Every premises case is fact-specific, but these situations show up often in the Mount Pleasant area:
- Parking lot and sidewalk injuries: slick patches after weather changes, poorly marked repairs, or uneven surfaces near entrances where people rush between cars and buildings.
- Apartment/condo common-area falls: hazards in stairwells, hallways, or shared walkways—sometimes from deferred maintenance or inconsistent cleaning schedules.
- Weather-related trip-and-fall: snow/ice removal delays, inadequate salt/sand application, or meltwater pooling in shaded areas.
- Neighborhood construction and contractor work: loose debris, open access points, or barriers that weren’t properly maintained during ongoing work.
- Retail and service entrances: inadequate mat placement, missed spill cleanup, or lighting that makes hazards hard to see at dusk.
In each scenario, the question usually isn’t whether an accident happened—it’s whether the property owner acted reasonably to prevent known or reasonably foreseeable hazards.


