
Kentucky Slip and Fall Laws: Proving Premises Liability
Kentucky slip and fall law: 1-year deadline (KRS 413.140), pure comparative fault, no open-and-obvious bar (Shelton 2013), and no natural-accumulation rule (Carter 2015).
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Kentucky slip and fall law: 1-year deadline (KRS 413.140), pure comparative fault, no open-and-obvious bar (Shelton 2013), and no natural-accumulation rule (Carter 2015).

Kansas slip and fall law guide: reasonable-care standard, open-and-obvious comparative factor, winter storm doctrine, 2-year SOL, K.S.A. 12-105b municipal notice, modified-50 fault rule.

Iowa slip and fall law: unified reasonable-care duty (Koenig 2009), open-and-obvious comparative, no natural-accumulation immunity, 2-year SOL, no government notice deadline.

Indiana slip and fall law guide: invitee duty, open-and-obvious as comparative fault, no natural-accumulation bar, 2-year SOL, 180/270-day Tort Claims Act notice.

Illinois slip and fall law: open-and-obvious bars claims, natural accumulation means no duty for ice/snow, 2-yr SOL (1 yr for government). Modified comparative fault 51% bar.

Idaho slip and fall laws explained: modified comparative negligence (50% bar), no open-and-obvious bar, no natural-accumulation immunity, 2-year SOL, 180-day government notice deadline.

Hawaii slip and fall law guide: modified-51 comparative fault, no open-and-obvious bar, no natural-accumulation rule, 2-year SOL, and 2-year county notice deadline.

Georgia slip and fall law under OCGA Section 51-3-1: proving owner notice, the Robinson two-prong test, open-and-obvious as comparative fault, no natural-accumulation immunity, 2-year SOL, and government notice deadlines.

Florida slip and fall law: Fla. Stat. § 768.0755 constructive-notice rule, 2-year SOL, modified 51% comparative fault, open-and-obvious doctrine, and government claim deadlines.

DC slip and fall law: pure contributory negligence bars any recovery if you share 1% fault. 3-year SOL, 6-month gov notice, natural-accumulation ice/snow rule explained.

Delaware slip and fall law: open-and-obvious is a complete bar, 2-year SOL, modified 51% comparative fault. Learn what you must prove to win your claim.

Connecticut slip and fall law: prove owner notice, navigate the ongoing-storm doctrine, 51% bar comparative fault, and a 2-year injury deadline (CGS §§52-572h, 52-584).