Retail Store and Shopping Center Injury Lawyers in Georgia & South Carolina
Millions of people visit retail stores and shopping centers every day, trusting that the premises are reasonably safe. When property owners and retailers fail to maintain safe conditions, customers suffer serious injuries — from slip and fall accidents on wet floors to falling merchandise from improperly stacked shelves. The Bureau of Labor Statistics and the National Floor Safety Institute report that falls are the leading cause of retail injury claims, but hazards extend well beyond wet floors.
At Roden Law, our retail store injury attorneys represent shoppers injured in stores, malls, and shopping centers throughout Georgia and South Carolina. We hold property owners, retail chains, and management companies accountable when their negligent maintenance, inadequate safety protocols, or understaffing leads to preventable injuries.
Common Retail Store and Shopping Center Hazards
Our attorneys handle claims involving a wide range of retail hazards:
- Wet and slippery floors: Spills, tracked-in rainwater, freshly mopped floors without warning signs, and leaking refrigeration units create dangerous slip and fall conditions
- Falling merchandise: Items improperly stacked on high shelves, unsecured displays, and top-heavy product arrangements that fall and strike customers
- Damaged flooring: Cracked tiles, torn carpet, uneven thresholds, missing floor mats, and changes in elevation without warning
- Obstructed aisles: Pallets, boxes, stocking carts, and merchandise left in walkways, creating tripping hazards
- Parking lot hazards: Potholes, poor lighting, inadequate drainage, ice and snow accumulation, and missing curb markers in parking lots and garages
- Defective shopping carts: Broken wheels, collapsing carts, and carts that tip over, especially dangerous for children riding in the cart
- Automatic door malfunctions: Doors that close on customers, fail to open, or open unexpectedly
Premises Liability Law for Retail Injuries
Both Georgia and South Carolina impose a heightened duty of care on retail establishments toward their customers (invitees):
- Georgia: Under O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1, property owners must exercise “ordinary care” to keep the premises safe for invitees. This includes a duty to inspect the property, discover hazardous conditions, and either correct them or warn invitees. Georgia courts apply the “equal knowledge” rule — a plaintiff cannot recover if they had equal knowledge of the hazard and could have avoided it.
- South Carolina: South Carolina imposes a similar duty on landowners toward invitees — the duty to exercise reasonable care to keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition, to warn of dangerous conditions that are not obvious, and to conduct reasonable inspections to discover latent hazards.
Customers are classified as “invitees” — the highest duty category — because they enter the property for the mutual benefit of both parties (commercial transactions).
Proving a Retail Store Injury Claim
Our attorneys establish liability by proving that the store knew or should have known about the hazardous condition and failed to remedy it or warn customers. Key evidence includes:
- Surveillance footage: Store cameras often capture both the hazard and the accident — but footage is frequently overwritten within days, making prompt legal action critical
- Incident reports: Internal store reports documenting the accident and conditions
- Inspection and maintenance logs: Records showing when floors were last inspected, cleaned, or mopped
- Prior complaints: Evidence of prior customer or employee complaints about the same hazard
- Expert testimony: Safety engineers and premises liability experts who evaluate whether the store met industry safety standards
Compensation for Retail Store Injuries
Injured shoppers may recover medical expenses, lost wages, pain and suffering, permanent disability or disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life. Georgia law (O.C.G.A. Title 51) and South Carolina law provide full compensatory damages, and punitive damages may be available where the store’s conduct was egregiously negligent.
