FELL ON SIDEWALK PERSONAL INJURY LAWYERS
Our personal injury attorneys recently settled a case for a woman who tripped on a sidewalk. The case was against a construction company that was working in the area.
This incident occurred at about 5:15 p.m. Our client was just out for a walk. She started from her house, intending to walk a few blocks through the neighborhood. When she started walking it was dusk out, and at the time of the incident it was just getting dark.
She was walking on the sidewalk along the north side of the street when her foot suddenly caught on something and she fell hard. What she caught her foot on was an insulation hose. The hose had been run across the sidewalk from a contractor’s truck. It went from the truck to a house the contractor was working on. The truck was parked on the street in front of the house. Therefore, the hose had to run across the sidewalk.
Unfortunately, the contractor took no safety precautions. Despite the hose being black, and the fact that it was dark out, there were no cones, lights, or reflector tape. Nothing to alert people walking on the sidewalk that there was a dark hose extending across the pathway. Nor were there any barricades or other barriers/fencing. In other words, there was nothing to keep pedestrians from walking into an area that was a clear trip hazard. Unfortunately, our client did not see the hose, so she tripped and fall, sustaining a serious injury.
ATTORNEYS TO SUE NEGLIGENT CONTRACTOR
Another woman, who was out for a walk with her dog, witnessed the incident. The witness described the hose as being black or blue, and about the size of a soup can in diameter. She states that given the lack of light, and no warning, the hose was very difficult to see. She was also nice enough to help our client get to the hospital.
The truck where the hose originated had the contractor’s name on it, and the hose extended across the sidewalk to a house the contractor was working on. Apparently, the contractor installs insulation in homes, and the hose was being used to get the insulation from the company truck to the house.
Fortunately, the evidence we gathered showed clear negligence by the contractor. The contractor should obviously not run a dark hose across a public sidewalk after dark – without warnings, lights, or barricades to keep people from tripping on it. Our accident injury lawyers take cases like this throughout Minnesota. If you are injured because a contactor created a dangerous situation, call us for a free consultation with an attorney.