Property owners have a legal obligation to keep their premises safe for visitors. When they fail leaving hazards unaddressed, skipping maintenance, or ignoring known dangers and someone gets hurt as a result, Georgia law holds them accountable.
Boyd Law Firm represents people injured on negligently maintained properties throughout Brunswick and Southeast Georgia. We investigate the conditions that caused your injury, establish what the owner knew and when, and build the case for full compensation.

Invitees (O.C.G.A. § 51-3-1) customers patrons clients and others invited onto property for a business purpose are owed the highest duty. The owner must exercise ordinary care to keep the premises and approaches safe. This covers retail stores restaurants apartment complexes parking lots and virtually any commercial property.
Licensees (O.C.G.A. § 51-3-2) social guests and others present with permission but not for business purposes are owed a reduced duty. The owner must refrain from willful or wanton conduct that could injure them.
Trespassers (O.C.G.A. § 51-3-3) those present without permission are owed minimal protection. Owners may not willfully or wantonly harm trespassers but generally owe no duty to warn of hazards.
Most injury claims arise from the invitee category the standard that governs commercial properties and their customers.

Georgia’s standard for premises liability is built around knowledge. To hold a property owner liable the injured person must show that the owner had superior knowledge of the hazard meaning the owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition while the injured person did not know and could not reasonably have discovered it through ordinary care.

Unavoidable hazards if there was no reasonable alternative route and the hazard was in the only path of travel, obviousness does not shield the owner.
Business environment distraction when the nature of the business itself reasonably diverts a visitor’s attention a busy restaurant a cluttered retail aisle or a crowded parking lot courts treat obviousness as a jury question rather than a guaranteed defense.

Boyd Law Firm handles the full range of property injury claims:
Additional claim types within premises liability:
Inadequate lighting — parking lots, stairwells, hallways where poor
lighting contributed to a fall or assault.

Four elements are required:

If your injury occurred on government-owned property — a city sidewalk, county
building, public park, or government facility — different deadlines apply.
Municipal (city) property: ante-litem notice required within 6 months of
the injury, stating the nature of the claim, date, time, and place of the incident, and the damages sought.
State of Georgia property: ante-litem notice required within 12 months
Miss these notice deadlines and your claim is barred regardless of how clear the negligence is. If a government entity is involved, contact us immediately.

If you were injured on someone else’s property, you deserve to know whether
the owner bears responsibility. The consultation is free, there’s no obligation,
and you pay nothing unless we win your case.