Scanlan recommends preserving footage. Premises cases are often not witnessed. “For a homeowner or a plaintiff, those tapes can be crucial,” she says. 

“The standard in New York is that it has to be a reasonably safe condition,” Scanlan continues. “One of the misconceptions is if you fall on ice—say, coming out of a friend’s home—that the homeowner is automatically responsible. That’s not necessarily the case.

The law allows a reasonable amount of time after a storm for a homeowner to take care of a dangerous condition. With weather, there is the ‘storm in progress’ defense that says, if it’s snowing or sleeting out and someone falls on your property, you’re generally not responsible because it’s not reasonable to expect someone to treat precipitation while it’s occurring.”

Somebody who’s coming in to rob you is looked at differently from neighbor kids coming over to play in your pool. If you have an invited guest or somebody you expect to come to your house, the standard’s going to be a lot higher. You know that a postal worker comes and delivers mail.

Cheryl Eisberg Moin

How Much Time Do You Have To Bring a Case?

“There’s no specific time set by the legislature or courts,” says Scanlan. “They look at the totality of the circumstances. If it’s a foot of snow, that takes time for a homeowner to clear. But if it’s a commercial building with a parking lot, they’d have less time to treat that condition because they know employees and shoppers are coming. What’s reasonable is on a case-by-case basis.

“For defective conditions—say, a raised or uneven sidewalk—there are two ways a premises owner can be held responsible. One example is if they created the condition—like they repaved and didn’t do a good job, or they have a drain that causes water to go over the pathway and it freezes. Another example is a condition that exists for a long enough time that a reasonable property owner should have known about it.”

This standard also applies to who is involved. “Somebody who’s coming in to rob you is looked at differently from neighbor kids coming over to play in your pool,” Moin says. “If you have an invited guest or somebody you expect to come to your house, the standard’s going to be a lot higher. You know that a postal worker comes and delivers mail.”

It all starts with insurance. It’s a good idea for a homeowner to have an excess/umbrella liability insurance policy, Scanlan says, because in New York, “an injured party is not limited in recovery to only available insurance. Sometimes the property owner’s personal assets can be exposed on an excess verdict.”

Read carefully; each insurance policy is different. Report an accident in a timely manner, Scanlan adds, to allow the insurance company the opportunity to investigate your claim. Otherwise, it could deny liability coverage.

“In New York, most plaintiff personal injury attorneys work on a contingency fee,” Scanlan says. “Therefore, an injured plaintiff should seek a no-cost opinion in order to protect their rights on a potential claim.” 

For more information on this area of law, see our overviews of personal injury and premises liability.

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