If you were injured on someone else's property in Doylestown or Wayne County, you may have a premises liability claim. Ohio law establishes clear standards for property owner duty of care — and The Henry Law Firm has the experience to hold owners who fall short of those standards fully accountable.
Negligent Security Can Turn a Property Into a Crime Scene
When a property owner in Doylestown fails to provide adequate security — working locks, lighting, security personnel — and a violent crime occurs on the premises, the owner may be liable for the victim's injuries. Negligent security cases require both personal injury and premises liability expertise.
What is Premises Liability?
Premises liability is an area of personal injury law that holds property owners and occupiers responsible for injuries caused by unsafe conditions on their property. In Doylestown, this can include hazards at retail stores, restaurants, apartment buildings, parking garages, office buildings, private homes, and public sidewalks.
Ohio's Duty of Care Standards
Ohio courts use a classification system to determine the level of care owed to visitors:
- Invitees (shoppers, customers, business visitors) — owed the highest duty; owners must regularly inspect the property, discover hidden hazards, and either fix them or provide adequate warnings
- Licensees (social guests) — owners must warn of known dangerous conditions that the guest is unlikely to discover on their own
- Trespassers — generally owed no duty, with a critical exception: the attractive nuisance doctrine protects children injured by unsecured pools, trampolines, and similar hazards
Common Premises Liability Cases in Doylestown
- Slip, trip, and fall accidents on wet floors, icy walkways, or uneven surfaces
- Inadequate or negligent security leading to assaults and robberies
- Swimming pool accidents — drowning, diving injuries, drain entrapment
- Elevator and escalator malfunctions
- Falling objects — merchandise, ceiling tiles, signage
- Toxic chemical exposure — cleaning chemicals, carbon monoxide, mold
- Amusement park and recreational facility injuries
- Construction site hazards affecting visitors or bystanders
Proving a Premises Liability Claim in Ohio
To succeed in a premises liability case, you must establish four elements:
- The defendant owned, leased, occupied, or controlled the property
- A dangerous condition existed on the property
- The defendant knew or should have known about the hazard and failed to fix it or warn about it
- The dangerous condition directly caused your injuries
Government entities — the city of Doylestown, Wayne County, school boards, and state agencies — can be held liable for premises injuries on public property, but the rules are different. Claims against government defendants often require shorter notice periods (sometimes 6 months) and follow specific procedural rules. Contact The Henry Law Firm promptly if your premises injury occurred on government property.
Experience with All Types of Premises Claims
The Henry Law Firm handles the full range of premises liability cases in Doylestown: slip and fall, negligent security, swimming pool accidents, elevator/escalator injuries, toxic exposure, and construction site hazards. Our breadth of experience means we know how to build each type of case.
Your Attorney: Eric Henry
Personal injury cases are not won by volume — they're won by preparation, persistence, and experience. Eric Henry brings all three to every case at The Henry Law Firm, with $50M+ recovered to prove it.
Eric and his team proudly serve residents of Doylestown and Wayne County from offices in Chagrin Falls and Cleveland.
What Our Clients Say
"The Henry Law Firm was a very pleasant experience. Mr. Henry was very pleasant and honest. The firm always responded when I had any questions or concerns. I highly recommend." — Tashea R., Google Review
"I was nervous to hire a lawyer but The Henry Law Firm made it very easy and took care of me every step. Eric really cared about my case. I wouldn't hesitate to call them if I need anything in the future." — Mika D., Google Review
Frequently Asked Questions
What is premises liability in Doylestown, Ohio?
Premises liability is the legal principle that property owners and occupiers are responsible for injuries caused by dangerous conditions on their property. In Doylestown, this applies to homeowners, businesses, landlords, and government entities that fail to maintain safe conditions for visitors.
What duty of care does a property owner owe in Ohio?
Ohio law distinguishes between invitees (owed the highest duty — property owners must actively discover and fix hazards), licensees (must be warned of known hazards), and trespassers (generally owed no duty, with exceptions for children under the attractive nuisance doctrine).
What types of injuries are covered by premises liability?
Premises liability covers any injury caused by a dangerous condition on someone's property, including slip and fall injuries, inadequate security assaults, swimming pool accidents, elevator/escalator injuries, toxic exposure, and dog bites occurring on the property.
Other Practice Areas in Doylestown
The Henry Law Firm handles a full range of personal injury cases for Doylestown residents. Explore our other practice areas:
Car Accident Lawyer
Truck Accident Lawyer
Motorcycle Accident Lawyer
Medical Malpractice Lawyer
Wrongful Death Lawyer
Nursing Home Abuse Lawyer
Slip and Fall Lawyer
Bicycle Accident Lawyer
Serving Doylestown from Our Ohio Offices
The Henry Law Firm serves Doylestown and all of Wayne County from two convenient locations:
- 8401 Chagrin Road, Suite 18, Chagrin Falls, OH 44023
- 850 Euclid Ave, Suite 1012, Cleveland, OH 44114
We offer free consultations by phone, video, or in person. If your injuries prevent you from traveling, we can come to you anywhere in Wayne County. Call (216) 302-9500 to schedule.
Premises Liability Consultation — Free for Doylestown Residents
Find out if you have a claim. The Henry Law Firm evaluates all types of property injury cases in Doylestown and Wayne County. Call (216) 302-9500 today.
Content reviewed by Eric Henry, Esq. — Last updated April 2026.
