In a city like Commerce, properties can see heavy, recurring use—employees, tenants, visitors, deliveries, and contractors. That matters because many premises claims hinge on whether the responsible party knew or should have known about a hazard.
Common Commerce scenarios we see include:
- High-turnover apartment buildings where stairwells are cleaned frequently, but repairs to handrails or worn treads get delayed.
- Commercial properties with frequent deliveries where debris, torn matting, or clutter around landings becomes a “normal” condition.
- Work areas with public access (break rooms, lobbies, customer entrances) where the entity controlling maintenance argues the hazard was “temporary” or “not their responsibility.”
A strong claim doesn’t just describe what happened—it connects the unsafe condition to the responsible party’s duty to maintain safe premises.


