Richfield’s seasonal changes create predictable risk. In many property-injury cases, the “danger” wasn’t random—it was the result of conditions that property owners knew (or should have known) were likely to occur, such as:
- Slips and falls during freeze-thaw cycles (melted ice refreezing overnight)
- Wet floors and tracked-in snow in lobbies, entryways, and retail storefronts
- Uneven sidewalks, cracked pavement, or step/threshold trip hazards around homes and businesses
- Lighting and visibility problems in parking lots, shared drives, and building entrances
When injuries happen during these periods, insurers often argue the hazard was “temporary” or “obvious.” Your claim is stronger when you can show the condition existed long enough for reasonable notice and correction.


