When you slip and fall on someone else’s property, your injury is just the beginning of your legal journey. What many injured victims don’t realize is that the property owner’s records—particularly maintenance logs and surveillance footage—often tell a story that contradicts their defense.
These documents are frequently the deciding factor in slip and fall premises liability cases, yet property owners often go to great lengths to keep them hidden or minimize their significance.
At BV Law Group, APLC, we’ve spent years uncovering the evidence that property owners would prefer to keep buried.
This article reveals what you need to know about the hidden documentation in slip and fall cases and why these records are so critical to your claim.
Maintenance records are the backbone of proving negligence in slip and fall cases. These documents show the property owner’s knowledge of hazardous conditions and whether they took reasonable steps to address them.
When a property owner fails to maintain their premises or neglects to document routine maintenance, it demonstrates a pattern of negligence.
Maintenance logs typically include:
If a property owner knew about a dangerous condition—say, a water leak or a worn floor—and failed to repair it for weeks or months, that knowledge is documented. When you slip and fall on that exact hazard, the records prove the owner had notice and failed to act.
Property owners understand the power of maintenance documentation, which is exactly why they often attempt to hide, destroy, or downplay these records.
Document Destruction: Some property owners discard maintenance records after a certain period, claiming they follow standard retention policies. However, once a claim is filed, legal obligations to preserve evidence begin immediately.
Destroying records after notice of injury can result in sanctions and adverse inferences—where courts assume the destroyed records would have proven your case.
Incomplete Documentation: Property owners may deliberately maintain vague or incomplete records to avoid establishing a clear timeline of neglect. Instead of detailed repair logs, you might find cryptic notes that don’t prove when a hazard was known or how long it persisted.
Falsified Records: In some cases, property owners or managers backdate maintenance records or create fake entries to suggest they took action when they didn’t. This is both unethical and illegal, and discovery often reveals the truth.
Accessing maintenance records requires formal discovery in your premises liability case. Your attorney can issue subpoenas to compel the property owner to produce all relevant maintenance documentation. These records cannot be hidden simply because a property owner wants to avoid liability.
Request the following types of maintenance records:
When property owners fail to produce these records or claim they don’t exist, that absence itself becomes powerful evidence. Courts often infer that the property owner’s negligence was so systematic that they didn’t even maintain basic documentation.
Surveillance footage is often the most direct evidence in a slip and fall case. It shows exactly what happened, where the hazard was, and how long it had existed.
It can also reveal whether other people before you encountered the same hazard, proving the property owner should have known about it.
High-quality footage can demonstrate:
This is where property owners often become most evasive. Many commercial properties have security cameras, but footage is frequently recorded over within days or weeks.
Property owners may claim their systems only retain footage for 72 hours or that footage was automatically deleted. However, when a property owner is on notice that someone has been injured on their premises, they have a legal obligation to preserve all evidence—including surveillance footage.
Deliberately deleting or “losing” video after learning of your injury is spoliation of evidence, and courts punish this behavior severely.
What we often find is that property owners conveniently “discover” that footage was deleted, but investigation reveals they had the capability to preserve it and chose not to. In these situations, courts may issue adverse inferences, meaning the judge or jury is instructed to assume the destroyed footage would have supported your claim.
If the property owner still has surveillance footage, your attorney can demand it through discovery. If it’s been deleted but wasn’t supposed to be, this becomes evidence of consciousness of guilt.
Footage may exist on multiple sources:
Professional investigation can often recover footage from multiple sources that property owners claim no longer exists.
The power of maintenance records and surveillance footage lies in how they work together.
Maintenance records show what the property owner knew and when. Surveillance footage shows the actual hazard and its duration. Together, they prove negligence beyond reasonable doubt.
For example, if maintenance records show that a water leak was reported three weeks before your fall, and surveillance footage shows water pooling in that exact spot for at least two weeks, you’ve established clear negligence.
The property owner had notice of a hazard and failed to remedy it.
Our team works with specialized professionals to interpret evidence:
These professionals interpret documents and footage in ways that clearly establish liability. They can determine how long a hazard likely existed, whether the property owner followed standard maintenance practices, and whether the conditions met industry safety standards.
The moment you’re injured in a slip and fall, evidence begins to disappear. Property owners may delete footage, “lose” records, or alter documentation.
That’s why it’s critical to have an attorney protecting your interests immediately.
At BV Law Group, APLC, we know exactly what evidence to request and how to access it. We understand the tactics property owners use to hide their negligence, and we know how to counter them. We fight aggressively to uncover the hidden evidence that proves your case—and we do it without asking you to pay anything upfront.
If you’ve been injured in a slip and fall, don’t let hidden evidence remain hidden. Contact BV Law Group today for a free consultation and let us fight for the justice you deserve.