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after one itty bitty law course, is that there are required ingredients for suing for negligence. A missing ingredient in any of these will often lead to a dismissal. The ingredients are that a duty of care is owed to the plaintiff (ie, keeping the sidewalks free of ice), breach of the duty (ie, ice was there for awhile, no attempt made to remove it) and finally causation and damages. If someone slips and falls, but doesn't get hurt, there are no grounds for damages. If there is an injury, and damage, it must be a direct result of the careless conduct (ie if someone was wearing high heels instead of snow boots, that could be dismissed as it cannot be proven that but for the conduct of the defendant, the plaintiff would have never fallen).
Now, I'm not sure what the 'tests' are in American law for negligence, but I think it's obvious that the damages awarded here would be substantially less simply because of our universal health care. Also, the court limits punitive damages to intentional torts and those have an upper $ limit. General damages (ie, loss of income or pain and suffering) may be substantial, but generally even the winning party must pay some of their own legal expenses. So it is quite cost prohibitive to sue unless you are assured a win and a large amount of damages.
So, I have never seen an ad for lawyers like that anywhere but the yellow pages, and usually that is only for motor vehicle accidents. Here in Alberta we have private insurance so we do have some 'ambulance chasers' but in places like Manitoba where their provincial auto insurance has an upper limit on the amount that can be awarded it's less common. I know the slip and fall type lawyers must exist, since even though we have universal health care, we don't have government prescription coverage. So someone who had an injury requiring large amounts of expensive medication may have a good case.
Okay, probably more than you wanted to know. Hope that helped some. Maybe we have a lawyer or paralegal here who knows more than I do that could join in and/or correct me :)
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