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Parker, Colorado commercial corridor along Parker Road. CGH Injury Lawyers represents slip and fall victims in Parker and Douglas County from our Denver office.
Parker, Colorado

Parker Slip and Fall Lawyers Who Build Premises Liability Claims to Full Value

A fall at a Parker retail store, a shopping center along Mainstreet, an apartment complex, or an icy commercial parking lot can fracture bones, injure your spine, and upend your life in moments. CGH Injury Lawyers serves Parker slip and fall victims from our Denver office, navigates the Colorado Premises Liability Act and the 182-day government-notice rule, and files in the Douglas County District Court when an owner or insurer refuses to be fair. You pay nothing unless we win.

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Serving Parker 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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  • Parker slip and fall cases are governed by Colorado's Premises Liability Act (C.R.S. 13-21-115). The duty a property owner owes you depends on whether you were an invitee, a licensee, or a trespasser when you fell. Most Parker customers at retail centers along Mainstreet and Parker Road, tenants in apartment complexes, and visitors to commercial properties qualify as invitees who are owed the highest duty of care.
  • Most Parker slip and fall injury claims must be filed within two years of the date of the fall (C.R.S. 13-80-102). If you fell on government property, such as a Town of Parker sidewalk, a Douglas County building, or public property managed by a government authority, you must serve a formal written notice of claim within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)) or the claim against that entity is permanently barred.
  • Colorado follows a modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111). You can recover damages as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible for your fall. If a property owner or insurer argues you were 50 percent or more at fault, you recover nothing. Documenting the hazard immediately is critical to preserving that recovery.

Parker's rapidly growing commercial corridors along Mainstreet and Parker Road, apartment complexes expanding across Douglas County, large retail parking lots that sit uncleared after Colorado snowstorms, and the construction zones that follow the town's growth all create real premises liability exposure for residents and visitors every year. CGH Injury Lawyers handles Parker slip and fall claims from our Denver office, files at the Douglas County District Court in Castle Rock when a fair resolution is refused, and advances all costs so you pay nothing unless we recover for you.

The law that governs your case

How Colorado's Premises Liability Act decides what a Parker property owner owed you (C.R.S. 13-21-115)

Colorado does not apply old common-law negligence principles to most slip and fall cases. Instead, the Premises Liability Act classifies every visitor into one of three categories. That classification sets the exact legal duty the property owner owed you before you fell, and it shapes every negotiation and every argument in the Douglas County courtroom that follows.

  1. Invitee: the highest duty of care

    When you enter a Parker store, restaurant, retail shopping center, or apartment complex as a customer or tenant, you are typically an invitee. You are there for the mutual benefit of both yourself and the property owner. The law requires the owner to actively inspect the property for dangerous conditions, repair hazards without undue delay, and warn you of dangers that cannot be fixed immediately. A Parker grocery store or big-box retailer that allows a spill to remain on the floor for twenty minutes while you shop owes you this highest standard. A property owner who falls short of it faces legal liability for your injuries.

  2. Licensee: a moderate duty

    A licensee enters the property with permission but primarily for their own benefit rather than for the owner's commercial advantage. Social guests visiting a private Parker home are the clearest example. The owner must warn a licensee of known dangers that are not obvious but has no duty to actively search for hidden hazards the owner did not already know about. The line between invitee and licensee can significantly affect the outcome of a premises case, which is why pinning down your exact legal status on the property is one of the first things we do in every Parker slip and fall investigation.

  3. Trespasser: a limited duty

    A trespasser enters without permission and is owed only protection from willful or wanton harm. Special rules under the attractive nuisance doctrine do protect child trespassers who are drawn onto a property by a feature that poses unreasonable danger to a child who cannot appreciate the risk, such as an unfenced pool or an unlocked construction site adjacent to a Parker residential neighborhood under active development.

The overwhelming majority of Parker slip and fall victims who contact us were invitees: shoppers at a retail center along Parker Road or Mainstreet, tenants in an apartment complex, visitors to a hotel, or patrons at a restaurant. In those cases the property owner's duty was at its highest, and a failure to inspect for hazards, clean a wet floor, treat icy walkways, or repair a broken step creates clear legal liability under C.R.S. 13-21-115.

Where Parker falls happen

The dangerous conditions behind the most serious Parker slip and fall claims

Not every fall creates legal liability. The Premises Liability Act requires proof that a dangerous condition existed and that the owner knew or should have known about it. These are the hazards that produce the most serious premises liability claims in the Parker area.

Winter and outdoor hazards specific to Parker

  • Ice and snow left uncleared on commercial sidewalks along Mainstreet and Parker Road after a storm has passed and a reasonable removal window has closed
  • Refrozen ice patches in retail parking lots where snow was plowed into unlit median islands overnight and melted water re-iced across travel paths by morning
  • Black ice on parking structures and covered entrances at commercial properties along the Lincoln Avenue and Parker Road interchange corridor
  • Damaged or uneven pavement in newer construction-zone retail areas where ground settling has not been corrected

Indoor and structural hazards

  • Wet entryways and tracked-in water without warning signs at Parker grocery stores, big-box retailers, and restaurants along Mainstreet
  • Broken or missing stair handrails in apartment complexes and newer commercial buildings where construction punch-list items were never completed
  • Poorly lit stairwells, parking garages, and building corridors where light fixtures go unrepaired in multi-tenant commercial properties
  • Loose floor mats, torn carpet, or unmarked step-down transitions at retail properties and entertainment venues in the Parker commercial district

Parker's rapid growth brings new commercial properties online at a pace that can outrun maintenance systems. Newly built retail centers often have parking lot drainage problems, incomplete landscaping transitions between pavement and walkways, and management companies still building their inspection routines. When a known hazard in a brand-new Parker shopping center goes uncorrected because the property management team has not yet established its inspection schedule, that is not a defense. It is negligence.

Snow and ice cases

The natural accumulation rule and when a Parker property owner is still liable for an icy fall

Colorado follows the natural accumulation rule, which generally shields property owners from liability for ice and snow that falls naturally during a storm. Parker sits in Douglas County on the Front Range where significant snowfall is a recurring winter reality, and this rule comes up in a large number of premises cases here. Understanding when it stops protecting an owner is essential to evaluating whether your fall case has merit.

When the natural accumulation rule still protects the owner

  • A storm is actively ongoing and accumulation is still in progress at the time of your fall
  • The fall occurs so soon after snowfall ends that a reasonable Parker property owner could not yet have cleared and treated the surface
  • The condition is the ordinary result of natural weather with no action by the owner that worsened or redirected the hazard

When the Parker owner can still be held liable

  • Enough time passed after the storm for a reasonable commercial property owner to clear the walkway or parking lot, and no clearing was done
  • The owner began clearing snow or ice but did so negligently, pushing snow into travel lanes or creating re-iced channels overnight
  • The owner created the hazard through their own actions, such as directing snowmelt from a cleared roof onto a pedestrian entrance without treatment

Recent Colorado Court of Appeals decisions have limited the natural accumulation defense when an owner began snow removal but carried it out carelessly. If the owner started the job and created a more dangerous surface in the process, the natural accumulation defense fails entirely. Parker commercial properties with large parking lots and drainage patterns that push snowmelt across walking surfaces are exactly the kind of setting where negligent snow-removal practices turn a protected accumulation into an actionable hazard. We examine the storm timeline, the maintenance logs for the property, and any available parking lot surveillance footage to establish exactly when and how the owner became responsible for your fall.

Fell on government property?

The 182-day notice deadline if you fell on a Parker town sidewalk, park, or public building

If you slipped or tripped on a public sidewalk, in a Parker town park, in a government office building, on property controlled by the Town of Parker, Douglas County, or another public entity, a completely separate legal framework applies. Most people assume they have two years to act, just as they would for a private property fall. They do not. The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act imposes a far shorter window, and missing it permanently ends the claim against the government entity regardless of how clearly the hazard was the government's fault.

  1. File written notice within 182 days of discovering the injury

    Under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1), you must file a formal written notice of claim with the responsible government entity within 182 days of discovering the injury. Not 180 days. Not one year. The clock runs from the date you discovered the injury, not from the date of the fall itself. This notice is not a lawsuit. It is a formal pre-suit document that must be served on the right government office before any litigation can proceed. Failing to file it almost always ends the government-entity claim entirely, no matter how dangerous the condition was.

  2. Identify which government entity controls the property

    A fall on what appears to be a Town of Parker sidewalk may involve the Town of Parker, Douglas County, CDOT if the sidewalk borders SH-83 or another state highway, or E-470 Public Highway Authority if the incident occurs near an E-470 ramp or interchange. The notice must reach the correct entity or it fails entirely. Getting that identification wrong wastes your 182 days and can bar the claim even if a timely notice was attempted.

  3. Confirm that a CGIA immunity exception applies

    The Colorado Governmental Immunity Act grants broad immunity to public entities, but important exceptions exist. Dangerous conditions of public buildings and certain public facilities that the entity knew or should have known about can create liability notwithstanding the general immunity grant. We evaluate whether your Parker fall fits an exception before pursuing the notice process.

  4. Understand the CGIA caps on recovery from a government entity

    Even a successful claim against a government entity is capped by statute. For claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026, the per-person limit is $505,000 and the per-occurrence aggregate is $1,421,000 (C.R.S. 24-10-114). There is no willful or wanton conduct exception that lifts these caps. That reality directly shapes how we value and pursue government-property fall cases in Parker differently from private-property falls.

If you fell on a Town of Parker sidewalk, in a Douglas County park, near an E-470 interchange, or anywhere a government entity controls the property, call (303) 209-9395 right away. Six months passes faster than most people expect, and the 182-day notice cannot be recovered once it expires.

Building the case

Proving notice and beating the open-and-obvious defense in a Parker fall case

Winning a Parker premises liability case requires proving the property owner knew or should have known about the hazard that caused your fall. Owners and their insurers defend these cases with two predictable arguments: they had no notice of the hazard, and the hazard was open and obvious. Here is how each works and how we address them.

Actual notice

  • An employee or manager at the Parker property was directly told about the hazard before your fall occurred
  • Prior incident reports or customer complaints about the same condition are on file at the property
  • Staff members observed the spill, broken fixture, or icy surface before your fall and took no action

Constructive notice

  • The hazard existed long enough that a reasonable inspection of the Parker property would have discovered it
  • Maintenance logs or inspection schedules show the area went unchecked for an unreasonable period
  • Surveillance footage shows how long the dangerous condition was present before your fall

The open-and-obvious defense: common but not absolute

Parker property owners and their insurers frequently argue that the hazard that caused your fall was so visible and apparent that any reasonable person exercising ordinary care would have avoided it. Colorado courts have traditionally been receptive to this argument, but it is not a guaranteed win for the owner. Recent Colorado Court of Appeals decisions have limited the open-and-obvious rule when the hazard was so unreasonably dangerous that injury was virtually certain even for a careful person.

Whether a hazard was truly open and obvious also depends on what a reasonable person in your particular situation would have seen and been able to avoid. Carrying shopping bags, navigating a crowded Parker retail aisle, approaching a dimly lit building entrance on a winter evening, or crossing a newly built parking lot whose drainage pattern channels water across the walking path all affect what a reasonable person would notice and be able to avoid. We build the factual record with photographs, video footage, maintenance records, and witness statements so the open-and-obvious argument fails where the evidence does not support it.

Local knowledge

Parker courts. Parker trauma care. Parker premises.

A Parker slip and fall claim lives in Parker: the property where you fell, the hospital that treated you, and the courthouse where any lawsuit is filed. Here is the local ground we work on for every Douglas County premises liability client.

Courthouse

Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock (18th Judicial District)

Parker slip and fall lawsuits above the county court jurisdictional limit are filed at the Douglas County District Court, 4000 Justice Way, Castle Rock, CO, in Colorado's 18th Judicial District. Parker sits in Douglas County, and the 18th Judicial District covers Douglas, Arapahoe, Lincoln, and Elbert counties. Filing in Douglas County means facing a Castle Rock-area jury pool, Douglas County local procedure, and the defense firms and insurance adjusters who regularly work this court. Most premises liability cases settle before any lawsuit is filed, but knowing where the case would go in Castle Rock shapes how we build your demand and value your claim from the first day we open your file.

Trauma Care

AdventHealth Parker

AdventHealth Parker is the primary hospital serving the Parker area and the closest full-service hospital for residents and visitors injured in a fall at a commercial property along Mainstreet, Parker Road, or Lincoln Avenue. When a Parker slip and fall sends someone to AdventHealth Parker, the emergency records, imaging reports, and treatment notes from that visit become the foundation of the damages claim. We work with those hospital records from the beginning of every Parker premises case to make sure no diagnosis, procedure, referral, or future care need is left out of your claim. When injuries are severe and require a higher level of trauma care, patients may be transferred to a Denver facility, and we gather records from every treating provider.

Local Premises Risk

Mainstreet commercial zone, Parker Road and Lincoln Avenue corridor, apartment complexes, and public sidewalks

Parker's commercial core along Mainstreet and Parker Road concentrates foot traffic in retail, restaurant, and entertainment spaces that have expanded quickly alongside the town's growth. Newer commercial buildings in fast-growing communities sometimes have drainage problems, incomplete walkway transitions between pavement and landscaping, and parking lot maintenance schedules that do not match actual winter conditions. The intersection of Parker Road and Lincoln Avenue handles high volumes of pedestrian and vehicle traffic alongside retail driveways and restaurant parking that can produce walkway hazards concentrated in a small area. Apartment complexes across Parker generate stairwell, hallway, and exterior pathway maintenance claims, particularly during winter when outdoor walking surfaces require active attention. Public sidewalks throughout Parker, especially near the town commercial core and near SH-83, are subject to the CGIA's 182-day notice requirement when the Town of Parker or Douglas County controls the property.

After the fall

What to do after a slip and fall in Parker

Premises liability evidence disappears fast. Store video gets overwritten, spills get mopped up, and ice melts by afternoon. The steps you take in the minutes and hours after a Parker fall determine whether the hazard can be proven at all and what you can ultimately recover. These are the actions that make the difference.

  1. Get medical care

    Serious Parker falls are typically treated at AdventHealth Parker, the primary hospital serving the Parker area. Even injuries that seem mild at the scene can hide spinal disc damage, a traumatic brain injury, or a hip fracture that presents mild symptoms in the first hours and worsens significantly within days. Get examined on the day of the fall or the next morning. A medical record created close in time to the incident ties your diagnosis directly to what happened on that property.

  2. Report the fall to the property owner or manager

    Before leaving the Parker property, report the fall to the store manager, building manager, or whoever is responsible for the premises. Ask for a written incident report and request a copy. This creates a contemporaneous record of the hazard that the owner cannot later deny existed. If you fell on a Town of Parker sidewalk or government property, note the exact address, time, and conditions because the CGIA notice deadline runs from the moment you discovered the injury.

  3. Document the scene right away

    Photograph the hazard, the surrounding area, the lighting conditions, and the presence or absence of warning signs. If you fell on ice in a Parker parking lot along Parker Road or Lincoln Avenue, photograph the extent of the ice, whether sand or salt was applied anywhere nearby, and where the drainage directs water across the walking surface. Get the names and contact information of any witnesses before they leave. Video from your phone showing the exact surface condition is far more powerful evidence than any description you might write later.

  4. Preserve evidence of the hazard

    Save the shoes and clothing you wore during the fall. Do not clean them. Sole condition, heel wear, and the absence of any obvious footwear defect are all points a property owner will raise in litigation to argue your footwear contributed to the fall. Keep any receipts or records that prove you were at the Parker property that day. If the hazard was structural, such as a broken step, a missing handrail, or a cracked walkway, take photographs from multiple angles and distances before you leave.

  5. Watch for government-entity deadlines

    If your fall happened on a Parker town sidewalk, in a public park, in a government office building, near E-470 Public Highway Authority property, or on any property the Town of Parker or Douglas County controls, the 182-day CGIA notice deadline under C.R.S. 24-10-109(1) started running the moment you discovered the injury. Missing this deadline almost always ends the government-entity claim permanently, regardless of the strength of the evidence. Call us before the window closes.

  6. Contact a Parker premises liability attorney

    The standard two-year statute of limitations for a private premises claim under C.R.S. 13-80-102 runs from the date of the fall. That sounds like plenty of time, but surveillance footage at Parker commercial properties is typically overwritten in 30 to 90 days, and maintenance records become difficult to obtain once litigation is not yet pending. A free consultation with CGH Injury Lawyers costs nothing and puts us in position to send preservation letters before that evidence is gone.

Compensation

What you can recover after a Parker slip and fall, even if you were partly at fault

Colorado law lets injured people recover the full documented value of a fall injury and the human cost of living with its consequences. Two broad categories apply to every Douglas County premises liability claim, along with a fault rule that insurers use aggressively to drive down what they pay.

Economic damages (no cap)

  • Medical expenses, past and future, including emergency care at AdventHealth Parker and any subsequent surgeries, physical therapy, or long-term treatment
  • Lost wages from time missed at work during recovery
  • Loss of future earning capacity when the fall limits your ability to work long-term
  • Costs of assistive devices, home modifications, and long-term care needs
  • Out-of-pocket transportation and care expenses caused directly by the fall

Non-economic and other damages

  • Pain and suffering from the fall and the recovery process
  • Emotional distress and anxiety caused by the injury and its effects on daily life
  • Loss of enjoyment of life when the fall limits activities that mattered before the injury
  • Loss of consortium when a spouse or family member is affected by the injury
  • Compensation for permanent physical impairment or disfigurement, which carries no cap under Colorado law

Economic damages such as medical bills and lost wages carry no cap in Colorado premises liability cases. Non-economic damages such as pain and suffering are capped at $1,500,000 for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2025 (C.R.S. 13-21-102.5). Compensation for physical impairment or disfigurement carries no cap at all, which is why fall injuries that produce permanent hip damage, spinal cord injury, or traumatic brain injury can build substantial case value in that uncapped category even when the non-economic cap limits pain-and-suffering recovery.

Colorado's modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111) allows you to recover as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible for your fall. Your compensation is reduced by your percentage of fault. A plaintiff found 30 percent at fault recovers 70 percent of total damages. At 50 percent or more, recovery is barred entirely. Parker property owners and their insurers use this rule as a default opening position in every claim: you were not watching where you were going, your shoes were inadequate, or you were looking at your phone. Building the record of the hazard, the lighting, the warning signs that were absent, and your own path through the space is how we limit the fault assigned to you and keep the full value of your Parker claim on the table.

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Your team

The Parker slip and fall team behind your case

CGH Injury Lawyers is a eight-attorney Colorado firm founded in 2016, formerly Cheney Galluzzi and Howard. Managing Partner Kevin Cheney is a member of the American Board of Trial Advocates (ABOTA) and has tried over 25 cases to verdict. Timothy G. Tarr has been recognized by Best Lawyers every year since 2023. Every Parker premises liability case is handled by a licensed Colorado attorney who files and tries cases in the 18th Judicial District, not by a paralegal.

ABOTA member on the team Tim Tarr: Best Lawyers in America since 2023 Over 25 cases to verdict 18th Judicial District experience Bilingual EN / ES Free consultation No fee unless we win

One thing we will tell you upfront: CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Parker office. We serve Parker slip and fall clients from our Denver office at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205. We come to you for meetings when needed, we file at the Douglas County District Court in Castle Rock, and we try cases in the 18th Judicial District. What you get is the work and the result, not a storefront on Mainstreet.

Frequently asked questions

Parker slip and fall frequently asked questions

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

You generally have two years from the date of the fall to file a personal injury lawsuit against a private property owner under C.R.S. 13-80-102. That deadline runs from the day you fall, not from when you finish treatment. If you fell on government property, such as a Town of Parker sidewalk, a public park, or a Douglas County building, a much shorter 182-day written notice deadline applies under the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). Missing the CGIA notice almost always ends the government-entity portion of your claim permanently, no matter how strong the evidence is. Do not wait to contact an attorney, because critical evidence at Parker commercial properties is often overwritten or destroyed within weeks of a fall.

Can I sue the Town of Parker if I fell on a public sidewalk?

Yes, in some circumstances, but you must comply with the Colorado Governmental Immunity Act. You must file a formal written notice of claim with the Town of Parker within 182 days of discovering the injury (C.R.S. 24-10-109(1)). The CGIA grants broad immunity to public entities but provides exceptions for dangerous conditions of public buildings and certain public facilities that the entity knew or should have known about. If the claim succeeds, recovery is capped at $505,000 per person and $1,421,000 per occurrence for claims accruing on or after January 1, 2026 (C.R.S. 24-10-114). The combination of the short notice deadline and the CGIA caps makes government-property fall cases in Parker significantly different from private premises cases.

What if I slipped on ice in a Parker parking lot?

Colorado follows the natural accumulation rule, which generally protects property owners from liability for ice and snow that falls naturally during a storm. However, if the storm has passed and the owner failed to clear the lot within a reasonable time, or if the owner began snow removal but created a more dangerous refrozen surface in the process, liability can attach. The specific timeline after the storm ended, the maintenance records for the Parker parking lot, the drainage pattern that may have channeled water across the walking surface, and any available surveillance footage are all critical to evaluating whether the owner's natural accumulation defense holds up.

What if the Parker property owner says the hazard was obvious?

The open-and-obvious defense is a standard argument in Parker slip and fall cases, but it is not absolute. Even a visible hazard can create liability under Colorado's Premises Liability Act when the hazard is so unreasonably dangerous that a careful person could not avoid it given the circumstances. Whether a hazard was truly open and obvious depends on lighting conditions, what else competed for your attention in the Parker retail space, the layout of the property, and whether adequate warnings were posted. Recent Colorado Court of Appeals decisions have limited this defense when owners create conditions that are unreasonably dangerous. We build the factual record that challenges the defense where the evidence does not support it.

What can I recover if I was partly at fault for my fall in Parker?

Colorado's modified comparative fault rule (C.R.S. 13-21-111) lets you recover as long as you were less than 50 percent responsible for your fall. Your compensation is reduced by your share of the fault. If you are found 30 percent at fault, you recover 70 percent of your total damages. At 50 percent or more, you recover nothing. Property owners and their insurers raise comparative fault in nearly every Parker premises liability claim. Documenting the hazard and the conditions at the property at the time of the fall is the most effective way to keep your fault percentage low and your recovery full.

Does CGH Injury Lawyers have an office in Parker?

No. CGH Injury Lawyers does not have a Parker office. We have one office, at 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205, (303) 209-9395. We serve Parker and Douglas County slip and fall clients from that Denver office, file premises liability cases at the Douglas County District Court in Castle Rock, and meet you wherever is convenient for your situation. There is no additional charge for Parker clients. We are available in English and Spanish.

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Read next: Colorado slip and fall law: what you need to know statewide

CGH Injury Lawyers · 2701 Lawrence St., Suite 201, Denver, CO 80205 · Serving Parker and Douglas County