If you were injured on unsafe property, a South Jersey slip and fall lawyer can help you understand whether a property owner may be liable. Slip and fall accidents can happen in seconds, but the injuries can affect your health, work, mobility, and daily life.
In South Jersey, these accidents often happen in grocery stores, restaurants, apartment complexes, parking lots, sidewalks, office buildings, shore-area businesses, and public properties. A fall in Brick, Manasquan, Toms River, Cherry Hill, Atlantic City, Vineland, Camden, or another South Jersey community may involve wet floors, poor lighting, loose mats, uneven pavement, snow, ice, debris, broken handrails, unsafe stairs, or walkways. Our South Jersey attorneys at Kitrick, McWeeney & Wells, LLC can fight to protect your rights after a slip and fall.
For more than 30 years, Kitrick, McWeeney & Wells, LLC has represented injured individuals and families throughout New Jersey. Since 1991, our firm has been committed to helping clients navigate complex legal matters, including slip and fall accidents and other injuries caused by unsafe property conditions.
When someone is hurt because a property owner failed to maintain safe premises, our attorneys work to uncover the facts, preserve evidence, communicate with insurance companies, and pursue the compensation our clients may be entitled to recover for medical expenses, lost income, pain and suffering, and other damages.
The experiences of our past clients reflect the dedication and personalized attention we bring to every case. Below, you can read testimonials from clients who have shared their experiences working with our firm:
After a fall, report the incident to the property owner, store manager, landlord, supervisor, or person in charge. Ask whether an incident report can be completed, and request a copy if one is available. If you are able, take photos of the hazard, the surrounding area, your shoes, visible injuries, warning signs, lighting, and weather conditions.
You should also seek medical care promptly. Some injuries, including concussions, back injuries, soft-tissue injuries, knee injuries, and fractures, may not feel severe right away. A medical record can help connect your injuries to the fall. Avoid giving detailed statements to an insurance company before understanding your rights, because adjusters may ask questions in a way that shifts blame.
Liability may fall on the person or company responsible for controlling, maintaining, inspecting, or repairing the property. This may include a property owner, commercial tenant, landlord, store operator, maintenance company, cleaning company, snow removal contractor, municipality, or another party.
The key question is whether the responsible party failed to act reasonably. Did they know about the hazard? Should they have discovered it through routine inspection? Did they fix it, block it off, clean it up, or warn visitors? Those details can determine whether a claim is strong.
A slip and fall case usually requires evidence that the unsafe condition existed, that the responsible party knew or should have known about it, and that the condition caused the injury. Evidence may include photos, surveillance video, incident reports, inspection records, maintenance logs, employee statements, weather records, medical records, and witness testimony.
Timing matters. Surveillance footage may be erased. Employees may forget details. A dangerous condition may be cleaned, repaired, or removed. Kitrick, McWeeney & Wells, LLC handles slip and fall cases by reviewing the accident scene, identifying responsible parties, preserving evidence, and communicating with insurers. Will Wells’ certification by the New Jersey Supreme Court as a civil trial attorney adds a meaningful credential after a serious injury.
The value depends on the injury, medical treatment, missed work, long-term limitations, pain, available evidence, insurance coverage, and whether the injured person is being blamed. No lawyer can promise a specific result.
Our personal injury attorneys handle slip and fall cases on a contingency fee basis. This means attorney fees are typically paid only if compensation is recovered on your behalf.
Yes, in some cases. New Jersey uses comparative negligence. An injured person may recover damages if their share of fault is not greater than the fault of the responsible party or parties. However, compensation may be reduced by the injured person’s percentage of fault.
For example, an insurer may argue that you should have seen the hazard or that you were not paying attention. A South Jersey slip and fall law firm can respond by showing why the property condition was unsafe and why the responsible party failed to use reasonable care.
Slip and fall accidents can happen when a property is not reasonably maintained. Common causes include spilled liquids, tracked-in rain, icy sidewalks, uneven pavement, potholes, broken tiles, loose rugs, poor lighting, cluttered aisles, unsafe stairs, missing railings, and unmarked changes in floor height.
South Jersey has seasonal risks. Winter weather can create icy parking lots. Shore-area businesses may deal with sand, water, and heavy foot traffic. Older commercial properties may have cracked sidewalks, worn steps, poor drainage, or uneven flooring. A South Jersey slip and fall attorney can review whether the property owner knew or should have known about the hazard.
Slip and fall accidents can cause broken wrists, ankle fractures, hip injuries, knee injuries, shoulder injuries, back and neck injuries, concussions, spinal injuries, and soft-tissue damage. Older adults may face serious complications after a fall, including surgery, reduced mobility, and a longer recovery period.
Even a fall that seems minor at first can interfere with work, driving, household tasks, childcare, and daily routines. Some people need physical therapy, imaging, injections, or follow-up treatment. Others may lose income because they cannot perform their regular job duties.
A property owner may still be responsible if they should have known about the condition through reasonable inspection or maintenance. Evidence such as cleaning logs, employee statements, surveillance footage, weather records, and the condition of the hazard may help show how long the danger existed.
Most slip and fall claims in New Jersey must be filed within two years of the date of the accident. However, shorter deadlines may apply if a government entity is involved, so it is important to speak with an attorney as soon as possible.
Seeking medical attention is generally important both for your health and for documenting your injuries. Even if you have already started treatment, a lawyer can review your situation and explain your legal options.
Parking lot falls may involve potholes, ice, poor lighting, uneven pavement, faded curbs, debris, drainage problems, or poorly maintained walkways. Responsibility may depend on who owned, leased, managed, maintained, or controlled the lot.
Snow and ice cases depend on timing, weather conditions, maintenance responsibilities, and whether reasonable steps were taken to clear, salt, inspect, or treat the area. If you fell while working, you may have a workers’ compensation claim. If a third party contributed to the hazard, another claim may also be possible.
Many premises liability claims are resolved through settlement negotiations. However, if a fair resolution cannot be reached, your attorney may recommend pursuing the case through litigation.
A slip and fall accident can leave you dealing with pain, medical bills, missed work, and uncertainty about what comes next. Kitrick, McWeeney & Wells, LLC can review what happened, explain your rights, and help you understand your options. Call 732-920-8383 or fill out our online form to schedule a free consultation with a South Jersey slip and fall accident lawyer. With offices located in Manasquan and Brick, New Jersey, we serve clients across the state.
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