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Chair Collapse Injury Attorney: Premises Liability Claims in Florida

This page explains your legal rights, potential compensation, and what to do after being injured by a collapsed or defective chair. Our Florida injury lawyers have delivered millions in results for clients harmed by property owner negligence.

What Is a Chair Collapse Injury?

A chair collapse injury occurs when a seat fails under a person’s weight—due to poor maintenance, defective design, or inadequate inspection—causing sudden falls and severe harm. Such injuries can happen in restaurants, hotels, offices, apartment buildings, event spaces, or any public setting. Common outcomes include broken bones, head trauma, back and spinal injuries, lacerations, sprains, and lasting pain.

Victims may also suffer emotional distress and financial loss, especially if prolonged recovery keeps them from working or participating in daily life. In many cases, pre-existing medical conditions do not exempt the property owner or chair manufacturer from liability—what matters is whether the chair was safe and the owner acted responsibly.

Who Is Liable for Collapsed Chair Injuries?

Property owners and business operators must keep premises safe for guests, including inspecting and maintaining furniture. Failure to do so can make them legally responsible when a defective, worn, or unstable chair causes injury. Liability may also extend to the manufacturer or retailer of the chair if the product was poorly designed or assembled, allowing for a product liability claim alongside premises liability.

Our attorneys investigate liability thoroughly, identifying whether a restaurant, hotel, retail store, apartment complex, or other party was aware (or should have been aware) of the risk and failed to act. Both businesses and individuals have won substantial settlements for chair collapse claims where owners neglected their duty of care.

How to Prove Premises Liability in Chair Collapse Cases

  • Duty of Care—Property owners must keep furniture, floors, and fixtures safe and functional.
  • Breach—Did the owner or operator fail to inspect, repair, or replace the chair after learning of defects or wear?
  • Causation—Did this breach directly result in injury, either by the chair’s collapse or unsafe modification?
  • Damages—Can injuries and financial losses be documented through medical bills, lost wages, or pain and suffering?

Evidence such as accident photos, incident reports, witness accounts, and expert evaluations all strengthen a claim

Florida law generally gives injured parties four years to file a premises liability lawsuit, though cases should be pursued as soon as possible to preserve physical and documentary evidence

Types of Compensation for Chair Collapse Injuries

  • Medical bills—hospitalization, surgery, doctor visits, medication, therapy costs.
  • Lost earnings—wages lost during time off work and future earning capability.
  • Property damage—loss or destruction of personal items during the incident.
  • Long-term care—rehabilitation expenses or modifications for disability.
  • Punitive damages—for gross negligence or repeated failure to maintain safe premises.

Settlements vary widely, from covering medical bills and small claims to multi-million-dollar jury awards for catastrophic injury and paralysis.

Chair Collapse Lawsuit Examples

  • $2.2 Million Jury Award (Florida): A man injured while meeting a lawyer received over $2 million for injuries sustained when a law firm’s office chair collapsed. The jury found both the law firm and the chair retailer liable due to lack of inspection and faulty design.
  • $5 Million Settlement (California): A woman fell from a store-provided defective chair, suffering partial paralysis. Investigation revealed improper modification and negligent assembly. The settlement covered medical costs and lifetime care.
  • $150,000 Settlement: A food court patron won damages after a chair collapse led to back and shoulder injuries requiring surgery.
  • Defective Armrests & Structural Failure: Victims of faulty folding chairs and garden seats have recovered for finger amputations, spinal injuries, and long-term pain when owners and manufacturers were found negligent.

While some claims settle privately, others go to trial, especially where responsibility is disputed. Our firm pursues every legal avenue to maximize your recovery, no matter how complex the case.

Steps After a Chair Collapse Injury

  1. Seek medical attention—Document all injuries and treatment, even for minor symptoms.
  2. Report the incident—Alert property management or business owners and obtain a written incident report.
  3. Collect evidence—Take photos of the collapsed chair, location, and any physical signs; obtain witness contact info.
  4. Preserve related expenses—Keep receipts for medical care, missed work, and damaged property.
  5. Consult a premises liability attorney—Skilled lawyers can identify all liable parties and deal with insurance adjusters and legal deadlines.
  6. Avoid settling without legal advice—Businesses may offer compensation or require waivers; consult a lawyer first.

The Injury Firm proudly provides free case reviews, available 24/7, with no fee unless recovery is successful.

The Injury Firm: Florida’s Chair Collapse Injury Attorneys

Our team represents injured victims throughout Fort Lauderdale, Orlando, and West Palm Beach. With offices across South Florida and a proven track record of results, The Injury Firm fights for full compensation after any premises liability injury—chair collapse, slip and fall, trip and fall, or dangerous property conditions.

Fort Lauderdale Office: 1608 E Commercial Blvd, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33334
West Palm Beach Office: 2536 Okeechobee Blvd., West Palm Beach, FL 33409
Orlando Office: 4495 Semoran Blvd., Orlando, FL 32822

The Injury Firm is licensed in Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Tennessee.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I sue a business if a chair collapsed under me?
Yes. If the business or property owner failed to maintain or inspect the chair, or if the chair was defective, you may be entitled to damages for injuries, medical bills, and other losses.
Who is liable in a chair collapse case—owner or manufacturer?
Responsibility may lie with the owner for failing to maintain safe furniture, and with the manufacturer or retailer for product defects. Sometimes, both parties share liability.
What evidence do I need for a chair injury claim?
Photos of the chair and injuries, witness statements, incident reports, medical records, and proof of expenses are crucial for building a claim.
How much compensation can I expect?
Compensation depends on injury severity, medical costs, lost income, and pain. Awards have ranged from thousands for minor injuries to millions for catastrophic harm.
Does my weight or age affect my ability to sue?
No. Florida law doesn’t excuse owners from maintaining safe chairs because a guest is older or heavier; the key question is negligence.
Should I accept a settlement from the business?
Not before consulting a lawyer. Offers may undervalue your claim or require you to waive rights. Legal advice protects your interests.
How long do I have to file a claim in Florida?
Florida’s statute of limitations is typically four years for premises liability injury claims. Acting quickly helps secure key evidence and maximizes recovery.
Will my case be made public?
Most cases resolve privately, but public trial or precedent-setting decisions are possible in disputes. Our lawyers protect client privacy whenever possible.

 



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The information contained in this website is provided for informational purposes only.  This website may contain information about The Injury Firm's past results, testimonials about the firm or a lawyer within the firm, and statements regarding the quality of The Injury Firm's work product. This information has not been reviewed or approved by The Florida Bar. Please be advised that: 1) the facts and circumstances of your case may differ from the matters for which results and testimonials have been provided: 2) Not all results of cases handled by the firm or its lawyers are provided and not all clients have given testimonials; and 3) The results and testimonials provided are not necessarily representative of results obtained by the firm or by its lawyers or of the experience of all clients or others within the firm or its lawyers. Every case is different, and each client’s case must be evaluated and handled on its own merits.

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