Slip and fall cases are some of the most misunderstood in personal injury law. Just because you fell on someone else's property doesn't automatically mean they're responsible. To build a strong premises liability claim in Michigan, four elements generally need to be established:
- Duty of Care: The property owner had a legal obligation to keep the premises reasonably safe for you as a visitor.
- Breach of that Duty: They knew — or should have known — about the dangerous condition and failed to fix it or warn you.
- Causation: That breach directly caused your fall and your injuries.
- Damages: You suffered real, documented harm — medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering.
The critical battleground in most slip and fall cases is notice — did the owner know about the hazard? Evidence that helps prove this includes:
- Incident reports filed with the property
- Surveillance footage (request it immediately — it gets overwritten fast)
- Maintenance logs or prior complaints about the same hazard
- Witness statements from people who saw the condition before or after your fall
- Photographs of the scene taken as close to the time of the incident as possible
