Christopher B. Dolan

California Slip and Fall Lawyer: Grocery Store and Supermarket Rights

Aug 28, 2025 @ 01:12 PM — by Chris Dolan
Tagged with: California Slip And Fall Lawyer Premises Liability California Grocery Store Accident Supermarket Slip And Fall Evidence Preservation

"If you or someone you know suffered a slip and fall in a California supermarket or grocery store, this guide explains how premises liability works and what a California slip and fall lawyer looks for."

From the clients that I have represented, I know how serious the pain and mental anguish a patient who fractured his or her hip feels. I, myself, suffered a massive pelvic fracture and still have implanted hardware. It can be life changing. From my experience, I can tell you that one way you can help him is to encourage him to concentrate not on his limitations but instead on what he can do and that for which he is grateful. That attitude will aid in his recovery and help document his California personal injury claim.

Can I Sue For a Slip and Fall at a Supermarket?

Yes. California law requires all owners and managers to maintain their properties in a safe condition and warn of any dangers. California Civil Code § 1714(a) states: 

“Everyone is responsible, not only for the result of his or her willful acts, but also for an injury occasioned to another by his or her want of ordinary care or skill in the management of his or her property or person, except so far as the latter has, willfully or by want of ordinary care, brought the injury upon himself or herself.”

An individual may bring a premises liability or “slip and fall” lawsuit against a property owner who fails to meet this standard and seek compensation for his or her injuries caused by a dangerous condition of property.

Factors to Consider in Bringing a Slip and Fall Lawsuit Against a Supermarket, Grocery or Convenience Store

Slip-and-fall injuries occur frequently in supermarkets, groceries and convenience stores. Many times boxes of new items are left in the aisles for employees to open and stock the shelves. In the meantime, these boxes create a tripping hazard for shoppers and may show a failure to reasonably inspect and maintain the premises.

It is also common for customers to spill containers of milk, soda, wine and other liquids in the aisles. If another customer immediately falls on the wet floor following a spill, usually there would be no basis for bringing a premises liability lawsuit against the supermarket, as the manager most likely would not have notice of the dangerous condition or an opportunity to correct it. On the other hand, if a store employee learned of the hazard and did not immediately clean it up or provide a warning sign until someone could promptly come and clean it, there would be a sound basis to bring a legal claim supported by sweep logs, incident reports, or surveillance video.

One in which the liability of the supermarket may be more readily established. For example, it is doubtful that any customer was carrying strawberries to the restroom and dropped and crushed them on the floor. What is more likely is that the strawberries were dropped by an employee taking fruit from the stock room to the fruit and vegetable section of the supermarket. This may be considered negligence to drop food on the ground and not immediately clean it up.

The strawberries being smashed may indicate that they were there long enough for other employees to have seen them and cleaned the floor. If the store has video, it would be helpful for both parties to see when the strawberries fell, if other employees walked by them and if that is, indeed, why your father fell. Send a preservation letter to the store immediately requesting that any surveillance video, sweep schedules and cleaning records be preserved.

If you or someone you know may have stumbled for reasons unrelated to the strawberries. Video often helps everyone avoid litigation. Many times we have seen video and counseled clients against bringing a suit. In other instances, video has been critical proof leading to settlement or victory at trial in California slip and fall cases.

There is a type of insurance that is most likely immediately available to your father, regardless of who is at fault. It is called medical payments coverage (MedPay) and is standard component of most property insurance policies held by business (and private property) owners as part of their liability coverage. Ask the store for its insurance company’s name and contact them for information on medical payments coverage. It can help pay for deductibles and protect your credit while Medicare processes any liens. You don’t need to release any other potential claims to get this coverage.

I recommend you contact an experienced trial lawyer, a California slip and fall lawyer to gather additional information to properly evaluate the claim and advise you on your options. In the interim, tell the store to preserve video and request the incident report, take photos of his injuries and make sure you have your shoes. Don’t clean your shoes or wear them until they have been examined to see if there is plant material on the bottom. If you slipped on strawberries, there should be some embedded in the tread on your shoe; place the shoes in a paper bag, label and store them safely as evidence.

Contact a Slip and Lawyer at The Dolan Law Firm

If you have been injured in a serious slip and fall accident, contact our attorneys today by completing our contact form or call us toll free at 1-888-452-4752 for skilled and experienced legal counsel. We will review your case for free, promptly and with no obligation on your part.

We serve clients across the San Francisco Bay Area and throughout California from our offices in San Francisco, Oakland, Redondo Beach and Downtown Los Angeles. Our work is no recovery, no fee (contingency-based). That means we collect no fee unless we obtain money for your damages and injuries.

Please do not delay in contacting us. If your injury occurred on public property (which includes public school, community colleges, municipal parks, etc.), you only have six months from the date of your injury to file a claim under California law , and other deadlines may apply.