Many injured people assume the case is only about what broke at the moment of the accident. In reality, Troy cases often hinge on whether the responsible parties had notice of a dangerous condition (or should have through reasonable maintenance and inspection).
That can include:
- A device that had been acting “off” before the injury (jerking, hesitating, unusual door behavior)
- Prior complaints from tenants, employees, or visitors
- Maintenance that was delayed, incomplete, or documented in a way that doesn’t match the problem
In New York, proving negligence typically requires connecting the dots between what was wrong, what should have been addressed, and how that led to your injury. The earlier your attorney can assemble the timeline, the better.


