Sandra Beasley v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 2020
Docket05-18-01542-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sandra Beasley v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (Sandra Beasley v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.) 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
Sandra Beasley v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc., (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

AFFIRM; Opinion Filed February 18, 2020

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-01542-CV

SANDRA BEASLEY, Appellant V. WAL-MART STORES, INC., Appellee

On Appeal from the 86th Judicial District Court Kaufman County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 98406-86

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Schenck, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Carlyle

This is a slip-and-fall case. In two issues, appellant Sandra Beasley contends the trial court

erred by denying her request for a spoliation presumption and granting appellee Wal-Mart’s

motion for summary judgment on her premises liability claim. We affirm in this memorandum

opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.

Background

In her petition, Ms. Beasley asserted that while shopping in a Wal-Mart store’s pharmacy

department on November 4, 2016, she “slipped on water that was on the flooring causing severe

and incapacitating injury” to her left knee. According to her petition, (1) Wal-Mart “was guilty of

maintaining a dangerous premises and for failing to properly inspect the premises,” “failed to warn [her] of the dangerous condition on the premises,” and “had actual and/or constructive notice of

the dangerous condition,” and (2) Wal-Mart’s acts or omissions constituted negligence that

proximately caused her injury. She claimed actual damages “in excess of $30,000.00” and an

additional $40,000.00 in damages for “physical pain and suffering and mental anguish.”

Wal-Mart filed a general denial answer and, following discovery, moved for traditional

and no-evidence summary judgment. In its summary judgment motion, Wal-Mart contended Ms.

Beasley’s premises liability claim “fails as a matter of law” because (1) Wal-Mart “had neither

actual nor constructive knowledge of any clear liquid substance allegedly left on the floor before

[Ms. Beasley’s] fall” and (2) at the time of the incident, Ms. Beasley was scheduled to undergo

surgery to repair a torn meniscus in her left knee from a fall that occurred two months earlier and

she “has provided no expert and medical opinion that agrees or explains her assertion that the slip

at Wal-Mart increased or amplified her pre-existing condition of a torn meniscus in her left knee.”

The appendix to Wal-Mart’s summary judgment motion included (1) a June 18, 2018

affidavit of the store’s “asset protection manager,” John Strachan1; (2) a November 4, 2016

“Witness Statement” handwritten by Wal-Mart customer Sandy Greenhaw on a Wal-Mart form2;

1 Mr. Strachan testified in his affidavit: Based upon my investigation of this incident, including my review of the underlying records, witness statement from customer Sandy Greenhaw and Sandra Beasley, and incident reports kept in the regular course of business, there is no evidence of who caused the liquid to be on the floor in the cold and flu aisle, how the liquid came to be on the ground, how long the liquid had been on the ground prior to Ms. Beasley’s alleged fall, or whether any person, employee, or representative of Wal-Mart store #265 could have reasonably discovered the liquid before the alleged fall. Likewise, there is no way to determine whether the liquid was on the ground and detectable by an employee in the area prior to the alleged fall.

2 Ms. Greenhaw wrote in her witness statement: I was talking to the pharmacist at the Drop off window the lady walked up behind myself and my Dad and wanted someone to call to have the floor mopped, she stated she twisted her knee. Myself, my Dad and the pharmacist did not see anyone fall and we heard no noise of anyone hitting the floor or any sounds from her. Ms. Greenhaw also marked “No” in response to the form’s question, “Were there any physical signs of injury?”

–2– (3) a November 4, 2016 Wal-Mart “Customer Incident Report” signed by Ms. Beasley3;

(4) excerpts from depositions of Ms. Beasley4 and Ms. Greenhaw5 in this case; and (5) Ms.

Beasley’s medical records.6

3 On the “Customer Incident Report,” information was handwritten on the form’s lines for “Legal Name,” “Physical Address,” “Date of Birth,” “Contact Phone,” and “SSN*.” Below the “SSN*” line, the form stated, “*SSN is required for an insurance claim. If SSN is not provided at this time, please note that you will be required to provide your SSN if a claim is made for medical payment.” The handwritten description of the reported incident stated: Was standing Pharmacy Isle. Turned to my right to leave and slipped on water spill. I had not seen it. My husband caught my hand and kept me from falling all the way to floor. Twisted my knee.

4 Ms. Beasley testified in her deposition: Q. What color of liquid was it? A. From what I could tell, it was just a clearish liquid. When I wiped my arm off, it was some dirt and clear stuff. It looked like water probably and dirt and junk that was on the floor. The manager brought me paper towels and I wiped off my shoe, and there was grime on there and what looked to be like water. .... Q. So you didn’t see it? A. No. .... Q. Right before the incident and during the incident, did you see any Wal-Mart employee nearby? A. There was a pharmacy tech at her window. She was behind the window. The lady that came over to help the manager later had passed just right behind me. Because I was standing there at the corner, and she had just gone right behind me. I think she was helping a customer because she picked up something off the thing and said, I think this is it. I’m assuming she was talking to a customer. I don’t know. And another employee passed but going the other direction. They didn’t even look where he was. They were going from one side of the store to another. Q. So really nobody could have seen this clear— A. I don’t know. Like I said, the lights reflect. I couldn’t see it because when I parked there waiting for my husband, I had the buggy there. So I didn’t see anything. And when I saw he was having a hard time getting back up, I pushed my buggy and when I did, my next step landed in the liquid. Before I put my buggy on top of it, could somebody else have seen it? Quite possibly. .... Q. How do you think that liquid happened to be there? .... A. I have no way of knowing. There is tons of customers, there is employees, there is stuff. There is kids. There is no way of knowing how it got there. There was not like a container anywhere close that I could see.

5 Ms. Greenhaw stated in her deposition: Q. . . . When you walked up to the pharmacist, when you walked up to the window, do you recall seeing any water or substances on the floor? A. No. Q. And how long were you standing at the window? A. Quite a while. I don’t remember the exact time, but quite a while, at least 30 minutes or longer. .... Q. Okay. You could see the aisle where [Ms. Beasley] said she fell? A. Uh-huh. Q. Is that a “yes”? A. Yes. Sorry. Q. . . . And then you could see where she was pointing at the time where she claimed the water was, but you didn’t see water? Is that what you— A. Correct. Q. Okay. Do you recall ever seeing an employee of Walmart bring a mop or a mop bucket?

–3– In her summary judgment response, Ms. Beasley argued she “testified in her deposition

that the Defendant had employees in the immediate area of her fall and in fact they both could

have seen the liquid substance on the floor”; she “did not see the liquid being spilled while she

was in line which leads her to believe that the liquid had been there prior to her fall”; and her

medical records “show additional complaints of pain and injury to [her] knee as a result of her fall

at Wal-Mart.” She also asserted spoliation, contending she requested video evidence in her original

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