H-E-B, L.P. v. Marissa Peterson

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 10, 2026
Docket24-0310
StatusPublished
AuthorBland

This text of H-E-B, L.P. v. Marissa Peterson (H-E-B, L.P. v. Marissa Peterson) 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.

Bluebook
H-E-B, L.P. v. Marissa Peterson, (Tex. 2026).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 24-0310 ══════════

H-E-B, LP, Petitioner,

v.

Marissa Peterson, Respondent

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Thirteenth District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued December 3, 2025

JUSTICE BLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this slip-and-fall premises liability case, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of a grocer. The court of appeals reversed, concluding that knowledge of earlier roof leaks elsewhere in the grocery store created a fact issue as to the grocer’s knowledge of a clear liquid puddle on an aisle floor. Following our precedent, we hold that a party responding to a no-evidence motion for summary judgment must adduce some evidence showing the duration an unreasonably dangerous condition existed to raise a fact issue as to whether the premises owner had constructive notice of the condition at the time and place of the plaintiff’s injury. The record in this case lacks such evidence. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and reinstate the trial court’s summary judgment for the grocer. I While shopping in the toy aisle at an HEB grocery store,1 Marissa Peterson slipped on a clear liquid puddle and fell. She continued shopping and sought medical treatment the next day. She sued HEB for premises liability, alleging HEB (1) knew or should have known about the unreasonable risk of harm the puddle presented and (2) failed to adequately warn of the puddle or make the premises reasonably safe. Peterson testified in her deposition that she fell, passed out, and awoke on the floor with pain in her knee and water around her. After she fell, Peterson noticed a puddle about six or seven inches wide and observed water dripping from a ceiling rafter above the puddle. She could not remember if there were tracks through the puddle, and she had “no idea” how long the puddle had been present before she fell. Her shopping companion, John Wayne, testified that he and Peterson arrived at the store within two or three minutes before Peterson fell. He was pushing a shopping cart to Peterson’s left. He estimated the puddle was “probably two feet across.” Wayne initially said he saw water dripping from above the toy aisle about every ten or fifteen seconds, but he later recanted, testifying: “I have no idea where the water came from[.] I assumed the water came from the ceiling but did not see it

1 Consistent with the parties’ briefing, we refer to H-E-B, LP, as HEB.

2 dripping as if from a leak.” On his way to customer service to retrieve a store manager, Wayne recalled seeing “signs and little white trash cans and buckets up in several places” elsewhere in the store. According to Peterson and Wayne, they mentioned the leak to the responding HEB manager. The manager observed a “small spot of water” on the floor, but he saw no leak or drip. He identified the source of the liquid as “rain” on the incident report because it had rained earlier in the day and no other source was apparent, like “a spilled cup or a bottle.” The manager assumed the liquid came from a wet shopping cart, umbrella, or article of clothing. Because he did not observe evidence of a leak, he did not report one to be repaired. HEB conducted heightened inspections during rainstorms. In the year before Peterson’s fall, the HEB store had experienced numerous leaks stemming from a remodeling project. Records produced for work performed on the roof in the year before and the year after Peterson’s fall show leak repairs throughout the two-year window. The records, however, do not reveal any reports of a leak above the toy aisle or corresponding roof repairs ahead of the incident. Nor is there such a report after the date of the incident. After the trial court granted HEB’s motion to exclude a report and testimony from Peterson’s expert, HEB moved for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment.2 HEB argued that no evidence demonstrated its actual or constructive knowledge of a dangerous

2 The court of appeals reversed and remanded this case once before.

Peterson v. HEB Grocery Co., No. 04-19-00688-CV, 2020 WL 1931628, at *1, *4 (Tex. App.—San Antonio Apr. 22, 2020, pet. denied).

3 condition causing Peterson’s injuries. In particular, it argued, it had no knowledge of the puddle on the toy aisle, and no evidence shows when the puddle formed. HEB attached deposition testimony from Peterson, Wayne, the responding store manager, and a corporate representative of the property owner’s management company. HEB also included the roof repair records.3 In her summary judgment response, Peterson did not dispute HEB’s lack of actual knowledge of the puddle. She instead argued that a fact dispute existed as to whether HEB should have known of the puddle, including whether a leak above the aisle had created the puddle. Peterson attached the incident report identifying “rain” as the puddle’s source and video footage showing that the rain had stopped two hours before the incident. Footage of walkways at the front and back of the toy aisle indicates no HEB employee had walked down the aisle in the two hours before Peterson’s fall. Peterson also attached deposition testimony from a second representative of the store’s property owner, who testified that the store’s roof leaked “every time it rain[ed]” because of the renovation project. The leaks, he said, were concentrated in the southern portion of the store, not near the toy aisle. Peterson further relied on the HEB manager’s testimony about the store’s heightened inspection protocol and her observation of water dripping from the rafter above the puddle contemporaneously with her fall.

3 HEB’s summary judgment reply brief included an expert report. We

do not consider this evidence because the trial court sustained Peterson’s objection to the reply as untimely; HEB did not appeal this ruling.

4 The trial court granted summary judgment for HEB. The court of appeals reversed, concluding that earlier roof leaks in the store need not be in the area of a puddle to support a finding of constructive knowledge of that puddle.4 The court further held that the trial court partially erred in excluding deposition testimony from Peterson’s expert that HEB had failed to adequately maintain the premises, contain the leak, and inspect the floor.5 In this Court, HEB challenges both rulings.6 II We review a summary judgment ruling de novo.7 A party may move for summary judgment on traditional and no-evidence grounds in a single motion.8 A movant seeking a no-evidence summary judgment must show that, after an adequate time for discovery, no evidence exists of an essential element of a claim on which the adverse party has the

4 719 S.W.3d 368, 387–88 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi–Edinburg 2024).

5 Id. at 381–82. The expert’s report included a drip experiment he performed. Id. The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s exclusion of this drip experiment as unreliable. Id. at 379. Peterson does not seek review of this ruling in our Court. 6 We do not address HEB’s challenge to the court of appeals’ reinstatement of some of Peterson’s expert testimony because the testimony does not adduce facts showing the length of time the puddle existed on the floor before Peterson fell. 7 Energen Res. Corp. v. Wallace, 642 S.W.3d 502, 509 (Tex. 2022).

8 Binur v. Jacobo, 135 S.W.3d 646, 650 (Tex. 2004); Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a(b)(1). Rule 166a’s recent amendments do not apply to summary judgment motions filed before March 1, 2026. HEB’s motion proceeded under the pre-amendment rule. The revisions to Rule 166a (apart from deadline changes) are “not intended to substantively change the law.” Tex. R. Civ. P. 166a cmt.

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Bluebook (online)
H-E-B, L.P. v. Marissa Peterson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-e-b-lp-v-marissa-peterson-tex-2026.