Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino v. Anderson Morrison Construction, LLC; Anderson Morrision Roofing, LLC; Shawn Morrision; And Morrision Roofing, LLC

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 2025
Docket01-23-00791-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino v. Anderson Morrison Construction, LLC; Anderson Morrision Roofing, LLC; Shawn Morrision; And Morrision Roofing, LLC (Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino v. Anderson Morrison Construction, LLC; Anderson Morrision Roofing, LLC; Shawn Morrision; And Morrision Roofing, LLC) 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.

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Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino v. Anderson Morrison Construction, LLC; Anderson Morrision Roofing, LLC; Shawn Morrision; And Morrision Roofing, LLC, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Opinion issued April 15, 2025

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-23-00791-CV ——————————— JOSE MANUEL LOPEZ ZEFERINO, Appellant V. ANDERSON MORRISON CONSTRUCTION, LLC; ANDERSON MORRISON ROOFING, LLC; SHAWN MORRISON; AND MORRISON ROOFING, LLC, Appellees

On Appeal from the 190th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2020-71444

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This appeal arises from a personal injury action by an employee against his

employer. Appellant Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino (Lopez) fell off the roof of a two-

story townhouse when his ladder slipped out from underneath him. He sued his employer and other affiliated parties for negligence, negligence per se, and gross

negligence because his employer did not subscribe to workers’ compensation

insurance coverage. The trial court granted summary judgment to all defendants. On

appeal, Lopez contends that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment

because: (1) the doctrine of open and obvious premises defects does not apply to an

employee’s workplace safety claim against his employer; and (2) the remaining

defendants were not entitled to a derivative grant of summary judgment. We reverse

and remand.

Background

Appellee Shawn Morrison founded appellee Anderson Morrison

Construction, LLC (AMC) in 2005. AMC primarily conducted roofing-related

business. AMC employed Lopez for many years as a roofer, and he became a

supervisor in 2016. AMC did not subscribe to workers’ compensation insurance

coverage.

On June 26, 2020, AMC directed Lopez to take photographs of a roof on a

two-story townhouse in west Houston. The townhouse had two sloped roof segments

at different heights: one segment was located one story above the ground, and the

second segment was two stories above the ground. Lopez needed to photograph the

roof on the second story, and the ideal equipment to climb onto the roof would have

been a 26-foot ladder that could reach the roof from the ground. However, Lopez

2 did not have a 26-foot ladder with him that day because it would not fit in the work

truck AMC provided him. Instead, he had only a 16-foot ladder that did not reach

the second-story roof from the ground.

At AMC’s encouragement, Lopez visited nearby retailers in search of a 26-

foot ladder that would fit in his work truck. When he was unable to find one, he

returned to the townhouse. To reach the second story roof, Lopez used the 16-foot

ladder to first climb onto the first-story roof. He then had to position the base of the

ladder on the lower sloped roof segment and climb up to the second-story roof

segment. This entailed a risk of the ladder slipping on the sloped roof surface.

Unfortunately, the risk materialized when Lopez finished photographing the second-

story roof and began to descend the ladder. On his way down from the second-story

roof to the first-story roof, the ladder slipped, and Lopez fell and allegedly sustained

injuries.

Sometime after Lopez’s accident, Morrison wound down AMC and began a

new company. This new company was either appellee Anderson Morrison Roofing,

LLC or appellee Morrison Roofing, LLC.

Because AMC was a nonsubscriber, Lopez filed suit against AMC asserting

claims of negligence, negligence per se, and gross negligence. Lopez later added

Morrison, Anderson Morrison Roofing, and Morrison Roofing as defendants. In his

live petition, Lopez alleged that appellees were negligent, negligent per se, and

3 grossly negligent for various reasons, including for failing to provide “safe means of

ingress and egress” to the roof, to provide proper safety equipment, to warn about

dangerous conditions, to ensure the worksite was reasonably safe, and to take

adequate precautionary measures.

Lopez also asserted successor and vicarious liability claims against Morrison

and Morrison Roofing.

AMC moved for traditional summary judgment. The motion characterized

Lopez’s suit as involving an experienced employee confronting a known risk. For

example, the introduction section of the motion argued the following:

1. The Plaintiff’s claims for injuries he incurred on June 26, 2020, after he misused a ladder on a sloped roof, are barred by the Texas Supreme Court’s line of cases dealing with “hazards known to the employee.” 2. The Plaintiff was a roofing crew supervisor for AMC. He had sixteen years’ experience in roofing in Houston. On the date in issue, the Plaintiff placed an eighteen foot multi-position ladder on the concrete driveway to access the eight foot high 5:12 pitch sloped section of the garage roof, then lifted the ladder onto the garage roof and extended the ladder in order to access a second 5:12 pitch sloped, shingled roof above the living area of the townhome of a client. During his deposition, the Plaintiff repeatedly conceded that he knew climbing a ladder on a sloped roof would cause it to slip off the roof. The only question he had was to what extent he would injure himself. 3. Because Texas employers do not owe a duty to warn their employees of hazards that are already appreciated by the employee, Defendant AMC did not owe the Plaintiff a duty to warn him about his deliberate misuse of the ladder. Accordingly, there can be no breach of [] that duty, nor can there be a finding

4 of negligence, gross negligence or negligence per se, based on the intentional misuse of the ladder. 4. Additionally, the Plaintiff conceded he had the appropriate twenty-four-foot extension ladder in his other truck, parked at his home twelve miles away, when he misused the eighteen-foot extension ladder on the date in issue. Accordingly, the claims for failure to provide proper equipment also fail as a matter of law.

AMC argued that Lopez acknowledged at his deposition “that he was aware of the

danger inherent in placing a ladder on a sloped roof—but he did it anyway.” AMC

further argued that Lopez “cannot establish a duty to make him safe that AMC

breached,” and he “cannot support his claim that AMC failed to supply requisite

safety equipment.” AMC argued that Lopez possessed the necessary ladder at his

house but decided not to get it. AMC’s summary judgment evidence consisted of a

transcript of Lopez’s deposition and photographs of the townhouse where Lopez fell.

Lopez testified that he had a 26-foot ladder at his house, but he could not

transport it in the work truck provided to him by AMC. On the day of the accident,

he had a 16-foot ladder that fit in the work truck. Lopez went to two hardware stores

looking for a 26-foot ladder that would fit in the work truck, but he was unable to

find one. He needed a 26-foot ladder to reach the second-story roof. Morrison

directed Lopez to go to the townhouse and take photographs of the roof. When Lopez

arrived and saw that the townhouse had a two-story roof, he called Morrison and

told him he could not get on the roof with the ladder he had, but Morrison told him

to “find a way” onto the roof “because he needed photos.” Lopez was unable to use

5 the front area of the townhouse because it was locked, and he was not authorized to

use the area. So he had to place his 16-foot ladder in the back of the townhouse to

climb to the second-story roof in an unsafe manner.

Lopez responded that summary judgment should be denied because AMC

owed him a nondelegable duty to provide a reasonably safe workplace, which

included a duty to provide necessary safety equipment or assistance. Lopez further

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Jose Manuel Lopez Zeferino v. Anderson Morrison Construction, LLC; Anderson Morrision Roofing, LLC; Shawn Morrision; And Morrision Roofing, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-manuel-lopez-zeferino-v-anderson-morrison-construction-llc-anderson-texapp-2025.