When a person is injured on someone else's property, be it private or commercial, there are always questions as to who is responsible for those injuries. Is the property owner responsible because they did not properly maintain their property, or is the victim liable because they were not an invited guest?
When discussing reasonably safe conditions and how they apply to serious personal injury cases in Mt Kisco, it helps to understand all of the aspects of these types of cases and the different dynamics at work.
The first part of determining a personal injury case is deciding how to classify the injured party. How they are classified has a lot to do with whether or not there can even be a serious injury case. The different guest classifications are:
Visitors in any type of classification are expected to use reasonable caution when walking on a property. If the injury is the result of the victim being careless, then the property owner is not held liable. The same is said for obvious obstructions that the visitor should notice but either chooses not to or simply does not take the time to notice.
A property owner is expected to keep their property free from dangers, and they are expected to take sufficient steps to protect people from hidden dangers. For example, a stairway that cannot easily be seen upon approach needs to have warning signs or some other protection to let people know that there is a danger ahead.
The rules are different for commercial property owners and private property owners. While commercial property owners must be diligent in finding and taking care of potential dangers to visitors, residential property owners only need to attend to obvious dangers and warn of any hidden dangers that the property owner themselves had created. Commercial property owners are expected to do routine inspections of their property and take care of any obstacles, but they are not required to have a staff large enough to constantly monitor every part of their property around the clock.
The idea of creating reasonably safe conditions for a property depends on who you are and what kind of property you are visiting. A customer at a retail store falls into a different category than someone who is breaking into a home in the middle of the night. Both types of visitors should expect a safe property, but the law treats each differently in the event that a serious injury results from them being on that property.
In any case, should an individual suffer harm due to slip or trips on a property, it helps having legal guidance in order to identify the condition of the property they were on in order to determine liability.