Something located on a piece of property that attracts children but also endangers them.
in negligence cases, situations which "attract" children and are inherently dangerous, such as swimming pools and construction sites.
Something on a piece of property, such as a tree, swimming pool or piece of heavy equipment, that attracts children but that can be unsafe or cause harm to the children it attracts.
Anything on a property which may attract small children and is dangerous to them. Reasonable care must be used to prevent injury to the children.
shy; A dangerous instrumentality, machinery, etc. on one's land which is likely to attract children.
anything on your premises that might attract children into danger or harm; "their swimming pool is an attractive nuisance; they should fence it in"
an artificial condition that attracts a child but which the child doesn't recognize as dangerous, such as a swimming pool
an object which by its very location and configuration is attractive and also dangerous to children
a potentially harmful object or condition of the land that has the ability to attract children
a potentially harmful object so inviting or interesting to a child that it would lure the child onto the property to investigate
A dangerous place or instrumentality attractive to children like a swimming pool without a fence. The owner of an attractive nuisance has the legal duty of taking unusual care to guard children from it.
The law states that an individual owes no duty of care to someone trespassing upon that individual's property. This is an exception to that rule since it does state that a special duty of care is required of a person with respect to conditions which attract children.
a dangerous place, condition, or object particularly attractive to children
A potentially hazardous object, such as a swimming pool, or a condition, such as an open pit on a parcel of land, that is inviting and potentially dangerous to young children.
Condition that can attract and injure children. Owners or occupants of land on which such a condition exists are liable for injuries to children.
This a condition that can attract and injure people (namely children). The occupants of land on which such a condition exists are liable for their injuries.
A dangerous place, condition, or object that is attractive to children and may prove harmful to them. People may be held liable for injuries to children caused by an attractive nuisance, even if the children were trespassing when they got hurt. The courts have frequently held that where “attractiveness” exists, the owner is under a duty to take steps to prevent injury to those who may be attracted and the owner may be held liable for failure to do so.
A dangerous condition on land which attracts children.
"Attractive" refers to the response of children to a feature of land (whether natural or man-made) which has the potential to be harmful (an uncovered well, a swimming pool, a swift moving stream).
Something on a piece of property that attracts children but also endangers their safety. For example, unfenced swimming pools, open pits, farm equipment and abandoned refrigerators have all qualified as attractive nuisances.
a dangerous place or instrumentality attractive to children (e.g., a swimming pool, idle construction equipment, a discarded refrigerator), the owner of which has the legal duty to exercise a higher than ordinary degree of care to protect them from it, regardless of whether the child may be an INVITEE, a LICENSEE, or a TRESPASSER. (See NEGLIGENCE)
Condition on property that may be attractive but hazardous to children. The property owner must take responsibility to prevent children from having access, which may put them in danger.