In North Carolina, you start by filing a negligence (premises liability) lawsuit in the county where the property is located or where the landlord resides. You must show the landlord owed you a duty, breached it by not fixing a known lighting hazard, and that the breach caused your injuries. Most personal injury claims must be filed within three years, and you’ll have to properly serve the landlord with a Civil Summons and Complaint under Rule 4.
You want to know whether you can sue your North Carolina landlord for injuries after falling from a poorly lit porch when the landlord didn’t install requested exterior lighting. This question sits squarely in personal injury law and focuses on whether the landlord’s failure to address a known lighting hazard can support a premises liability claim and how to file it.
In North Carolina, landlords must use reasonable care to keep common areas safe and comply with applicable housing and building codes. For rental homes and apartments, the Residential Rental Agreements Act requires landlords to keep common areas safe and follow codes that affect health and safety. A premises liability claim is a negligence claim: you must prove duty, breach, causation, and damages. File your civil action in the appropriate North Carolina court, serve the landlord under Rule 4, and be mindful that the statute of limitations for negligence is generally three years from the injury. Defendants typically have 30 days after service to respond.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You reported the lack of exterior lighting before the fall, which supports landlord notice. A poorly lit porch in a common area the landlord controls can breach the duty to keep common areas safe and comply with applicable codes. Your fall and resulting spinal and arm injuries connect causally to the lack of lighting. Your medical treatment shows damages. Watch for contributory negligence arguments; in North Carolina, any fault by the injured person can bar recovery, but the landlord’s prior notice and control over the area strengthen your claim.
To sue your North Carolina landlord for injuries caused by a poorly lit common area, file a negligence claim showing the landlord’s duty, prior notice, breach, causation, and damages. The Residential Rental Agreements Act supports the landlord’s duty to keep common areas safe and comply with codes. Act promptly: file a Complaint and Civil Summons in Superior Court and properly serve the landlord, generally within three years of the fall.
If you’re dealing with injuries from a fall on a poorly lit rental property and need to understand your options and timelines, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you plan your next steps. Call us today to discuss your case.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.