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California Slip and Fall Lawyer Referrals

  • Writer: JC Serrano | Founder - LRIS # 0128
    JC Serrano | Founder - LRIS # 0128
  • Apr 20
  • 8 min read

Last updated: April 2026 — Reflects California Civil Code § 1714, CACI 1000 premises liability instruction, and controlling case law on constructive notice and the trivial defect doctrine in effect as of January 1, 2026


Slip and fall cases are among the most commonly filed personal injury claims in California and among the most contested. The underlying theory is straightforward — a property owner failed to maintain the premises in a reasonably safe condition, and that condition caused injury — but the proof framework is substantially more demanding than most plaintiffs expect.


California courts have developed two doctrines that make these cases unusually defensible for property owners: the constructive notice requirement, which demands evidence of how long a dangerous condition existed, and the trivial defect doctrine, which bars recovery for injuries caused by minor surface irregularities.


This section covers the statutory and case-law framework governing slip-and-fall claims in California, the proof issues that most often determine outcomes, and the evidentiary steps that protect claim value.


For the broader premises liability framework — landowner duty categories, dog bite strict liability, negligent security, swimming pool safety, and the Rowland v. Christian unified duty analysis — see California Premises Liability Lawyer Referrals.


California Slip and Fall Lawyer

The CACI 1000 Elements


Slip and fall claims are governed by the general premises liability framework codified in Civil Code § 1714, which imposes a duty of reasonable care on all Californians for their own conduct and their management of property. The


California Supreme Court's decision in Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d 108 unified premises liability under a general negligence framework, eliminating the common-law distinctions between invitees, licensees, and trespassers.


The Judicial Council of California Civil Jury Instructions, CACI 1000, sets out the elements a plaintiff must prove: the defendant owned, leased, occupied, or controlled the property; the defendant was negligent in the use or maintenance of the property; the plaintiff was harmed; and the defendant's negligence was a substantial factor in causing the harm.


The harder question in practice is what "negligence in the use or maintenance of the property" means — and the answer turns on notice.


Notice: The Central Battleground


A property owner is liable for injury caused by a dangerous condition only if the owner had actual knowledge of the condition, or if the condition existed long enough that the owner should have discovered it through reasonable inspection. This is the constructive notice requirement, and it is where most slip-and-fall cases are won or lost.


The controlling California Supreme Court authority is Ortega v. Kmart Corp. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 1200, which held that speculation about how long a spill existed is insufficient — the plaintiff must present evidence from which the jury can reasonably infer the condition was present long enough to impose constructive notice.


Notice Requirements — Actual vs. Constructive


Element

Actual Notice

Constructive Notice

Definition

Defendant knew about the dangerous condition

Defendant should have discovered it through reasonable inspection

Proof standard

Direct evidence of defendant's knowledge

Evidence that the condition existed long enough that a reasonable owner would have found it

Typical evidence

Prior customer complaints, employee observations, incident reports, warnings issued, defendant's own records of the hazard

Surveillance video, inspection logs, employee schedules, dried or aged condition of the substance, witness testimony on duration

Proof difficulty

Low when evidence exists — usually leads to early settlement

High — most slip and fall cases turn on constructive notice disputes

Defense strategy

Dispute that employees saw or should have seen the hazard; challenge prior-incident relevance

Argue insufficient time elapsed; challenge quality of circumstantial evidence

Controlling authority

Rowland v. Christian (1968) 69 Cal.2d 108

Ortega v. Kmart Corp. (2001) 26 Cal.4th 1200


The practical consequence of Ortega is that early evidence preservation is critical. Surveillance video is typically overwritten within days or weeks. Employee scheduling, inspection records, and incident reports must be demanded before they become unavailable.


A preservation letter served within days of the incident is standard practice in any slip-and-fall matter with significant damages.


The Trivial Defect Doctrine


California recognizes the trivial defect doctrine — a defense holding that a property owner is not liable for injuries caused by minor, insignificant defects in walking surfaces.


The doctrine originated in Ness v. City of San Diego (1956) and has been reaffirmed in Caloroso v. Hathaway (2004) 122 Cal.App.4th 922 and Stathoulis v. City of Montebello (2008) 164 Cal.App.4th 559.


The analysis is not purely dimensional — courts also consider surrounding circumstances such as lighting, concealment, and foot-traffic patterns — but the basic rule is that not every surface irregularity supports a premises liability claim.


Trivial Defect Thresholds in California Case Law


Defect Type

General Benchmark

Key Considerations

Sidewalk vertical displacement

Often trivial if under ¾ inch

Size alone is not dispositive; lighting, debris, and foreseeability matter

Pavement cracks and depressions

Typically trivial if shallow and minor

Trip-inducing edges and width of the defect weigh against triviality

Indoor floor surface irregularities

Minor irregularities generally trivial

Commercial settings with foreseeable foot traffic receive closer scrutiny

Aggravating circumstances

Can defeat triviality at any dimension

Inadequate lighting, concealment by debris, prior complaints, heavy foot traffic, obstructed sightlines

Who decides

Court on summary judgment or jury at trial

Courts apply triviality as a matter of law when the defect is "clearly trivial"; jury questions arise with close calls


The trivial defect doctrine is most often invoked in municipal sidewalk cases and commercial property cases involving minor pavement or flooring deviations.


Plaintiff counsel's response is typically a combination of precise measurement (a defect only slightly above the "trivial" threshold), evidence of aggravating circumstances (inadequate lighting, concealment by debris, prior complaints), and expert testimony on industry safety standards, including ADA-adjacent guidance.


Mode of Operation Cases


A subset of slip-and-fall cases proceeds under the mode-of-operation theory—the argument that a specific business practice creates a foreseeable risk of dangerous conditions, eliminating the need to prove constructive notice of the specific incident.


Self-service produce displays, buffet restaurants, ice-vending areas, and self-serve beverage stations are classic examples.


If the business model itself creates foreseeable floor hazards, the plaintiff can argue that the property owner's duty of reasonable care requires specific preventive measures — non-slip matting, frequent inspection schedules, and employee training — without proving how long the specific condition existed.


Mode of operation claims are more difficult to defeat on summary judgment because the proof shifts from "when did this spill occur" to "what reasonable preventive measures did the business implement for the foreseeable risk."


Courts have been receptive to the theory in grocery store, big-box retail, and restaurant contexts, particularly where industry standards or the defendant's own safety manuals call for the preventive measures the defendant failed to take.


Comparative Fault in Slip and Fall Cases


California's pure comparative fault rule applies in slip and fall cases. Defense counsel routinely argues comparative fault based on the plaintiff's inattention, footwear, familiarity with the premises, or failure to observe "open and obvious" conditions.


Plaintiff counsel rebuts with evidence of the specific circumstances — lighting conditions, distraction by merchandise displays, the presence of other hazards, and the property owner's failure to warn.


The "open and obvious" doctrine is particularly contested. California has moved away from the rule that an open-and-obvious hazard automatically bars recovery; the current framework treats obviousness as one factor in the comparative fault analysis rather than an absolute defense. A plaintiff found 30% at fault for inattention still recovers 70% of the total damages.


Damages


Slip and fall cases recover the standard categories of California personal injury damages. Hip fractures, wrist fractures, knee injuries, and traumatic brain injuries from falls are the most common serious injury patterns — particularly in elderly plaintiffs.


A hip fracture in a 75-year-old plaintiff routinely produces $1 million or more in medical damages before non-economic damages are considered. Concussive injuries and delayed-onset brain injuries are frequent and underdiagnosed in the initial emergency room evaluation.


California imposes no cap on economic or non-economic damages in ordinary slip-and-fall cases. For particularly severe falls producing traumatic brain injury, spinal cord injury, or permanent disfigurement, the damages framework matches that of catastrophic injury litigation, and life care planning becomes central to case valuation.


Statute of Limitations


Two years from the date of injury under Code of Civil Procedure § 335.1. Claims against government entities — falls on public sidewalks, in government buildings, on transit platforms, or in public recreational facilities — require a six-month administrative notice under the Government Claims Act.


Missing the six-month window permanently bars the claim, which makes prompt case evaluation essential whenever a fall occurs on public property.


What to Do After a California Slip and Fall


Document the scene immediately. Photograph the hazard, the surrounding area, lighting conditions, and any warnings or absence of warnings. Capture the defect's dimensions using a reference object — a coin, a phone, or a tape measure. Identify witnesses and obtain their contact information before they leave.


Report the incident to the property owner or manager and request a written incident report. Incident reports create a contemporaneous record and help establish actual notice when later combined with prior complaints. Request a copy — some property owners attempt to withhold it, which becomes an evidentiary fight worth having during litigation.


Seek medical evaluation promptly, even if injuries seem minor. Slip and fall injuries — particularly concussions, soft tissue damage, and hip injuries — often worsen over days or weeks. Treatment gaps are a frequent defense argument on causation and damages.


Preserve physical evidence. If footwear was a factor, retain the shoes in the post-fall condition. If a substance on the floor caused the fall, photograph it before any cleanup occurs.


Do not give recorded statements to the property's liability insurer. Commercial carriers are particularly aggressive about securing recorded statements that later form the basis of comparative fault arguments.


Retain counsel promptly to serve preservation letters before surveillance video is overwritten or inspection records are lost. For the broader premises liability framework and other property-injury categories, see California Premises Liability Lawyer Referrals.

California Slip and Fall Lawyer Referrals

Frequently Asked Questions


What do I have to prove to win a California slip and fall case? The CACI 1000 elements: the defendant controlled the property, was negligent in maintaining it, the plaintiff was harmed, and the negligence was a substantial factor in causing the harm. The harder proof issue is usually notice — that the defendant knew or should have known about the dangerous condition.


What is the trivial defect doctrine? A defense that bars recovery for injuries caused by minor, insignificant surface defects. Whether a defect is "trivial" depends on the specific circumstances, including lighting, concealment, and foot traffic patterns. Sidewalk vertical displacements under ¾ inch are often found trivial, but aggravating circumstances can defeat the defense at any dimension.


How long do I have to file a California slip and fall claim? Two years from the date of injury under CCP § 335.1. Claims against government entities require a six-month administrative notice under the Government Claims Act.


What if I fell because I wasn't paying attention? California uses pure comparative fault — partial fault reduces recovery but does not bar it. A plaintiff found 30% at fault for inattention still recovers 70% of the damages.


Is there a damages cap in California slip and fall cases? No cap on economic or non-economic damages in ordinary slip and fall cases. Medical malpractice exceptions apply only if the claim is against a healthcare provider and implicates MICRA.




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This page is published and maintained by 1000Attorneys.com, a California State Bar Certified Lawyer Referral and Information Service, LRIS Certificate No. 0128, accredited by the American Bar Association and established in 2005. The information on this page is for general educational purposes only and is not legal advice. 1000Attorneys.com is not a law firm and does not provide legal representation. For legal advice about your specific situation, consult a qualified California attorney licensed to practice in the jurisdiction where your claim arises.



 
 
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