80-year-old Carolyn was visiting a restaurant in Marietta, Georgia, with her son. She went to the bathroom and slipped and fell in a puddle of water inside the bathroom stall. She broke her hip and required surgery to repair it. When the restaurant denied responsibility for Carolynโs fall, she came to Ruppersburg Injury & Accident Attorneys for help. After nearly a year of litigation, Michael Ruppersburg, our Athens personal injury lawyer, secured a settlement from the restaurant. The settlement amount and name of the restaurant are confidential at the request of the defendant.
Carolyn’s Injuries
ย Carolyn broke her femur in the fall. Doctors determined she needed a hip replacement surgery to repair it. Because of her age, she spent several months after the surgery recovering in a rehabilitation facility. Sheย made a good recovery but now walks with a cane and is not as active and mobile as she used to be before her injury. Her medical bills from the surgery and rehabilitation were over $80,000.

Proving Responsibility In A Slip And Fall
To hold a business responsible in aย slip and fall case, you have to prove the businessย knewย orย should have knownย about the slip hazard. ย Here, we didnโt have any evidence that the restaurant knew about the water on the floor. Instead, we needed to prove that the restaurantย should have knownย about the water.
Georgia law requires businesses and property owners to keep their property reasonably safe for customers. This includes inspecting it for slip and trip hazards. If a business does not have an inspection routine to look for slip and trip hazards, the law says the business has โconstructive knowledgeโ of any hazards. Constructive knowledge means the businessย should have known aboutย the slip hazard.
The restaurant claimed it inspected the bathrooms every thirty minutes. However, the restaurant did not have any evidence or witnesses to prove it actually did so. We used the restaurantโs lack of an inspection routine to show it should have known about the water on the floor.
I found a former employee of the restaurant who cleaned up the bathroom after Carolynโs fall. He testifiedย that the restaurantโs bathroom cleaning checklist was blank and that the restaurant had not cleaned the bathroom that day. This was more evidence the restaurant did not have an inspection routine in place and should have known about the water on the floor.
Restaurant “Spoliated” Evidence By Not Saving Surveillance Video
We determined that the restaurantโs surveillance cameras would have recorded people walking in and out of the bathrooms. The surveillance footage would haveย been conclusive proof of when restaurant employees inspected and cleaned the bathroom.
However, the restaurant did not save any surveillance video from the day of Carolynโs fall. It didnโt save any despite the manager immediately investigating the fall, completing an accident report, reporting the fall to the restaurantโs corporate office, and reporting a claim to the restaurantโs insurance company.
Under Georgia law, the restaurantโs failure to save the surveillance video is โspoliation of evidence.โ This means that a jury can assume the destroyed evidence would be helpful to Carolyn and harmful to the restaurant.
The Settlement
We agreed to mediate the case shortly before it went to trial. We reached a settlement that fairly compensates Carolyn for her injuries and the impact theyโve had on her life.
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If you or a loved one is injured due to someone else’s negligence, Ruppersburg Injury & Accident Attorneys can help. Contact us today!