In Parma, many incidents happen in places where residents and visitors are coming and going—apartment entrances, strip-mall storefronts, parking areas, and shared hallways. In these settings, the biggest question is usually whether the property should have expected a similar safety problem and took reasonable steps anyway.
Ohio premises liability law generally requires more than a showing that harm occurred. You typically need evidence that:
- the risk was foreseeable (not random or unforeseeable), and
- the property failed to take reasonable precautions under the circumstances, and
- that failure contributed to what happened.
When insurance adjusters or defense counsel push back, it’s often because they argue the property had no warning—or that the measures in place were enough. That’s why early evidence collection matters.


