In many burn cases, the dispute isn’t whether you were hurt—it’s how it happened and who should be held responsible. In New Haven, those questions frequently surface in these common settings:
- Residential and multi-unit buildings: Older plumbing, heating, and electrical systems can create hazards, and landlord/tenant responsibilities may be contested.
- Restaurants, retail, and hospitality: Hot oil, steam, grills, and kitchen equipment can lead to thermal burns—sometimes with missing or inconsistent incident documentation.
- Construction-adjacent work and property maintenance: Burns from hot surfaces, welding/grinding sparks, or chemical exposure can involve multiple parties (contractors, subcontractors, site owners).
- Public places with heavy pedestrian activity: Slip-and-fall adjacent hazards, kitchen/utility equipment in public-facing areas, and maintenance-related heat sources can contribute to incidents.
- Commuter and event-related foot traffic: If a burn happens during a busy public event or high-volume workplace shift, video, staffing logs, and eyewitness accounts can become crucial.
Because New Haven is dense and active, evidence is often time-sensitive. If you wait too long to gather documentation, the details insurers rely on can become harder to prove.


