Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.
The pictures prove nothing. Your problem is the condition of the sidewalk. And you can't prove that they didn't maintain it carefully. Maybe they can say you were a drunk idiot who didn't watch where they were going. Nobody else in your party managed to slip on this deadly ice, right? Just you?
It was a small patch and since we were walking across a sidewalk which is something you only do once, by definition I was the only one to slip on it, bc it was in my path and no one else’s. I probably want the only person to slip on it that day though. The wannabe lawyers of DCUM really are none too bright it seems.
So, if it was that small, isolated, and impossible to see when you were right on top of it, why should the houseowners be expected to see it when you couldn't?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.
The pictures prove nothing. Your problem is the condition of the sidewalk. And you can't prove that they didn't maintain it carefully. Maybe they can say you were a drunk idiot who didn't watch where they were going. Nobody else in your party managed to slip on this deadly ice, right? Just you?
It was a small patch and since we were walking across a sidewalk which is something you only do once, by definition I was the only one to slip on it, bc it was in my path and no one else’s. I probably want the only person to slip on it that day though. The wannabe lawyers of DCUM really are none too bright it seems.
Anonymous wrote:The OP still has not explained why they could not get STD. Are there some things that qualify or do not as reasons? I assumed it needed a doctor note that you can't work and then you have STD paid out at whatever the rate is.
Anonymous wrote:Home owners are not required by law to clear the sidewalk in most jurisdictions. Bottom line the home owner is not liable if these were natural conditions and would likely be praised if they made a reasonable effort to clear the snow.
OP waited six months to bring this up; the statues of limitation‘s is probably been exceeded.
Black ice on sidewalk?
This past winter was not cold enough for black ice if this is the DC area.
If OP had surgery , then the insurance company should have inquired about a third-party being involved at the time
OP just happened to take a picture of the black ice and her self standing in front of the home minutes before she fell. And then minutes after she fell. This is suspicious.
OP should know that people don’t sue insurance companies. Your Insurance company with you the other insurance company for reimbursement on the cost of your surgery, short, term, disability, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I doubt it's so easy as you slipped and fell and therefore it's their fault. You may have to prove that they knew it was dangerous, that the ice was there because of something the homeowner did, and that it actually was a dangerous situation. Maybe OP was just a drunk idiot stumbling home from the bars taking selfies with friends paying no attention to where she was walking and tripped. Why a group of people was walking together, taking pics, right when it happened is odd.
Anonymous wrote:I slipped on an icy sidewalk outside someone's house (isolated black ice on an otherwise cleared ground), fell and broke my arm, was disabled for 8 weeks, could not work and was no covered by STD. Turns out that the property owner is responsible for the sidewalk where I was. I'm not the litigious type, but do I actually have a case? Would you sue for this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.
The pictures prove nothing. Your problem is the condition of the sidewalk. And you can't prove that they didn't maintain it carefully. Maybe they can say you were a drunk idiot who didn't watch where they were going. Nobody else in your party managed to slip on this deadly ice, right? Just you?
It was a small patch and since we were walking across a sidewalk which is something you only do once, by definition I was the only one to slip on it, bc it was in my path and no one else’s. I probably want the only person to slip on it that day though. The wannabe lawyers of DCUM really are none too bright it seems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did this topic come up in June?
BC I only recently learned that I might be able to recover some of the losses. Someone asked me if I sued and it had not occurred to me.
You are beyond the statue of limitations and any claims are baseless because any of your injuries could have happened since then
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.
The pictures prove nothing. Your problem is the condition of the sidewalk. And you can't prove that they didn't maintain it carefully. Maybe they can say you were a drunk idiot who didn't watch where they were going. Nobody else in your party managed to slip on this deadly ice, right? Just you?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.
So, how do you know it was ice? It sounds like you were inconsiderate and having a social/party in front of their house and slipped.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have proof of where you fell?
This. Also, I thought people are responsible for removing snow, so it’s “walkable”, which it seems they did. Not sure residents are also responsible for black ice.
It so happens I do, bc we took a photos right before and I was with other people, so there were multiple witnesses.
You aren’t litigious but you took photos and the names of witnesses?
Come on, now.
You people are all terrible readers and paranoid. The pictures were just social and the ice isn’t in it. The house is though, and multiple witnesses who can speak to my having fallen right afterwards in front of that house.