Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised by these answers. I live in NYC and whenever there is even a suggestion of snow or ice, the vast majority of homeowners blanket the sidewalks in front of their house with salt and ice melt, sometimes to a ridiculous degree, to ensure a situation just like this does not happen. In NY, people can and do sue for just such incidents, and everyone knows it.
I do this but I am not home 24/7 (and had to go in during COVID) so what happens if someone still falls or the ice melt dissipates? I also live in an area where many people walk on my sidewalk and yard and that pushes snow onto the sidewalk that can melt into ice. Sometimes people work 12-24 hour shifts and by the time they come home the ice melt is gone. I literally blanket my sidewalk with the stuff in the winter and get complaints from other pet owners, but this type of situation is why I do it!
I don't know, I think if you are walking in the snow and ice and the homeowner clears the sidewalk you need to be vigilant and should know you could slip.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised by these answers. I live in NYC and whenever there is even a suggestion of snow or ice, the vast majority of homeowners blanket the sidewalks in front of their house with salt and ice melt, sometimes to a ridiculous degree, to ensure a situation just like this does not happen. In NY, people can and do sue for just such incidents, and everyone knows it.
Anonymous wrote:You won't win unless you immediately knocked on the door and got the owner to admit some type of omission of fault and have proof there was ice. Or I can just fall down my stairs and sue the neighbors for ice .
Anonymous wrote:I do not like people like you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People don’t really have a lot of control over black ice developing. You say yourself it was otherwise cleared. It’s not like they were trying to be negligent. I am sorry you were injured so severely, and I think this is just a matter of accidents happen, not really a matter of a reason to go looking for someone to blame.
I really do not care about the blame. I would appreciate the financial compensation for my actual losses.
It is your fault that you fell. This is just typical American greed. Shame on you
It is quite frankly not my fault that I fell. I was wearing appropriate shoes for the weather, walking at a normal pace for a normal purpose on a sidewalk, in an area that appeared clear & safe but was not. There is nothing that I could have done differently not to fall. If there were no ice, or if it had been salted or marked, I would not have fallen.
Anonymous wrote:This is such a frivolous lawsuit. If I were the owner of the house, I'd find a way to countersue you for wasting my time.
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.
Anonymous wrote: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 took photos right before you fell on a random patch of ice outside someone’s house? Interesting. How do you know this homeowner?
I do not know the homeowner. The photos (of the people I was with in front of the property) were for an unrelated purpose.
Why were you hanging out on their property?
I wasn't. I walked down a public sidewalk that passed their house. Turns out, they are responsible for the sidewalk.
But you took a picture that includes the ice before you fell on it?
No, ice was not in the picture, someone asked me how I knew which property it was.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you really asked the wrong audience. This board is full of rich people who have well-paying jobs that add very little to society and who believe that the rest of the world exists to serve them. The idea that one of the "peons" would sue them for doing something wrong is a difficult concept for them. They can't even understand that there are jobs in this world that don't have STD -- that's how removed from reality they are.