The holidays may be over, but the risks they create don’t disappear the moment decorations come down.
In the weeks during and immediately after the holiday season, stores are often left dealing with the aftermath of heavy foot traffic—overcrowded aisles, rushed restocking, understaffed shifts, and winter conditions tracked indoors. Clearance sales, returns, and inventory resets keep stores busy well into January, and hazards often linger longer than they should.
Slippery floors from melted snow, unstable displays hastily assembled or left overloaded, cluttered aisles, and poorly monitored walkways continue to pose serious dangers—especially for children.
And then it happens—your child slips, a display collapses, a cart tips, or a heavy item falls from a high shelf. The excitement of a routine shopping trip turns into fear in an instant.
But let’s be clear: you are not to blame.
Stores have a legal duty to keep their spaces safe—not just during the holidays, but after them as well. When retailers fail to clean up hazards, secure displays, or properly inspect their premises during high-risk winter months, children get hurt.
And when a store fails your family, you have rights.
When Is the Store Legally Responsible?
Injuries that happen inside retail stores—whether during the holidays or after—fall under Michigan’s premises liability laws. These laws determine when a store can be held responsible for unsafe conditions that harm customers, especially vulnerable ones like children.
Duty to Maintain a Safe Environment
Under Michigan law, stores must:
- Keep aisles reasonably safe
- Fix hazards in a timely manner
- Warn customers about dangers when they can’t be fixed immediately
- Inspect the premises regularly
When a retailer ignores these responsibilities—by leaving spills unattended, allowing unstable displays to remain, or failing to inspect high-traffic areas—they may be legally responsible for the injuries that result.
The “Notice” Requirement
To prove liability, we examine what the store knew or should have known.
- Actual notice: The store knew about the hazard—such as an employee seeing a spill and failing to act.
- Constructive notice: The hazard existed long enough that the store should have discovered and corrected it.
Post-holiday conditions often reveal exactly this problem: hazards that sat unattended during busy weeks and were never properly addressed.
The “Open and Obvious” Myth
Many stores try to avoid responsibility by claiming a hazard was “open and obvious.” But Michigan courts are increasingly skeptical of this defense—especially when children are involved.
Why? Because children:
- Do not perceive danger like adults
- Are naturally drawn to displays
- Cannot reasonably assess risk
A child injured by a dangerous condition is not held to the same standard as an adult. And that distinction matters in court.
Negligence Defined
For a store to be liable, we look at negligence—the failure to use reasonable care.
Cornell Law defines negligence as conduct that “falls below the standard established by law for the protection of others against unreasonable risk of harm.”
If a store’s actions—or lack of action—created an unreasonable risk to your child, that store may be negligent.
What Parents Should Do Immediately After the Injury
Seek Medical Care
Your child’s health comes first.
- Visit the ER, urgent care, or pediatrician
- Take photos of injuries as soon as possible
Report the Incident to the Store Manager
Ask for:
- An official incident report
- Written acknowledgment from management
- Confirmation that security footage will be preserved
Gather Evidence
The store will not do this for you.
Collect:
- Photos of the hazard
- Photos of your child’s injuries
- Names and contact information of witnesses
- The clothing and shoes your child wore
Do Not Let Store Employees Pressure You
Employees may try to:
- Downplay the injury
- Suggest your child was “running” or “not paying attention”
- Push for a written or recorded statement
- Shift blame onto you
You are not required to cooperate beyond reporting the incident.
Contact Marko Law Before Speaking to Insurance
Corporate insurers move fast in child injury cases. Their goals are to:
- Deny claims
- Minimize payouts
- Shift responsibility away from the store
Once statements are given, they can be used against you.
How Marko Law Proves Store Negligence
Obtaining Surveillance Footage
Most retail stores have extensive camera systems. We act quickly to preserve:
- Video of the incident
- Footage showing how long the hazard existed
- Employee activity in the area
Without a preservation request, footage can be deleted within days.
Reviewing Maintenance Logs
Stores are required to document:
- Spill cleanups
- Floor inspections
- Shelf stocking
- Winter entrance maintenance
Gaps in these records often reveal negligence.
Investigating Employee Training
Post-holiday staffing often includes:
- Temporary or seasonal workers
- Minimal safety training
- Poor supervision
We examine training records, safety policies, and compliance failures.
Inspecting Store Layout and Hazard Controls
We evaluate:
- Crowded or blocked aisles
- Overloaded shelves
- Unstable displays
- Poor lighting
- Inadequate floor mats
These conditions often show systemic safety failures.
Using Experts
When necessary, we involve:
- Engineering experts
- Safety specialists
- Child development professionals
Their testimony helps juries understand why the store—not the child—is responsible.
Evaluating Michigan Winter Conditions at the Time of Injury
Winter injuries often involve:
- Snow and slush tracked indoors
- Melted puddles
- Ice near entrances
- Inadequate or missing mats
We compare store conditions with the weather that day to determine whether the store acted reasonably.
Damages Your Child May Be Entitled To
- Medical bills
- Future care
- Pain and suffering
- Scarring or disfigurement
- Emotional trauma
- Loss of enjoyment of life
- Long-term disability
Michigan’s Statute of Limitations for Child Injury Claims
Extended Filing Deadlines
Michigan allows minors additional time to file lawsuits after reaching adulthood. However, many related claims have much shorter deadlines, sometimes as short as one year.
Why Waiting Still Hurts the Case
Delays can:
- Erase surveillance footage
- Lose witnesses
- Allow hazards to be fixed
- Weaken proof of notice
- Undermine medical documentation
Insurance companies benefit from delay—you don’t.
Your Child Deserves Safety—And You Deserve Answers.
Holiday-related store injuries don’t end when the calendar turns to January. Many occur because retailers rushed, cut corners, or failed to correct hazards created during the busiest shopping season of the year.
That is not your fault.
And it is not your child’s fault.
At Marko Law, we take child injury cases personally. We understand what’s at stake—your child’s health, emotional well-being, and your family’s peace of mind. We shoulder that burden with you.
Contact Marko Law for a Free Case Evaluation
📞 Phone: +1-313-777-7777
📍 Main Office: 220 W. Congress, 4th Floor, Detroit, MI 48226
🌐 Website: https://www.markolaw.com/