Premises Liability Areas

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Subin Law and the former Subin Associates.

Property owners, landlords, and building managers in New York City have a legal obligation to maintain safe conditions for everyone who enters their property. When they fail, and someone is seriously hurt, premises liability law provides a path to accountability. These cases cover a wide range of conditions and settings, from deteriorating sidewalks and defective stairways to negligent security and structural failures, but the legal framework stays consistent.
 
Subin Law represents people seriously injured in premises liability claims in New York City. These cases are complex. Multiple parties often share responsibility, evidence disappears quickly, and property owners and insurers act fast to protect their position once an incident is reported.
 

The Legal Standard

Premises liability in New York City is governed by a standard of reasonable care under New York common law. Property owners, landlords, and those controlling premises owe that standard to anyone lawfully on the property. Meeting it requires identifying a hazardous condition and correcting it within a reasonable time.
 
Liability comes into play when a responsible party creates a dangerous condition, has actual notice through a complaint or prior incident, or has constructive notice because the condition existed long enough for a reasonable inspection to find it. The statutes and standards vary depending on the property type, hazard nature, and who controls the conditions. These variables shape who is named, what evidence is required, and how the claim is built.
 

The Range of Cases

Premises liability claims arise across a wide range of settings and hazard types. Slip-and-fall accidents on wet or uneven surfaces, stairway failures, elevator malfunctions, ceiling collapses, defective sidewalks, negligent security, lead paint exposure, and winter ice and snow hazards all fall within this area of law.
 
Each category has its own legal framework, evidentiary requirements, and potentially responsible parties. A ceiling collapse case depends on building maintenance records and prior complaint history. A negligent security case depends on the foreseeability of criminal activity and the adequacy of security measures. And, a sidewalk case may involve a property owner, the City of New York, or both, depending on the type of property abutting the defect. Understanding which framework applies and building the case accordingly is where the legal work begins.
 

How These Cases Are Built

Premises liability claims depend on evidence from the outset. The condition that caused the injury, how long it existed, whether it was reported, and who was responsible for correcting it all require documentation. That documentation has a short window. Conditions are repaired, surveillance footage is overwritten, and the physical record of what caused an injury can disappear within days of the incident.
 
Property owners and insurers begin evaluating exposure immediately after an incident is reported. Every case at Subin Law is built for trial from the start, which means evidence is gathered and preserved before it disappears, and liability is established against every party who bears responsibility.
 

What These Cases Involve

Premises injuries include fractures, traumatic brain injury, spinal damage, hip injuries, and conditions that require surgery, extended rehabilitation, and long-term care. The full impact of a serious premises injury extends well beyond the first incident, affecting a person’s ability to work, move independently, and manage daily life.
 
Subin Law takes a limited number of serious cases so each receives focused attention and a strategy built around its specific facts. Consultations are free and confidential. No attorney fees are charged unless compensation is recovered.
 
Contact Subin Law to discuss your case.

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