Ohio premises liability law holds property owners accountable for injuries caused by unsafe conditions on their property. Whether you were hurt at a store, restaurant, apartment building, or private residence in Riverside, The Henry Law Firm can evaluate your claim and fight for the compensation you deserve.
Property Owners Often Dispute Knowledge of the Hazard
The core of most premises liability defenses is: 'We didn't know the condition was dangerous.' Ohio law doesn't require actual knowledge — a hazard that existed long enough that the owner should have discovered it through reasonable inspection is enough. The Henry Law Firm builds evidence to establish what the owner knew or should have known.
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 Riverside, 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 Riverside
- 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
Ohio's attractive nuisance doctrine may impose liability on property owners in Riverside for injuries to children caused by hazardous features like unsecured pools, trampolines, or abandoned equipment — even if the child was technically trespassing. The Henry Law Firm evaluates attractive nuisance claims carefully because they often involve unique factual and legal issues.
Full Investigation of Property Owner's Duty and Breach
The Henry Law Firm examines the property owner's inspection schedule, maintenance records, prior incident reports, and regulatory compliance in every Montgomery County premises liability case — building a comprehensive picture of negligence.
Your Attorney: Eric Henry
Eric Henry is a seasoned Ohio trial attorney with over 15 years of courtroom experience. He has recovered more than $50 million for injury victims across the state and personally handles every case at The Henry Law Firm — you will never be passed off to a junior associate.
Eric and his team proudly serve residents of Riverside and Montgomery County from offices in Chagrin Falls and Cleveland.
What Our Clients Say
"Eric and his team are great. They get the job done and are very professional. If you want positive results in a timely manner, go with The Henry Law Firm." — Porschia A., Google Review
"Eric and his law firm are truly amazing — very professional, compassionate, empathetic, and communication is top tier. I was involved in a really bad car accident and they were there for me every step." — Tiara T., Google Review
Frequently Asked Questions
What is premises liability in Riverside, Ohio?
Premises liability is the legal principle that property owners and occupiers are responsible for injuries caused by dangerous conditions on their property. In Riverside, 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 Riverside
The Henry Law Firm handles a full range of personal injury cases for Riverside 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 Riverside from Our Ohio Offices
The Henry Law Firm serves Riverside and all of Montgomery 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 Montgomery County. Call (216) 302-9500 to schedule.
Injured on Someone's Property in Riverside? Call The Henry Law Firm.
Free case evaluation for Montgomery County premises liability victims. Call (216) 302-9500. No fee unless we win.
Content reviewed by Eric Henry, Esq. — Last updated April 2026.
