Elevator and Escalator Accidents in Rhode Island
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Elevator and escalator injuries in Rhode Island often result from equipment that has been poorly maintained, inadequately inspected, or allowed to fall into disrepair. When a mechanical failure, a sudden drop, a misleveled floor, or an escalator malfunction causes a serious fall or crush injury, the responsible parties include the building owner, the property manager, and in many cases the maintenance contractor who was responsible for keeping the equipment in safe working order.
At the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano, we know how to obtain inspection records, subpoena maintenance logs, and work with mechanical engineers to build elevator and escalator injury cases. Call us at (401) 288-3888 for a free consultation. You pay nothing unless we win.
17,000+
Elevator and escalator injuries serious enough to require emergency room treatment occur in the US each year
CPSC / OSHA
Annual
Rhode Island requires periodic inspection and certification of elevators and escalators by the RI Department of Labor and Training
RI DLT Elevator Safety Unit
Multiple
Parties may be liable in an elevator accident: the building owner, property manager, maintenance contractor, and in some cases the equipment manufacturer
Rhode Island premises liability law
Rhode Island Elevator Safety Regulations
Rhode Island’s Department of Labor and Training (DLT) regulates elevator safety in the state. Building owners are required to obtain periodic inspection certificates for elevators, escalators, and related conveyances. Elevators must be inspected and certified before being placed in service and at regular intervals thereafter. Failure to maintain a current inspection certificate, or failure to address deficiencies identified during inspection, is powerful evidence of negligence in an injury case.
Rhode Island follows the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) A17.1 Safety Code for Elevators and Escalators as the applicable technical standard. Maintenance contractors and building owners are expected to meet this standard in all elevator and escalator maintenance work.
Common Causes of Elevator and Escalator Injuries in Rhode Island
Misfleveling and Door Malfunctions
Elevator misleveling occurs when the elevator car does not align precisely with the floor level when it stops, creating a step up or step down that trips passengers entering or exiting. This is one of the most common causes of elevator slip and fall injuries and is almost always a result of inadequate maintenance or calibration. Door malfunctions, including doors that close on passengers or fail to open at the correct floor, cause crush injuries and falls.
Sudden Drops and Free Falls
A sudden, unexpected drop of the elevator car, even a short distance, can cause passengers to lose their footing, fall, and sustain serious injuries. Longer drops, while rare, are catastrophic. These events result from brake system failures, cable failures, or control system malfunctions that proper maintenance should prevent.
Escalator Falls and Entrapments
Escalator injuries fall into two main categories: falls caused by sudden stops, missing steps, slippery surfaces, or broken handrails; and entrapment injuries where clothing, footwear, or body parts become caught in the escalator mechanism. Children are particularly vulnerable to escalator entrapment injuries. Both categories result from maintenance failures that proper inspection and service should prevent.
Maintenance and Inspection Failures
Many elevator and escalator accidents are preceded by a documented history of malfunction that was reported but not adequately addressed. Tenant complaints, service tickets, and prior incident reports that show the building owner or maintenance contractor knew about a problem and failed to fix it are among the most powerful evidence in these cases.
In elevator and escalator cases, the maintenance records tell the story.
Prior service calls, unresolved repair orders, and inspection deficiencies are the evidence that proves the owner knew about the problem. We get those records early.
Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano
Who Is Liable in a Rhode Island Elevator or Escalator Accident?
The Building Owner
The building owner has the primary duty to ensure that the elevator or escalator on their property is maintained in a safe and properly functioning condition. This duty includes hiring qualified maintenance contractors, ensuring inspections are current, and responding to reported malfunctions promptly.
The Property Manager
In commercial buildings, apartment complexes, and shopping centers, a property management company may have assumed the day-to-day maintenance responsibility. If the property manager knew about a malfunction and failed to take the elevator out of service or arrange for emergency repair, they share liability for any resulting injury.
The Maintenance Contractor
Elevator maintenance companies that fail to properly service, repair, or inspect equipment may bear direct liability for injuries caused by equipment failures that their maintenance contract required them to prevent. Maintenance records, service tickets, and the contractor’s inspection reports are critical evidence in establishing this liability.
The Equipment Manufacturer
In some cases, the elevator or escalator malfunction results from a design or manufacturing defect rather than a maintenance failure. In these situations, the equipment manufacturer may bear product liability responsibility in addition to or instead of the premises liability parties.
How We Build Elevator and Escalator Injury Cases
Obtaining Inspection Records
We request the elevator’s full inspection history from the Rhode Island DLT, including any deficiencies noted in prior inspections and the owner’s response to those deficiencies. An expired inspection certificate or unresolved inspection finding is immediate evidence of negligence.
Subpoenaing Maintenance Logs
Maintenance logs document every service call, repair order, complaint, and technician visit. A log showing prior complaints about the same malfunction that caused the injury, or a gap in required service visits, provides direct evidence of the failure that led to the accident.
Mechanical Engineering Expert Testimony
In complex elevator malfunction cases, we work with mechanical engineers who can examine the equipment, review the maintenance history, and testify about what caused the malfunction and how proper maintenance would have prevented it.
Preserving the Physical Evidence
Elevator equipment is often repaired or replaced quickly after an accident. We act immediately to notify the building owner, property manager, and maintenance contractor of their obligation to preserve the equipment in its post-accident condition until it can be examined by an expert.
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Areas We Serve
- Throughout Rhode Island & Massachusetts, helping victims of personal injury get the care they deserve.
“When you choose us, you can be rest assured that you will receive personalized attention and a comprehensive legal strategy tailored to your unique circumstances. Our skilled lawyers will guide you through every step of the legal process, explaining your rights and options in clear, straightforward language.
We handle a wide range of personal injury cases, including car accidents, slip and falls, Dog Bite, and more. No matter the complexity of your case, we have the expertise and resources to fight for the compensation you deserve.”
Frequently Asked Questions: Elevator and Escalator Accidents in Rhode Island
1. Who is responsible for an elevator malfunction in Rhode Island?
Potentially the building owner, property manager, and maintenance contractor. The specific responsible parties depend on who had the contractual obligation to maintain the equipment and who knew or should have known about the malfunction that caused the injury.
2. What if there is no maintenance record for the elevator that injured me?
The absence of maintenance records is itself evidence of negligence. Building owners and maintenance contractors are required to document inspection and service activity. A gap in records suggests either that required maintenance was not performed or that records were not kept as required.
3. Can I sue if I was injured on an escalator in a shopping mall?
Yes. Shopping mall operators and commercial property managers have a duty to maintain escalators in safe working condition. Escalator injuries in commercial settings are premises liability claims against the property owner or manager, often with additional claims against the escalator maintenance contractor.
4. How long do I have to file an elevator accident claim in Rhode Island?
Three years from the date of the accident under Rhode Island’s statute of limitations. Act immediately to preserve maintenance records before they are altered or destroyed after the incident.
Why Choose the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano
for Your Premises Liability Case?
Why Choose the Law Offices of Michael F. Campopiano for Your Premises Liability Case?
Founded in 2007, MFC Law has spent nearly two decades fighting for injury victims throughout Rhode Island. Michael F. Campopiano built this firm on a simple belief: advocacy with compassion, when clients need it most. That means being accessible, honest, and relentless. Mike answers client calls directly, moves quickly to preserve evidence, and does not back down when insurance companies push back.
Our team speaks English, Spanish, and Portuguese, so every client feels fully understood and supported through every step of the process.
We represent premises liability victims in:
And all surrounding Rhode Island communities.
For a full overview of Rhode Island premises liability claims, visit our Rhode Island Premises Liability Lawyer page.
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