Jimaree Parrish v. SMG

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 2017
Docket01-16-00934-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jimaree Parrish v. SMG (Jimaree Parrish v. SMG) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jimaree Parrish v. SMG, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Opinion issued December 7, 2017

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00934-CV ——————————— JIMAREE PARRISH, Appellant V. SMG, Appellee

On Appeal from the 129th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2015-18721

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In this personal injury suit, Jimaree Parrish sued SMG for negligence and

premises liability after she allegedly tripped over the corner of a rubber floor mat at

the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo. SMG moved for traditional and no- evidence summary judgment on Parrish’s claims, and the trial court rendered

summary judgment in SMG’s favor. In three issues, Parrish argues that: (1) the trial

court erroneously granted no-evidence summary judgment because she raised a fact

issue that SMG owed her a duty; (2) the trial court erroneously granted no-evidence

summary judgment because she raised a fact issue that SMG had knowledge of a

dangerous condition on the property; and (3) a need exists for the good faith

extension of the law concerning the duty that a lessor owes to an invitee of its lessee.

We affirm.

Background

The Harris County Sports & Convention Corporation owns NRG Park, which

is composed of NRG Stadium, NRG Center, and NRG Arena. It hired SMG as its

management company to oversee the day-to-day operations of the complex.

Pursuant to a lease agreement with Harris County, the Houston Livestock Show and

Rodeo, Inc. (“the Rodeo”) operates the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo at NRG

Park for three weeks every March.

NRG Center has concrete floors, and the Rodeo’s lease agreement obligates

SMG to install rubber mats on the floors. When the Rodeo is not operating, SMG

rolls up the rubber mats and stores them. During the preparation for the event, the

Rodeo typically directs SMG where to place the floor mats. SMG unrolls the mats

and uses industrial duct tape to tape the ends of the mats to each other. SMG does

2 not use any kind of adhesive between the bottom of the mats and the concrete floor.

Once the event starts, contractually the Rodeo bears the responsibility for

maintaining the mats, but SMG personnel assist, and when Rodeo and SMG

personnel see pieces of duct tape along the ends of the mats that have lost adhesion,

the workers will replace the tape. Before each yearly event, SMG provides the

Rodeo with twenty to twenty-five cases of duct tape to use on the ends of the floor

mats throughout the event.

On March 15, 2014, Jimaree Parrish attended the Rodeo with her daughter

and other relatives. She alleged that, as she was walking in NRG Center, a floor mat

had curled up at the corner and was hidden from view by sawdust and wood shavings

on the floor. She tripped over the corner of this mat. She fell to the ground and lost

consciousness. She also fractured her left orbital socket, fractured her left arm, tore

her left rotator cuff, and injured her knee, requiring knee replacement surgery.

Parrish sued the Rodeo on March 31, 2015, and asserted causes of action for

negligence and premises liability. Parrish alleged that the Rodeo was negligent by

“failing to keep the floor panels level on the grounds where people walk,” by

“covering the floor in large amounts of sawdust blocking from vision defects in the

floor paneling,” by “failing to properly maintain and secure the floor panels on the

grounds where people walk,” by “failing to remove the sawdust from the floor so

that defects in the floor could be seen,” and by “failing to post signs warning of an

3 uneven floor.” Parrish also alleged that a condition on the premises posed an

unreasonable risk of harm and that the Rodeo knew or reasonably should have

known of the danger, but it failed to adequately warn her of the condition or to make

the condition reasonably safe. In October 2015, Parrish amended her petition to

assert the same causes of action against SMG, as well as against the Rodeo.1

SMG moved for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment. SMG

argued that it did not owe Parrish a duty because SMG was not in possession of NRG

Park at the time of Parrish’s injury; instead, the Rodeo had leased the premises and

was in control. It also argued that, to the extent Parrish pleaded a negligent activity

claim, she could present no evidence of a negligent activity that occurred

contemporaneously with her injury. SMG also argued that summary judgment was

proper on Parrish’s premises liability claim because Parrish could produce no

evidence that SMG had actual or constructive knowledge of a dangerous condition

on the premises. Specifically, SMG pointed to (1) deposition testimony from

Michael DeMarco, the Rodeo’s Executive Director of Operations, who testified that

this particular incident was the first time a Rodeo patron had tripped on the floor

mats, and to (2) deposition testimony from Richard Fredette, SMG’s Director of

Operations at NRG Park, who testified that, although he was aware of prior instances

1 Ultimately, Parrish reached a settlement agreement with the Rodeo, and she nonsuited her claims against the Rodeo. The Rodeo is therefore not a party to this appeal. 4 in which the duct tape holding the floor mats down had lost its adhesion and come

undone, he was not aware of prior instances in which the floor mats then rolled up

as a result.

Parrish filed a response to SMG’s summary judgment motion. Parrish argued

that SMG knew the duct tape holding down the floor mats would fail and, thus, both

SMG and the Rodeo had personnel walking through NRG Park replacing duct tape

throughout the event. She argued that SMG “had a superior knowledge of the risk

over the patrons attending the stock show who had no way to know the installation

of the flooring was improper and posed an unreasonable risk of failure.” She also

argued that SMG had a duty to install the floor mats in conformity with the

manufacturer’s specifications and in a reasonably prudent manner, a duty to “take

affirmative action to control the dangerous condition of failed flooring that was

created by SMG’s unreasonable and improper installation of the flooring,” a duty to

warn patrons that the mats were “likely to stick into the air and create a tripping

hazard,” a duty not to cover the floor mats with wood shavings that could obscure

areas where the duct tape had failed, and a duty to warn patrons that the wood

shavings could obscure dangerous floor conditions.

Parrish also argued that the rule cited by SMG, that a lessor is not responsible

for the condition of the premises once it turns the property over to a lessee, has an

exception, namely if the lessor makes repairs to the leased premises, the lessor owes

5 a duty to use reasonable care in making those repairs. She argued that SMG, by

replacing duct tape, “was proactively making repairs throughout the stock show,”

but it was making those repairs “in the same negligent manner as the original

installation” of the floor mats.

Parrish also argued that “[b]ecause SMG installed the flooring in an

unreasonable manner and against the manufacturer’s recommendations, it created

the dangerous condition and by Texas law, it is presumed to have knowledge of the

condition.” She pointed to the depositions of Fredette and DeMarco, in which they

acknowledged that both SMG and Rodeo personnel walked the premises and

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