What Must Be Shown Under North Carolina Law
Most slip-and-fall cases are built on negligence. In plain English, you generally have to show the property owner or manager failed to act with reasonable care, and that failure caused your injuries and losses.
Key Requirements
- Duty: The property owner/manager must use reasonable care for lawful visitors in areas like common stairs and walkways.
- Breach: They failed to do what a reasonably careful property manager would do (for example, not addressing a known icy hazard within a reasonable time or not warning about it).
- Causation: The unsafe condition caused the fall, and the fall caused the specific expenses you’re claiming (not something else).
- Damages: You had real losses—medical bills, out-of-pocket purchases, lost income, and pain and suffering, among other categories.
Evidence That Commonly Helps
- Documents: Photos of the stairs/ice (if available), weather timing, written communications about snow/ice removal, and any written responses from management.
- People: Witnesses who saw the condition, saw the fall, or can confirm the stairs were not being cleared.
- Data: Medical records showing injury severity and mobility limits, plus receipts and logs showing what you bought/paid for and when.
Common Defenses & Pitfalls
- Contributory negligence: North Carolina is one of the few states where if the defense proves you were even slightly negligent and that contributed to the fall, it can bar recovery. In ice cases, arguments can include “the hazard was obvious,” “you chose a riskier route,” or “you didn’t use reasonable care on the steps.”
- “Not necessary” or “not related”: Insurers often challenge whether home help or supplies were medically necessary, or whether they were needed because of this fall versus a prior condition.
- Weak documentation: Cash payments without receipts, vague descriptions (“helped around the house”), or missing dates can make these damages harder to prove.
- Incident report issues: A property’s refusal to provide an incident report does not automatically defeat a claim, but it makes it even more important to preserve your own proof (photos, witness info, written notes, and medical documentation).
How This Applies
Apply to your facts: If you slipped on icy, uncleared apartment stairs after a storm and you now have fractures, ongoing pain, and mobility limits, expenses like a walker/cane, braces, over-the-counter medical supplies, and paid in-home help can be recoverable if they were reasonably needed because of those injuries. The strongest presentation usually includes receipts, dates, and a simple explanation (and sometimes medical documentation) tying the purchases and home assistance to the limitations caused by the fall. Because the defense may argue the ice was obvious or avoidable, it also helps to document what you observed and what you were doing at the time.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8-58.1 – Allows an injured person to testify about medical-related charges with supporting records and creates certain presumptions about reasonableness/necessity.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 44-49 – Creates certain medical provider liens on personal injury recoveries, including for medical supplies and ambulance services, which can affect how a settlement is paid out.
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-52 – Contains North Carolina’s general three-year statute of limitations that commonly applies to personal injury lawsuits.
Conclusion
You can often include out-of-pocket costs for in-home help and medical supplies as part of a North Carolina slip-and-fall injury claim, as long as you can show the expenses were reasonable and were needed because of the fall-related injuries. Keep receipts, dates, and a simple log of what was purchased or paid for and why. One practical next step is to gather those receipts and a short timeline of your limitations so a licensed North Carolina attorney can evaluate how to present and prove those damages.