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Montana Personal Injury · Practice Area

Montana Premises Liability Lawyer

Property owners — businesses, landlords, and government entities — have a legal duty to keep their premises reasonably safe. When they fail and someone is hurt, they can be held accountable.

What Premises Liability Covers

Premises liability extends well beyond slip-and-fall cases. It includes injuries from unsafe stairways and walkways, inadequate lighting, falling objects, swimming-pool hazards, broken railings, unsafe building conditions, and negligent security that allows a foreseeable assault. Owners of stores, restaurants, hotels, apartment complexes, and other properties must take reasonable steps to find and fix hazards or warn visitors about them.

Owner Duties and Your Rights

A property owner's duty depends on why the visitor was there, but in general, owners must keep their premises reasonably safe for people lawfully present, inspect for hazards, and address or warn of dangers they know about or should discover. When an owner's failure to do so causes injury, the owner may be liable. Montana's modified comparative negligence rule (Mont. Code Ann. § 27-1-702) applies, so you can recover as long as you were less than 51% at fault, with your recovery reduced by your share.

Building a Strong Claim

Document the hazard and the scene immediately, report the incident to the owner or manager, gather witness information, and seek medical care. Conditions change quickly, so prompt evidence collection is vital. Montana's three-year statute of limitations generally applies; claims against government property owners can involve shorter notice deadlines, which makes early legal advice important.

Montana deadline: Most premises liability claims must be filed within three years from the date of injury under the statute of limitations. Evidence fades fast — don't wait to learn your rights.

Premises Liability FAQs in Montana

No. It also covers negligent security, falling objects, unsafe stairways, inadequate lighting, pool hazards, and other dangerous conditions on property.

You may still have a claim, but claims against government entities can involve shorter notice deadlines. Consult an attorney quickly.

Show that a hazard existed, that the owner knew or should have known about it, and that the failure to fix or warn caused your injury. Prompt documentation helps.

Hurt in a Premises Liability Accident? We Can Help.

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