Slip-and-fall accidents can happen in seconds, but the injuries and financial consequences may last for months or even years. Gary C. Johnson, P.S.C. has released new educational guidance to help Kentucky residents understand their rights after preventable falls and why preserving evidence early can make a significant difference in a premises liability claim. The firm serves injured clients throughout Eastern and Central Kentucky, including Pikeville, Lexington, Hazard, and surrounding communities.
Falls are among the leading causes of emergency department visits in the United States, with more than one million emergency room visits each year associated with slip-and-fall incidents. Victims may suffer hip fractures, broken wrists, traumatic brain injuries, spinal injuries, shoulder damage, and other conditions that require extensive treatment and rehabilitation. Even injuries that seem minor immediately after a fall can become more serious over the following days.
Many incidents occur because hazards are left unaddressed. Common causes include wet floors, leaking roofs, uneven sidewalks, loose flooring, damaged stairways, inadequate lighting, cluttered walkways, parking lot hazards, and icy entrances. Property owners of grocery stores, restaurants, apartment complexes, hotels, office buildings, shopping centers, hospitals, and other venues generally have a responsibility to maintain reasonably safe premises for visitors.
Under Kentucky premises liability law, a fall does not automatically mean someone else is legally responsible. However, if a property owner knew—or reasonably should have known—about a dangerous condition and failed to repair it or provide an adequate warning, an injured person may have grounds to pursue compensation. Every case depends on its own facts, making an early investigation important.
The firm recommends that victims seek medical attention promptly, report the incident, photograph the scene, preserve footwear and clothing, obtain witness information, request an incident report, and avoid recorded statements before understanding their legal rights. Surveillance footage and maintenance records can disappear quickly if action is delayed. For more information, visit https://garycjohnson.com.
Common questions include whether a claim can be filed if the victim slipped in a grocery store—possibly, if negligence contributed to the incident. The absence of adequate warnings may be an important factor. Delayed symptoms are common, so medical evaluation is important. Kentucky law may allow recovery even if the victim was partially at fault. Damages that may be available include medical expenses, rehabilitation costs, lost wages, diminished earning capacity, pain and suffering, and other documented losses.
Key takeaways include seeking medical care immediately, documenting the scene with photographs, reporting the incident promptly, preserving evidence whenever possible, and understanding one's rights before accepting a settlement. Gary C. Johnson, P.S.C. has represented injured Kentuckians for more than four decades and has recovered more than $300 million for clients in automobile accidents, trucking accidents, slip-and-fall and premises liability cases, wrongful death claims, and other serious injury matters.


