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Defining a Premises Lawsuit
Home :: Business :: Legal
By: Alan Haburchak Email Article
Word Count: 528 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

Premises liability law involves legal responsibility ("liability") of a land or property owner in injuries or other damages suffered by persons present on the premises.

Was the Plaintiff an Invitee, Licensee or Trespasser?

Premises law is predicated on the litigant's presence on the premises in question. Under legal terms the litigant is known as the plaintiff of a case. The property or premises owner is called the defendant for purposes of the premises liability lawsuit. While a defendant is always a defendant, the plaintiff is not always a plaintiff in premises law. Often, a plaintiff is titled in three varying ways, although this does depend on the defendent's legal duty to the plaintiff:

Licensee: A licensee was invited by the defendant to remain on or enter the premises in question for any non-commercial purpose. For example, a guest at a party is a licensee.

The owner of a premises is legally responsible for the damage incurred to a licensee if all three of the following circumstances are met:

* a licensee who could not forsee the danger that could befall them and the defendant did not warn of the preexisting dangers;

* The licensee did not know, could not have known, or did not have reason to know or realize that the condition and its associated risk(s) existed; and

* The owner did not exercise reasonable care in either rectifying the unsafe condition, or notifying the licensee of the condition and its associated risk(s).

* Invitee: If a defendent, otherwise known as the owner of the premises, attempts to garner personal gain that is indirectly linked to the defendant's commercial dealings or business from inviting the invitee who was harmed. For example, a patron of a business, such as a customer at a restaurant, is an invitee. A defendant owes his most stringent duty of care to an invitee as follows:

* The defendant has an obligation to protect or warn an invitee about his or her risks while on the premises if the risk is both unreasonable and the defendant realizes this.

In addition, the defendant may be obligated to periodically inspect the premises for hazards or dangers, such as a routine safety inspection in a store with high shelving.

Trespasser: A trespasser goes on the premises in question without permission of the defendant, not while performing any duty in relation to the premises owner. Trespassers, however, are not usually protected from premises liability as the defendent does not have a duty to warn the trespasser of unsafe conditions.

However, a defendant premises owner may be obligated to exercise reasonable or ordinary care in warning a trespasser if he or she is aware that the trespasser is present on the property in question.

Dealing With Managment Companies and Contractors?

Non-Delegable Duties: A premises owner often has non-delegable duties. That is, the presence of a contractor on the premises does not release the defendant from his or her liability in relation to those premises. For example, an apartment owner retains premises liability for that building, even if a management company or janitorial service actually does the repairs at the property.

Visit http://www.LegalView.com for more information on this and other topics ranging from the Singulair risks, which is found at http://singulair.legalview.com , to traumatic brain injury treatments to Nephrogenic Systemic Fibrosis jury verdicts.

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