Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P. Doing Business Under the Assumed Name of Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center, and Bmc-The Benchmark Management Company v. Bradley Smith

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 2010
Docket06-1022
StatusPublished

This text of Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P. Doing Business Under the Assumed Name of Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center, and Bmc-The Benchmark Management Company v. Bradley Smith (Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P. Doing Business Under the Assumed Name of Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center, and Bmc-The Benchmark Management Company v. Bradley Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P. Doing Business Under the Assumed Name of Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center, and Bmc-The Benchmark Management Company v. Bradley Smith, (Tex. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

════════════

No. 06-1022

Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P.

doing business under the assumed name of

Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center,

and BMC-The Benchmark Management Company, Petitioners,

v.

Bradley Smith, Respondent

════════════════════════════════════════════════════

On Petition for Review from the

Court of Appeals for the Tenth District of Texas

Argued December 6, 2007

            Justice Hecht, joined by Justice Johnson, dissenting.

            The rule in Texas is that a possessor of land discharges his duty to protect an entrant from a condition that poses an unreasonable risk of harm by giving an adequate warning.1 Now the Court tells us that “in some circumstances” no warning can be adequate. Which ones, exactly, the Court does not specify, saying only that Bradley Smith’s full appreciation of the risk of injury from a bar fight “hardly seems” adequate.2 So the rule has become that an adequate warning discharges a land possessor’s duty except in circumstances when any warning hardly seems adequate. In other words, there is no rule, as the Court admits: “We do not announce a general rule today.”3 The land possessor who simply wants to be sure to avoid any exposure to liability is left without guidance.

            The Court’s application of its non-rule in this case portends a misguided change in the law. It is quite possible that Smith would not have been injured in a fight at the Grandstand Bar if the Del Lago Resort had provided better security. But it is quite certain he would not have been injured if he had left the Bar by either of its exits at any time during the 90 minutes he thought a fight was obvious, as he was completely free to do. The Court’s holding in this case is that a possessor of land must protect an entrant from a potentially dangerous condition that any reasonable person could clearly see, fully appreciate, and easily avoid. This has never been the law of Texas. It is not the law in most states, and for good reason. It exposes a possessor of land to liability for harm that any reasonable person could have avoided.

            The rule in section 343A(1) of the Restatement (Second) of Torts is to the contrary:

A possessor of land is not liable to his invitees for physical harm caused to them by any activity or condition on the land whose danger is known or obvious to them, unless the possessor should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.4

Based on this rule, I would reverse and render judgment for Del Lago. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

I

            Bradley Smith, 29, and a large crowd of his Sigma Chi fraternity brothers had been in the Del Lago Resort’s Grandstand Bar for several hours celebrating their fraternity’s 40th reunion when around midnight, in came a wedding party. Everyone had been drinking, and within a few minutes, a man in the wedding party apparently took umbrage at advances being made upon women in his party by the fraternity brothers. Recurrent shouting and shoving ensued for some 90 minutes, escalating in frequency and intensity with the approach of closing time. From the tension in the room, Smith — who recalled having had only one beer all night and could therefore clearly appreciate what was happening — thought it obvious to all there would be a fight. As one of the brothers testified at trial: “I mean, if you didn’t know that this was going on, then you’re either blind or deaf or don’t care.”

            Security officers were on duty at the Resort, and had they been called to the Bar at the first sign of trouble, the fight that erupted in the doorway, just as the wait staff was insisting that everyone leave, might have been prevented. Smith was not part of that fight, but his friend Spencer Forsythe was. At trial, Forsythe recounted:

Q         [T]here were about forty Sigma Chi guys there, right?

A         I would say so.

Q         Ten or fifteen in the wedding party, right?

A         Right.

* * *

Q         And some of the Sigma Chi fellows down at one end of the bar are having some words with the people in the wedding party, right?

Q         So you were concerned when you saw this verbal altercation go on between your Sigma Chi friends and these wedding party friends that this thing could develop into a bar fight?

A         Sure.

Q         Then what happens is . . . that a group of your friends — people you knew, right? Sigma Chi fellows? — moved, kind of, down towards the door? Not at the door, but towards the door, right?

Q         And we have some chest-thumping, that type of thing, right?

Q         And you chose to go to that fight, right?

A         Yes. I — yes, I did.

Q         Were you sitting or standing at the bar?

A         I was actually — I was leaning on the bar.

Q         Okay. You were leaning on the bar, and you looked down at the other part of the bar over here and you see some of your friends, and they’re kind of doing the whole chest thing, the whole “I’m a tough guy” thing, right?

Q         You walked right over here to it, didn’t you.

A         Okay. Yes. Yes.

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Del Lago Partners, Inc., and Del Lago Partners, L.P. Doing Business Under the Assumed Name of Del Lago Golf Resort & Conference Center, and Bmc-The Benchmark Management Company v. Bradley Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/del-lago-partners-inc-and-del-lago-partners-lp-doing-business-under-tex-2010.