Many Texans rent their living accommodations rather than owning. If you do, you are guaranteed the right to a healthy and safe living environment. Unfortunately, not all Texas landlords provide their tenants with reasonably safe living spaces, whether homes, apartments, condos or other habitations. When this happens, people can be injured as a result. If you have been injured in an apartment accident or injured due to the negligence of a landlord in another type of rental property, you can sue your landlord for getting hurt in many circumstances. However, landlords are not automatically liable for all injuries tenants suffer at their rental properties.
A personal injury lawsuit against a landlord can only be successful if you can prove that you were injured due to your landlord’s negligence, carelessness, and prove that they caused or contributed to the injuries through various types of evidence, including pictures or videos of the accident, medical records and bills, police reports or other government entity investigative documents, witness statements, and more. The tenant must show the landlord’s action or inaction naturally and foreseeably caused his or her resulting physical injury. Sometimes landlords can also be held legally responsible for injuries to guests or other people visiting the rental unit.
When a landlord’s behavior is the proximate cause of a tenant’s injury, a court can hold the landlord liable even if they didn’t intend any harm. An act or failure to act by the landlord can be considered the proximate cause of a tenant injury when an ordinary person could reasonably foresee that the landlord’s actions or inactions would cause the injury that occurred.
The theory of liability often used in rental property injury cases is called premises liability. Under this area of the law, your landlord has a duty to fix unsafe conditions when notified by a tenant and failed to do so. Important components of this type of personal injury case include:
Rental property accidents can be caused by any number of issues, though common causes can include broken staircases, defective or malfunctioning railings, broken or absent carbon monoxide/smoke detectors, damaged floors, asbestos, and more. In addition, landlords must comply with all applicable health and safety laws, and their failure to do so can be considered automatically negligent and make them liable for any resulting accidents and injuries.
If you are injured in an apartment or other rental property and the injury was caused by an unsafe condition, you must act quickly to ensure your rights are protected. Take the following immediate steps so you can sue your landlord for getting hurt:
Those injured in rental property accidents only have a certain amount of time to file a lawsuit against their landlord to recover financial compensation for their damages. In Texas, the statute of limitations for personal injury claims is two years from the date of the incident – meaning, an injury victim or the family of someone wrongfully killed only has two years from the date of the injurious event to sue a negligent landlord. Waiting longer than two years will most likely bar your right to seek or recover financial compensation.
The Weslaco, Texas personal injury trial lawyers of Ezequiel Reyna Jr. Law Office have over 40 years of experience handling cases like yours. We are proud to represent and serve the members of our community in both English and Spanish and to help you recover the financial damages you are due if someone else causes you harm.
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