How to Defend a Slip-and-Fall Claim With Maintenance Documentation
A $42,000 slip-and-fall claim disappeared because we had GPS-stamped proof our crew cleaned the stairwell 29 minutes before the incident. Here's what documentation actually holds up in a claim defense.
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Last February, I got a call from an owner. A tenant's guest had slipped on a wet stairwell landing in one of our 48-unit buildings. Bruised hip, ambulance ride, and a lawyer's letter within nine days. The claim was for $42,000.
We settled for zero. I pulled up the work order showing our cleaning crew had mopped and placed wet floor signs at 7:14am that morning, with GPS-stamped photos and a vendor check-out time of 7:51am. The incident happened at 8:20am. A 29-minute paper trail that proved we'd done our job. That's all it took.
The PM across town? Same week, same situation, different outcome. His crew "probably" cleaned the stairwell. He "thinks" it was Tuesday. No photos. No timestamps. No check-in record. His claim settled for $34,000 because he couldn't prove a thing.
That's the difference documentation makes. Not "good documentation practices." Specific, timestamped, verifiable proof that you did the work, when you said you did it, where you said you did it.
What documentation actually holds up in a slip-and-fall defense?
A slip-and-fall claim comes down to one question: did the property manager meet their duty of care? Your documentation either answers that or it doesn't. No middle ground.
Here's what I've learned holds up after being involved in five claim defenses over my career. And what falls apart.
What will a plaintiff's attorney request first?
Every slip-and-fall attorney runs the same playbook. They want to prove you knew about a hazard, or should've known, and didn't act. Your records are either your shield or their ammunition.
1. Maintenance history for the area where the incident happened.
They'll request every work order, complaint, and inspection record for that specific location going back 12-24 months. They're looking for a pattern. If three tenants reported that stairwell was slippery in the last year and you've got no record of fixing the underlying issue, that's negligence.
I learned this one the hard way. We had a walkway that collected water every time it rained because of a grading issue. Two tenants had mentioned it verbally. No work orders. When someone finally slipped, the attorney found those tenants and got statements. We couldn't prove we'd addressed the root cause because we'd never documented it as a maintenance issue. That one cost $22,000.
2. Your preventive maintenance schedule and proof of execution.
Not just that you have a schedule. That you can prove each task was actually completed. "We do monthly common area inspections" means nothing without the records.
This is where most PMs get caught. They've got a beautiful preventive maintenance calendar. Looks great on paper. But when the attorney asks for proof that the January inspection actually happened, the specific checklist, who did it, timestamps, they've got nothing. I've seen PMs pull out binders of blank templates thinking that counts. It doesn't.
3. Response time records for the specific hazard.
If the hazard was reported before the incident, how fast did you respond? A 72-hour gap between a tenant reporting ice on the walkway and someone showing up with salt? That's a problem. Four hours with documented proof? That's your defense.
What counts as defensible documentation?
I'll be blunt: a spreadsheet with dates doesn't cut it anymore. Neither does a folder of photos with no metadata.
Timestamped work orders with a complete chain. The request, the dispatch, the vendor arrival, the completion, the close-out. Every step with a time and date that wasn't manually entered after the fact. This is your backbone.
GPS-verified photos. Not just photos of the work. Photos that prove where and when it was done through embedded metadata. A photo of a mopped floor means nothing if you can't prove it was taken at that building, on that date, before the incident.
Vendor check-in and check-out records. This is the piece most PMs skip entirely, and it's the one that matters most in court. You need to show your vendor was physically on-site during the times you claim. A text message saying "I'm done" isn't the same as a GPS-stamped check-out at 7:51am. I had a plumber billing 4 hours for jobs that took 2, and we only caught it because we started requiring timestamped check-in/check-out photos. Over six months, he'd overbilled us roughly $3,400. The same system that caught his padding is the same one that saved us in that stairwell claim.
Inspection checklists with signatures or digital confirmation. Completed ones. With notes about what was found and what action was taken. Not blank templates sitting in a binder.
One thing I started doing after that stairwell incident: requiring completion photos from every common-area maintenance task. Not just repairs. Mopping, salting, leaf blowing, parking lot sweeping. Vendors hate it. But when you're sitting across from a plaintiff's attorney, "annoying" starts looking pretty smart.
How does documentation fail even when you think it's solid?
I've seen three setups that look good internally but crumble in a legal review.
Batch-entered records. Your coordinator enters all the week's work orders on Friday afternoon. Every timestamp says Friday at 3pm. An attorney will argue, correctly, that those records were reconstructed from memory, not captured in real time. And honestly? They're right.
Photos without metadata. You've got 200 photos of completed work. But they were texted from a vendor's phone, saved to a desktop folder, and renamed "stairwell-jan-15.jpg." The original metadata is gone. You can't prove when or where they were taken. I've watched an entire documentation file get thrown out over this. Two hundred photos, zero evidentiary value.
Verbal confirmations. "The vendor told me he did it." I hear this constantly. Worth exactly nothing in a claim defense. If it's not in writing with a timestamp, it didn't happen. Harsh? Sure. But that's how the legal process works.
Building a system before someone falls
You don't build defensible records after an incident. You build the system now and let it run.
My approach is simple. Every maintenance task that touches a common area or addresses a reported hazard gets the full treatment: timestamped request, dispatched with a time, vendor check-in with GPS, completion photos with GPS, vendor check-out with time. No exceptions. Even the routine stuff that feels like overkill.
Is it more work upfront? A little. But I've watched PMs spend 40+ hours scrambling to reconstruct records after a claim. That's weeks of your coordinator's time, plus legal fees, plus the settlement you'll probably end up paying anyway because reconstructed records look exactly like what they are.
Tools like Revoscape handle this automatically, from GPS-verified check-ins to timestamped photo capture to complete audit trails. But whatever system you use, the rule is simple: records get created in real time. Not reconstructed later. Not entered in batch on Friday. Real time.
The documentation that saved us $42,000
Back to that stairwell claim. Here's exactly what we had in our file:
Work order created automatically when the cleaning crew checked in at 7:14am
GPS coordinates confirming they were at the correct building
Four photos taken between 7:14am and 7:46am showing the mopped landing with wet floor signs in place. The third photo even caught a piece of the building number on the door frame behind the mop bucket.
Vendor check-out at 7:51am with GPS confirmation
Tenant's guest incident report timed at 8:20am
Twenty-nine minutes. That's the documented gap between our completed work and the incident. The attorney looked at our records, confirmed the GPS data matched the building address, and dropped the claim.
No negotiation. No settlement. Done.
Without that trail, we're in the same spot as the PM down the street. Saying "we cleaned it that morning" with nothing to back it up. And $34,000 lighter.
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