LMMM Houston 41, Ltd., LMMM Houston 41, Ltd, Dba La Michoacana Meat Market 41 v. Jesus Santibanez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2018
Docket01-16-00724-CV
StatusPublished

This text of LMMM Houston 41, Ltd., LMMM Houston 41, Ltd, Dba La Michoacana Meat Market 41 v. Jesus Santibanez (LMMM Houston 41, Ltd., LMMM Houston 41, Ltd, Dba La Michoacana Meat Market 41 v. Jesus Santibanez) 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
LMMM Houston 41, Ltd., LMMM Houston 41, Ltd, Dba La Michoacana Meat Market 41 v. Jesus Santibanez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 30, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-16-00724-CV ——————————— LMMM HOUSTON #41, LTD. AND LMMM HOUSTON #41, LTD., DBA LA MICHOACANA MEAT MARKET #41, Appellants/Cross-Appellees V. JESUS SANTIBANEZ, Appellee/Cross-Appellant

On Appeal from the 270th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 2014-19771

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants/cross-appellees, LMMM Houston #41, Ltd. and LMMM Houston

#41, Ltd., doing business as La Michoacana Meat Market #41 (collectively, “La

Michoacana Meat Market”), challenge the trial court’s judgment, entered after a jury

trial, in favor of appellee/cross-appellant, Jesus Santibanez, in his suit against La Michoacana Meat Market for premises liability. In three issues, La Michoacana

Meat Market contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s

findings in favor of Santibanez on his claim for premises liability and the trial court

erred in instructing the jury on premises liability.

In his sole cross-point, Santibanez contends that the trial court erred in

granting La Michoacana Meat Market a judgment notwithstanding the verdict

(“JNOV”) on the ground that no evidence supports the jury’s award of $120,000 in

future medical expenses.

We affirm.

Background

In his third amended petition, Santibanez alleged that on December 17, 2013,

he, while shopping at a La Michoacana Meat Market store, “slipped and fell on

grease that had been spilled on the floor” and “sustained serious, debilitating and

painful injuries.” He asserted a claim for premises liability against La Michoacana

Meat Market, seeking damages for physical disfigurement, and past, present, and

future physical pain, mental anguish, physical impairment, and medical expenses.

La Michoacana Meat Market filed an answer, generally denying the

allegations and asserting that Santibanez’s fall was the result of his own negligence

or an unavoidable accident.

2 At trial, Santibanez testified that on the evening of December 17, 2013, he

went to La Michoacana Meat Market to purchase meat, tortillas, and vegetables.

When he entered the store, he first went to find the meat and tortillas. And then, as

he approached the produce aisle, Santibanez “slipped on” “pork lard” and fell to the

floor. He hit his face, knees, and back “very hard,” and he “twisted [a]round,” “very

badly,” injuring his back. As a result of the fall, Santibanez felt pain in his lower

back, his nose swelled, his knees hurt, and he felt “dizzy.”

Santibanez explained that he could not see any of the warnings signs that had

been placed in the area where the pork lard had been spilled because the shelf holding

the produce “covered” them, they were “behind” the shelf and placed up against it,

and he was “looking [at] the vegetables” and not at the floor. Thus, as he approached

the produce aisle, he was not aware of any danger, and he saw the warning signs

only after he had fallen and “hit one” of them. According to Santibanez, if La

Michoacana Meat Market had placed the warning signs “in front” of the produce

aisle, he would not have fallen down. He opined that there was nothing he could

have done to avoid falling because as soon as he turned to enter the produce aisle he

was “already on the floor.” And he noted that he did not walk down the produce

aisle because he mistakenly believed the lard on the floor to be water.

After his fall, Santibanez, with his face, clothes, and hands “full of lard,” asked

a cashier to call for La Michoacana Meat Market’s manager. The cashier told

3 Santibanez that “he was every sorry . . . and evidently they hadn’t cleaned [the area

where the pork lard had been spilled] properly.” When he spoke to the manager, he

showed her “all the lard that [he] had on [his] body” and his swollen nose. And she

said that she was “very sorry” and “apparently the person who had done the

[cleanup] job hadn’t done it properly.” The manager also gave Santibanez cream

for his nose, “some tablets,” and tea, and she offered to take him to see a doctor that

evening or the next day if he was not feeling well.

When Santibanez returned home that night, he could not eat dinner “because

of the pain.” The next day, he called La Michoacana Meat Market’s manager to tell

her that he was in “severe pain,” and she took him “to a clinic that belong[ed]

to . . . La Michoacana [Meat Market].” The doctor at the clinic told him that he had

“swelling in [his] lower back” and sent him to the emergency room at Bayshore

Medical Center. Santibanez noted that at the time he went to the Bayshore Medical

Center, his primary complaint was lower back pain. A doctor, diagnosing him as

having muscle strain, related to his back, and contusions, prescribed medication for

him and recommended that Santibanez follow-up with an orthopedic surgeon within

forty-eight hours.

Santibanez subsequently went to the Southeast Chiropractic Center, where he

received physical therapy, which helped lessen his back pain, but did not eliminate

it completely. He received chiropractic treatment for approximately five months,

4 attending approximately thirty appointments, but he did not feel “healed” at the end

of his treatment. At the conclusion of his treatment, the doctor at Southeast

Chiropractic Clinic concluded:

Due to the severity of [his] injuries, his prognosis is guarded. [His] injuries are subject to episodes of remission and exacerbation by various aggravations from activities of daily living and times of stress. It is likely that [he] may experience future episodes of pain and weakness as a result of [his] residual unresolved injuries . . . . [Santibanez] is advised to seek continued care with an orthopedic specialist if symptoms continue to worsen. Future treatment is indicated on an as needed basis to help pain experienced from aggravations caused by [his] performance of his activities of daily living.

In addition to the treatment that he received at the Southeast Chiropractic

Center, Santibanez, at Memorial MRI & Diagnostic, had MRIs made of his lower

back and both knees. According to Santibanez, the MRI of his lower back showed

that his “lower discs are injured about 5 centimeters, each one,” and the MRIs of his

knees showed inflammation and “spread -- liquid.”

Santibanez also saw an orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Mark S. Sanders, who “gave

[him] tablets for the pain” and a “recommendation of what [he] needed to [do to] fix

the problem [in his] back.” And he saw Dr. José Rodriguez, an orthopedic specialist,

who concluded that he had “developed back, knee and foot pain, associated with

headaches” after his fall at La Michoacana Meat Market. Rodriguez advised

Santibanez to seek a “neurological evaluation for [his] headaches and memory

issues” and continue to participate in physical therapy. Further, both Rodriguez and 5 the doctor at the Southeast Chiropractic Clinic “recommended ongoing care for

[Santibanez] based on [his] pain, [his] symptoms, and [his] memory issues from [his]

head injury.” As of trial, Santibanez had not seen a neurologist.

Santibanez further testified that prior to his fall at La Michoacana Meat

Market, he had never been in pain, never seen a doctor to treat lower back pain, and

never seen a chiropractor. Nor had anyone, before his fall, ever suggested that he

should see an orthopedic surgeon for back pain.

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