
South Carolina Slip and Fall Laws: Proving Premises Liability
South Carolina slip and fall laws explained: open-and-obvious bars claims, modified-51 negligence, 3-year SOL, no ice/snow rule, and government claim deadlines.
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South Carolina slip and fall laws explained: open-and-obvious bars claims, modified-51 negligence, 3-year SOL, no ice/snow rule, and government claim deadlines.

Compare slip-and-fall premises liability laws across all 50 states and DC: negligence rules, open-and-obvious doctrine, ice and snow duty, and filing deadlines.

Rhode Island slip and fall law: pure comparative fault, no open-and-obvious bar (2019), Connecticut Rule for ice/snow, 3-year SOL, 60-day municipal notice (RIGL 9-20-4).

Pennsylvania slip and fall law: open-and-obvious is a no-duty bar, the hills-and-ridges doctrine limits ice claims, and the 51% comparative-fault rule governs recovery.

Oregon slip and fall law: modified-51 comparative fault, no open-and-obvious bar, no natural-accumulation immunity, 2-year SOL, 180-day government notice deadline.

Oklahoma slip and fall law explained: open-and-obvious bar, natural-accumulation ice/snow no-duty rule, 51% comparative fault, 2-year SOL, and GTCA notice requirements.

Ohio slip and fall law: open-and-obvious is a complete bar, ice/snow no-duty rule applies. 2-year SOL, 51% comparative negligence, non-economic damage caps explained.

North Dakota slip and fall law: 6-year SOL, modified-50 comparative fault, open-and-obvious as comparative factor, ice/snow rules, and 180-day state notice deadline.

NC slip and fall law: pure contributory negligence (1% fault bars all recovery), open-and-obvious absolute bar, 3-year SOL, and municipal charter notice traps.

New York slip and fall law explained: constructive-notice standard, open-and-obvious doctrine, storm-in-progress rule, 90-day NYC notice-of-claim trap, and pure comparative negligence.

New Mexico slip and fall law: pure comparative negligence, open-and-obvious abolished, no natural-accumulation rule, 3-year SOL, 90-day government notice of claim.

New Jersey slip and fall law: prove owner notice, navigate the commercial/residential sidewalk split, 51% bar comparative fault, and a 90-day government claim deadline.