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Thornton, Colorado. CGH Injury Lawyers represents slip and fall victims across Adams County from our Denver office.
Thornton, Colorado

Thornton Slip And Fall Lawyers Who Make the Property Owner Pay

If you were hurt on a wet floor at a Thornton store, a cracked parking lot, icy steps at an apartment complex, or a broken sidewalk along Washington Street, Colorado law can hold the property owner responsible for your medical bills, lost wages, and pain. We serve Thornton and all of Adams County from our Denver office and prepare every case for trial in Adams County District Court. You pay nothing unless we win.

No fee unless we win

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Serving Thornton From Our Denver Office CGH Injury Lawyers 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201 Denver, CO 80205 (303) 209-9395 Se habla espanol
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  • Thornton slip and fall claims are governed by Colorado's Premises Liability Act (C.R.S. 13-21-115). What a property owner owes you depends on whether you were an invitee, a licensee, or a trespasser when you were on the property.
  • If you fell on government property such as a City of Thornton sidewalk, a Thornton city park, or an Adams County facility, you have only 182 days to file a written notice under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (C.R.S. 24-10-109). Miss that deadline and the claim is usually lost forever.
  • Colorado follows modified comparative fault. You can still recover even if you were partly at fault, as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible (C.R.S. 13-21-111). The general deadline to file a personal injury lawsuit is two years (C.R.S. 13-80-102).

If a dangerous property condition hurt you in Thornton, Colorado law may hold the owner responsible for your losses. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Thornton and all of Adams County from our Denver office. We handle the investigation, any government notice deadline, the negotiation, and trial in Adams County District Court when an owner or insurer refuses to be fair. You pay nothing unless we recover for you.

Why these cases matter

A Thornton fall is rarely just a bruise

Thornton is Adams County's largest city, stretching from 84th Avenue north to 136th Avenue along the I-25 corridor. Its retail centers, big-box stores, apartment complexes, and commercial strips along Washington Street and 104th Avenue generate heavy foot traffic every day of the year. A fall on a wet grocery floor, a crumbling curb cut in a parking lot, or icy front steps at an apartment building can cause catastrophic, life-changing harm. Premises liability is the legal principle that property owners and occupiers must keep their property reasonably safe for visitors. When they fail and someone gets hurt, they can be held responsible for medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, and more.

Serious injuries we see in Thornton slip and fall cases include:

  • Traumatic brain injury and concussion from striking the head on a hard floor or curb
  • Spinal cord injuries and herniated discs
  • Hip, wrist, and other broken bones, especially in older adults who fall at Thornton apartment complexes
  • Torn ligaments, soft-tissue damage, and long-term chronic pain

Colorado law does not require a property owner to guarantee your safety. It requires them to act reasonably based on your legal status on the property. That status is where every Thornton slip and fall claim begins.

The law that governs your case

How your visitor status decides the case (C.R.S. 13-21-115)

Colorado handles slip and fall cases under one specific law, the Premises Liability Act, which uses a three-tier system that decides how much care a property owner owes you. Your visitor status is the single most important factor in your claim. The table below shows what each status means and what the owner must do.

Visitor status Who it covers What the property owner owes you
Invitee (highest duty) Customers, shoppers, restaurant guests, and anyone there for the mutual benefit of both parties Must inspect for hazards, fix dangerous conditions, and warn of dangers that cannot be immediately fixed
Licensee (moderate duty) Social guests, friends visiting a home, or door-to-door salespeople on the property with permission Must warn of known hazards that are not obvious; no duty to inspect for hidden dangers
Trespasser (lowest duty) Anyone on the property without permission or legal right Owed only protection from willful or wanton harm; special rules protect child trespassers under the attractive nuisance doctrine

Example: if you slip on a wet tile floor at a grocery store on 104th Avenue in Thornton, you are a customer and therefore an invitee. The store owes you a duty to inspect aisles, mop up spills, post wet-floor signs, and take reasonable steps to keep the floor safe.

Dangerous conditions

What qualifies as a dangerous condition in Thornton?

Not every fall creates legal liability. Colorado courts require proof that a dangerous condition existed and that the property owner knew or should have known about it. These are the hazards we investigate most often in Thornton, a city of more than 140,000 people with busy retail corridors, large apartment complexes, and aging commercial properties along Washington Street and the 104th Avenue commercial strip.

Winter and structural hazards

  • Ice and compacted snow in parking lots and on steps at Thornton apartment complexes that an owner failed to clear in a reasonable time after a storm
  • Cracked or uneven sidewalk slabs and deteriorating curb cuts along Washington Street and 104th Avenue commercial zones
  • Broken handrails and deteriorating steps in older multi-family buildings in the south Thornton and Eastlake neighborhoods
  • Poorly lit stairwells, dim parking garages, and inadequate exterior lighting

Transient and store hazards

  • Spills and freshly mopped floors in Thornton grocery and big-box stores with no warning sign placed in time
  • Merchandise, pallets, and display trip hazards left in retail aisles during restocking
  • Leaks, wet entryways, and tracked-in snowmelt at store entrances during Colorado winters
  • Loose mats, torn carpet, and cluttered walkways in older Thornton commercial spaces

A temporary hazard can still create liability if the owner had enough time to discover and fix it. The key legal question is notice, which a later section of this page explains.

Snow, ice, and liability

The natural accumulation rule for Thornton winter falls

Colorado follows the natural accumulation rule, which generally protects property owners from liability for ice and snow that naturally accumulates during a storm. The reasoning is that we live in a winter climate and people must use caution during and right after snowfall. An owner is not automatically liable every time it snows in Adams County.

When a Thornton property owner can still be liable for a winter fall

  • Enough time has passed after a storm for reasonable snow and ice removal, and the owner did nothing to address the condition.
  • The owner created or worsened the hazard, for example by piling shoveled snow that refroze into a hidden ice patch in a Thornton apartment parking lot.
  • The owner began snow removal but did it negligently, leaving ice patches or hidden hazards behind on steps or walkways.
  • A roof drainage system channeled water onto a walkway that then froze, creating a condition the owner made, not the storm.

Recent Colorado appellate decisions have narrowed the natural accumulation defense. When an owner starts clearing snow and does it carelessly, they can lose the protection of this rule. We document the timeline, the temperature records, and any maintenance logs to show when the duty to act arose.

Local Knowledge

Thornton courts. Thornton trauma care. Thornton ground.

A Thornton slip and fall case lives in Thornton: the hospital that treated you, the roads and commercial zones where the fall happened, and the courthouse where your case may be filed. Here is the ground we work on.

Trauma Care

HCA HealthONE Mountain Ridge (formerly North Suburban Medical Center)

After a serious Thornton fall, the most critically injured patients are typically treated at HCA HealthONE Mountain Ridge at 9191 Grant St., Thornton, CO 80229, the only CDPHE-designated Level II Trauma Center in Adams County. That designation means the hospital handles the highest-acuity trauma cases in the county. The trauma records created there document the full scope and severity of your injuries and become the foundation of your damages claim against the property owner's insurer.

High-Risk Ground

Washington Street, 104th Avenue, and Thornton's commercial corridors

Washington Street from 84th to 128th Avenue is Thornton's main north-south commercial spine, lined with strip malls, restaurants, and mixed-use properties that generate constant pedestrian traffic on sidewalks and in parking lots. The 104th Avenue corridor carries heavy commercial traffic east from I-25 through big-box retail centers and grocery-anchored shopping plazas, where cart corrals, store entries, and large parking fields are common fall sites. The south Thornton and Eastlake neighborhoods contain older apartment stock with aging exterior walkways and shared parking surfaces that require ongoing maintenance through the winter months.

Courthouse

Adams County District Court (17th Judicial District)

A Thornton slip and fall lawsuit that exceeds the county-court jurisdictional limit is filed in Adams County District Court at the Adams County Justice Center, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601, in the 17th Judicial District. The local procedures, the Adams County jury pool, and the defense firms you face all differ from other Colorado districts. We handle Adams County District Court cases directly and file there regularly, so we know the court and the opposing adjusters who appear in it.

Government property

The 182-day deadline for falls on Thornton government property

If you fell on government property in Thornton, such as a City of Thornton sidewalk, a public park maintained by Adams County, a Thornton Recreation Center, or any other public facility, you face a much shorter deadline under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act. Most people assume they have two years and consult an attorney too late.

  1. File written notice within 182 days

    You must file a written notice of your claim within 182 days, about six months, of discovering your injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109). This is a formal notice to the government entity, not the same as filing a lawsuit. Missing this deadline will likely end your claim permanently against any Thornton or Adams County government body.

  2. Identify the right entity

    In Thornton, covered entities can include the City of Thornton, Adams County, the Thornton-Adams County park system, the Regional Transportation District, school districts, and other public bodies. The notice must reach the correct entity, and identifying which government owns the property where you fell is not always obvious.

  3. Include what the law requires

    A valid notice must state your claim with the detail the statute requires, including the time, place, and circumstances of the injury and the nature of the harm you suffered.

  4. Confirm an immunity exception applies

    The Act grants immunity for many government functions, but important exceptions exist, including dangerous conditions of public buildings and certain public roadways and sidewalks. We evaluate whether your Thornton fall fits within a recognized exception before filing the notice.

If your Thornton fall happened on or near government property, do not wait. Call (303) 209-9395 so we can protect the 182-day deadline before it passes.

Why CGH

Why Thornton slip and fall victims choose CGH Injury Lawyers

Trial-ready attorneys who handle Adams County District Court cases directly, bilingual help, and no fee unless we win. We do not publish slip and fall settlement figures, because every premises case is different and a number on a page tells you nothing about your case. What we offer is the work, not a headline.

The Statute

C.R.S. 13-21-115

Colorado's Premises Liability Act decides every Thornton fall case by your visitor status. We know exactly how to prove the duty the owner owed you and how they breached it in Adams County.

Serving Thornton

Thornton cases, handled directly.

We serve Thornton from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., a short drive up I-25, and we appear in Adams County District Court in Brighton ourselves. Your case is not handed off to local counsel and forgotten.

The 182-Day Clock

Government deadlines protected.

Falls on City of Thornton or Adams County property carry a 182-day written notice deadline. We move fast to preserve it before the window closes.

Who Pays

The insurer, usually.

Most Thornton premises claims are paid by the property owner's liability insurance, not their personal savings. The insurer will contest the claim either way.

Trial-Ready

8 attorneys, prepared for trial.

Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. When attorneys are genuinely ready to try a case in Adams County District Court, insurers respond differently to a demand.

Bilingual

Hablamos espanol.

Spanish-speaking staff and attorneys serve Thornton's large Spanish-speaking community in Adams County.

No Win, No Fee

Contingency only.

You pay nothing out of pocket for legal fees. We advance costs and collect only from a settlement or verdict in your favor.

One honest thing we will tell you up front: we do not take slip and fall cases we cannot honestly stand behind. If your fall was caused by an open and obvious hazard you could easily have avoided, or by snow that had only just fallen during a storm, we will say so in the free review rather than sign you up and let the case stall. When the law is on your side, we fight hard. When it is not, you deserve to hear that early, for free.

After the Fall

What to do after a slip and fall in Thornton

Evidence in these cases disappears fast. Thornton store and parking lot surveillance footage gets overwritten on short cycles, spills get cleaned, and ice melts. Take care of your health first, document the scene, then call before you talk to the insurer. Here is the path we walk with you.

  1. Get medical care

    HCA HealthONE Mountain Ridge at 9191 Grant St. is Adams County's Level II Trauma Center and serves Thornton residents with the most serious fall injuries. Even a fall that seems minor can conceal a concussion or a fracture that worsens without treatment. Get examined the same day, and keep every medical record.

  2. Report the fall

    Tell the store manager, apartment manager, or property owner right away and ask for a written incident report. If you fell on a City of Thornton sidewalk, a public park, or any other Adams County government property, the 182-day notice clock may already be running from the date of your injury.

  3. Document the scene

    Photograph the hazard, the lighting conditions, any wet-floor signs (or the absence of them), and the surrounding area before the condition is fixed or altered. Get the names and contact information of any witnesses. Keep the shoes and clothing you were wearing at the time of the fall.

  4. Call before insurance does

    The property owner's insurer may contact you quickly and ask for a recorded statement. Do not give one and do not accept any early offer before speaking with us. Call (303) 209-9395 first.

  5. We build your claim

    We send preservation letters to Thornton property owners and retailers for surveillance footage and maintenance logs, document your visitor status, build the record of actual or constructive notice, and calculate the full value of your losses.

  6. Negotiate or litigate

    Most cases settle. We negotiate from a position of trial readiness, and when an Adams County insurer refuses a fair offer, we file in Adams County District Court in Brighton and try your case to a verdict.

I wish I could leave more than 5 stars!
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Building the case

Proving notice and beating the open-and-obvious defense in Adams County

To win a Thornton slip and fall case, you must prove the property owner knew or should have known about the dangerous condition. That comes down to two kinds of notice, and owners fight both with predictable defenses.

Actual notice

  • The owner was directly told about the hazard before your fall
  • A prior complaint or incident report at the Thornton location exists
  • A staff member saw the spill or defect before your fall

Constructive notice

  • The hazard existed long enough that a reasonable inspection would have found it
  • Thornton store maintenance logs show inspections were skipped or infrequent
  • Surveillance footage shows how long the dangerous condition was present before you fell

The open-and-obvious defense

Property owners in Thornton often argue that a hazard was so obvious they had no duty to warn you. Colorado courts have traditionally been receptive to this argument. The standard is that if a danger is open and obvious to a reasonable person using ordinary care, the owner may not be liable.

That defense is not absolute. Recent Colorado Court of Appeals decisions have begun to limit it when owners create unreasonably dangerous conditions. Even a visible hazard can support liability if it is so dangerous that injury is foreseeable regardless of visibility. This is why surveillance footage, maintenance records, witness statements, and scene photographs matter so much to an Adams County jury. The narrative is what wins or loses these cases.

Compensation

What you can recover, even if you were partly at fault

Colorado follows a modified comparative negligence rule with a 50 percent bar (C.R.S. 13-21-111). You can still recover damages if you were partly at fault, as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible, and your award is reduced by your share of fault. At 50 percent or more, you recover nothing. Insurers handling Thornton claims know this rule and will aggressively argue you were careless, so documenting the scene immediately after a fall matters greatly.

Economic damages

  • Medical bills, past and future, including any care at HCA HealthONE Mountain Ridge
  • Lost wages and lost income
  • Loss of earning capacity
  • Rehabilitation and future care needs
  • Out-of-pocket costs tied to the fall

Non-economic damages

  • Pain and suffering
  • Emotional distress
  • Loss of enjoyment of life
  • Permanent disability or diminished quality of life

Colorado does not cap economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages in premises liability cases. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025, under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5, with inflation adjustments beginning in 2028. Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement is not capped at all under that statute. We work with medical and economic experts when a case needs it to fully document the value of your Thornton claim.

The hard part of these cases

Filing against the insurance, not the Thornton business or landlord

People often hesitate to pursue a premises claim because the property belongs to a Thornton small business, a store they still shop at, or a landlord they still rent from. Understanding how the money actually moves usually puts that concern to rest.

  • In most cases you file a claim against the property owner's liability coverage, such as commercial general liability or homeowner and renter insurance, not against their personal savings or business checking account.
  • Most businesses and landlords in Thornton carry liability coverage that responds to slip and fall claims, though the limits and terms vary. We confirm the applicable policy before assuming anything about coverage.
  • The insurer pays the settlement or judgment up to the policy limits. The point of liability insurance is to protect both the injured person and the policyholder.
  • The insurance company will contest the claim either way. Having experienced counsel is how you make the Adams County insurer meet its obligation to you.
Questions

Thornton slip and fall, frequently asked questions

How long do I have to file a slip and fall claim in Thornton?

You generally have two years from the date of the fall to file a personal injury lawsuit in Colorado (C.R.S. 13-80-102). Do not wait, because evidence fades and witness memories diminish over time. If you fell on government property, such as a City of Thornton sidewalk, an Adams County park facility, or a public transit stop, a much shorter 182-day written notice deadline applies under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (C.R.S. 24-10-109).

Can I sue the City of Thornton if I fell on a public sidewalk?

Possibly, but you must comply with the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act and its 182-day written notice requirement (C.R.S. 24-10-109). The City of Thornton and Adams County can be liable for dangerous sidewalk conditions if they had actual or constructive notice and failed to repair them, but only when a recognized immunity exception applies under the Act. Because the deadline is so short, call us immediately after a fall on public property.

I slipped on ice in a Thornton apartment parking lot. Is the owner automatically liable?

Not automatically. Colorado's natural accumulation rule generally protects property owners during and right after a storm. However, once enough time has passed for reasonable snow removal, or if the Thornton property owner created or worsened an ice hazard through negligent snow-clearing, liability can attach. Falls caused by water draining off a roof or a building that refroze as black ice may also fall outside the natural accumulation protection. The specific facts and timeline of events determine the outcome.

Where is a Thornton slip and fall lawsuit filed?

Personal injury cases arising in Thornton that exceed the county court jurisdictional limit are filed in Adams County District Court, the 17th Judicial District, at the Adams County Justice Center, 1100 Judicial Center Dr., Brighton, CO 80601. The local rules, the Adams County jury pool, and the defense firms you face all differ from other Colorado venues. We file and appear in Adams County District Court directly from our Denver office and do not hand cases off to local counsel.

What is the difference between an invitee and a licensee under Colorado law?

Under the Premises Liability Act (C.R.S. 13-21-115), an invitee is on the property for mutual benefit, like a shopper at a Thornton grocery store or a guest at a restaurant on 104th Avenue, and the owner must actively inspect for hazards and fix them. A licensee is there for their own purpose, like a social guest at a home, and the owner only needs to warn of known hazards that are not obvious. Your visitor status when you fell is the most important factor in a Thornton premises liability case.

What if the Thornton property owner says the hazard was open and obvious?

Property owners and their insurers often use the open-and-obvious defense, but it is not absolute under Colorado law. Even visible hazards can create liability when they are unreasonably dangerous or when the circumstances, such as a crowded store aisle or a dimly lit parking lot, prevented you from avoiding them. Recent Colorado appellate decisions have narrowed this defense. We use surveillance footage, maintenance records, and witness statements to counter it in Adams County court.

What if I was partly at fault for my Thornton fall?

Colorado's modified comparative negligence rule lets you recover damages as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible for your fall (C.R.S. 13-21-111). Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. At 50 percent or more, you cannot recover. Insurers handling Thornton cases regularly argue that the injured person was not paying attention or was wearing improper footwear, which is why documenting the scene and the condition at the time of the fall is so important to your case.

What damages can I recover in a Thornton slip and fall case?

You may be entitled to compensation for medical bills, lost wages, pain and suffering, emotional distress, and future care needs caused by your fall injuries. Colorado does not cap economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages in premises liability cases, and damages for physical impairment or disfigurement are not capped at all. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are subject to the statutory cap under C.R.S. 13-21-102.5, which is $1.5 million for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025.

It's More Than Money.

You were hurt on someone else's Thornton property. We handle the rest.

Free consultation. No fee unless we win. Serving Thornton in English and Spanish.

Tell us what happened

100% confidential. No fee unless we win.

Prefer to read first? See how Colorado slip and fall law works.

CGH Injury Lawyers, serving Thornton · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205