The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC — d/b/a Attorney 911, Legal Emergency Lawyers™ · Houston, Texas
Injured at a hotel? Call me now — 24/7. 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) · (713) 528-9070 · Free case review ·
Houston Hotel Injury Lawyer
I’m Ralph Manginello. If you were hurt at a hotel in Houston — or you’re reading this because someone you love was hurt or killed and can’t read it themselves — understand one thing before you do anything else: the hotel and its insurance company already have a plan for you. A plan to lose the video, to deny they knew about the hazard, to blame you, to hand you a small check before you talk to a lawyer, and to hide the people with real money behind a paper company that owns nothing.
We know that plan cold — because we used to run it. My firm is built on attorneys who spent years inside insurance defense, the kind of firm carriers hire when they want to delay, deny, and devalue your claim. We left. Now we use everything we learned against them, for you.
And we don’t bluff. Behind this page sits a private library of 499 verified hotel-injury cases across 47 states — every one corroborated against a real court record or news report — plus the injury science, the safety standards, and the liability doctrines that decide who pays. By the time you finish reading, you will know more about how a hotel case is really won than the adjuster who is about to call you.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 now — free, confidential, 24 hours a day. No fee unless we win. Hablamos español.
The proof — 499 verified cases across 47 states, and the verdicts
Most injury firms say “we handle hotel cases.” We can show you the receipts. We have assembled and independently verified 499 hotel-injury cases spanning every major brand and 47 states — the deepest hotel-liability knowledge base we know of. It tells us, before we ever file, exactly how a Marriott, a Hilton, an MGM, or a roadside motel defends a case like yours — and where each one is weakest.
Everything in the tables below is verified public court records and reported verdicts. These are not our results; they show how courts across the country have held hotels accountable for exactly the kind of negligence that may have hurt you.
The headline verdicts (public record)
| Case | Property | What happened | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dugan v. Hyatt Regency | Hyatt Regency, St. Louis | A security guard used a master key to assault a sleeping guest; prior history + cover-up | $177M ($149M punitive), affirmed |
| Hyatt Regency walkway collapse | Hyatt Regency, Kansas City | Skywalk collapse — the deadliest structural failure in the dataset | 114 dead; ~$140M paid; Kenton $4M reinstated |
| Von Normann v. Newport Channel Inn | Newport Channel Inn | Under-height balcony railing gave way; skull fracture + brain injury | $38.6M — hotel 85% at fault despite intoxication |
| Curtis v. Hilton | Hilton Garden Inn, NY | Bathroom door reported broken the day before collapsed on a guest | ~$32.1M ($30M punitive) |
| Maldonado v. Gateway Hotel | Hotel boxing event (MO) | No ringside ambulance; catastrophic brain damage | $13.7M, affirmed |
| Fenton v. Nevada Property 1 | The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas | Slip on a spilled drink + broken glass; CRPS | $15M unanimous (~75 min) |
| McClure v. Hotel Crescent Court | Hotel Crescent Court, Dallas | Fell into an unlit drained fountain basin (Storm Uri); four surgeries | $9.45M — hotel 95% at fault |
| Mina v. Boca Ciega Resort | Boca Ciega Resort, FL | Fall into a dark, partially-drained, unlit hot tub | ~$7.6M |
| Hu v. DoubleTree | DoubleTree, Tucson | Pool drowning — poor lighting, no safety rope | $5.5M (reduced to $2.75M) |
| Laguerre v. Crowne Plaza | Crowne Plaza, Atlanta | Falling pipe from a pool deck; traumatic brain injury | $5M + $500,336 punitive |
| Alcala v. Marriott / Courtyard | Courtyard by Marriott, IA | Slip on an icy sidewalk; fractured ankle | ~$4.9M on retrial, affirmed |
| Dembitzky v. Hampton Inn | Hampton Inn, NJ | Wet-mopped floor at the elevator; permanent knee, 3 surgeries | $4.75M settlement |
| Marshall v. Roadway Inn | Roadway Inn, AL | Health-department-CLOSED cloudy pool kept open; a 19-year-old drowned | $3,766,000 |
| Lozano v. Paris Las Vegas | Paris Las Vegas (Caesars) | Slip on a spilled drink on wet marble; serious back injury | ~$3.4M (reduced for fault) |
| Comfort Inn pool drowning | Comfort Inn (Choice), KY | A 5-year-old drowned in water too cloudy to see his body | ~$3.1M punitive; gross negligence |
| “The Jane Hotel” matter | Boutique hotel, NY | Aesthetic marble outside a communal shower, no drainage/slip resistance | $2,021,000 |
| Hawkes v. Casino Queen | Casino Queen, IL | Tripped over an open vanity cabinet door; ruptured cervical disc | $1.87M (reduced to $1.309M) |
| Hilton Hotels v. Anderson | Embassy Suites, Orlando | Negligent security — robbery + shooting; brand, owner, manager, guard all sued | $1,702,066 |
| Goodman v. Foxwoods | Foxwoods Resort, CT | A spill sat ~20 minutes on video while employees walked past | $1.3M settlement |
| Best Western CO deaths | Best Western, Boone NC | A failed pool-heater vent killed three people in the same room | ~$12M; manager criminally charged |
A Houston spotlight from the same record: a lazy-river drain-entrapment drowning of an 8-year-old at the DoubleTree Houston Brookhollow (Jaico); a housekeeper left a wet floor with no warning at the Hyatt Regency Houston/Galleria (Riaz Ali); an elevator that fell two stories trapping a guest for ~2 hours at the Holiday Inn Express Westchase (McKinney); a parking-lot assault at the Shamrock Hilton (Walkoviak); and an actual-notice water-hazard win at Best Western Greenway Plaza (Pruitt).
The most damning proof of all: the hotel’s own record of being warned
See the pattern? Prior incidents. Ignored complaints. Inspections that never happened. That is what wins hotel cases — and exactly what we go hunting for the day you call.
- The Venetian in Las Vegas had logged 73 prior slip-and-falls on the same marble floors in three years — the court forced it to hand over the prior-incident reports (Sekera).
- A Sheraton tub case revealed eight other guests injured in the prior five months while roughly 200 unsafe tubs were still being rented (Wilson).
- At a Detroit Marriott, the hotel had taped down identical floor grids that very day and had no inspection schedule (Eggerton).
- A Ramada case turned on a maid who said she’d fallen in the same over-waxed spot 90 minutes earlier and warned management “too much wax” (Ray).
- The Hilton Garden Inn $30M punitive award followed a year of documented prior door complaints (Curtis); the Hyatt $149M punitive award followed a guard’s known history and a post-assault cover-up (Dugan).
The full verified ledger — every case, by brand
Below is the complete record: every one of the 499 verified cases, grouped by parent company. Each row gives the case, the property, the hazard, and the outcome or controlling holding. (Where a single case is reported by more than one source, it appears once.) Brand headings link to that brand’s dedicated page; the eight non-hotel authorities at the end are the Texas Supreme Court decisions that set the rules every hotel case runs on.
Marriott International — 53 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcala v. Marriott | Courtyard, Bettendorf IA | Ice on exterior sidewalk | ~$4.9M on retrial, affirmed (continuing-storm doctrine) |
| Wilson v. Sheraton | Sheraton | Bathtub, no mat/grab bar | ~$240K incl. $100K punitive — 8 prior falls in 5 months, ~200 unsafe tubs still rented |
| Wright v. Residence Inn | Residence Inn, Horsham PA | Ice on walkway | $63,896; reversed, new trial on damages |
| Bray v. Marriott | SpringHill Suites | Accessible shower seat/transfer | Reported opinion on premises duty re accessible-bath equipment |
| Stenlund v. Marriott | Marriott, Panama | Electrical cord across stairs | Choice-of-law / liability on summary judgment |
| Hooper v. Marriott | Marriott (N.D. Tex.) | Transient floor condition | Marriott summary judgment DENIED — case proceeds |
| Florsheim v. Marriott | Marriott Marquis, NYC | Toe caught expansion joint | Summary judgment for Marriott affirmed (expert speculative) |
| Stern v. Four Points | Four Points Sheraton, Ann Arbor MI | Trip in lobby; fractured knee | Dismissal of franchisee affirmed (no NY jurisdiction) |
| Boyd v. Sheraton | Sheraton Grand Rio, Brazil | Guest-room foyer slip | Pending (removed to S.D. Fla. 2025) |
| Confidential (Regina) | Courtyard, Pensacola FL | Bathtub slip; fractured humerus | Settled $197,500 |
| Borowski v. Ritz-Carlton | Ritz-Carlton, Lake Tahoe | Freshly mopped floor | Net ~$208,553 (plaintiff 1% at fault) despite extensive pre-existing injuries |
| Fenton v. Nevada Property 1 | Cosmopolitan (Autograph), Las Vegas | Water + broken glass at bar | $15M unanimous verdict — permanent CRPS |
| Wymes v. Ritz-Carlton Yacht | Ritz-Carlton Yacht “Evrima” | Collapsing chair; concussion/TBI | Pending (seeks >$250K) |
| Matouk v. Marriott | Marriott | Slippery tub, no mat/grab bar | Summary judgment DENIED — open-and-obvious bars only failure-to-warn |
| Simas v. Starwood | Sheraton/Westin | Shower fall, no mat | Summary judgment for hotel affirmed (no notice) |
| W Hotel shower-door | W Hotel, Ft. Lauderdale | Shower glass shattered; leg laceration | Settled $31,500 |
| Pandya v. Marriott | Marriott, Alpharetta GA | Rain-tracked wet threshold; T-4 fracture, later died | Summary judgment for Marriott (guest equal knowledge) |
| Allen v. Marriott Worldwide | Residence Inn | Black ice at curb | Assumption of risk barred recovery (later limited) |
| Marriott icy-lot | Marriott, Indiana | Snow/ice in parking lot | Filed/removed 2018; duty to clear lots + consortium |
| Sorensen v. Western Hotels | Leopold Hotel (Westin predecessor) WA | Defective ramp, no handrails | Jury for plaintiff; building-code violation = negligence per se |
| McMillian v. Sheraton | Sheraton, Chicago | Escalator “jerked”; separated shoulder | Vacated/dismissed (amount-in-controversy) |
| Chastain v. Hotel Commander | Hotel Commander (later Sheraton) MA | Oily smudge on service stairs | No liability (no constructive notice) |
| Brown v. Starwood | Sheraton Fairplex, Pomona CA | Defective entry mat; fell into glass doors | Summary judgment affirmed; no pre-claim spoliation duty |
| Ortega v. JW Marriott | JW Marriott Turnberry, Miami | Unmarked raised concrete slab (garage) | Summary judgment REVERSED, remanded for trial |
| Berkowitz v. Marriott | Seaview Resort, Galloway NJ | Trip over portable screen leg | Conflict-of-laws (NJ comparative law applies) |
| Brenner v. Sheraton Waikiki | Sheraton Waikiki HI | Stairway fall, bad lighting; permanent injuries | Motion to dismiss DENIED (jurisdiction over foreign owner via operator) |
| Bullard v. Marriott | Marriott (GA) | Raised brick on walkway | Open-and-obvious is a jury question |
| PHF II Buckhead v. Dinku | Sheraton Buckhead, Atlanta | Fall ~30 ft from skywalk fleeing loose dogs | Default liability affirmed; $3,006,708 damages reversed/remanded |
| Mangham v. Westin | Westin (GA) | Premises injury | Terminated 2017 (workers’-comp bar) |
| Ristagno v. Hampton | Hampton Inn, Carlisle PA | Shower, no mat; head injury, loss of consciousness | Suit filed; alleges post-incident repair to cover up hazard |
| La Russa v. Four Points | Four Points Sheraton, NJ | Tracked-in snow puddle | Dismissal REVERSED (plaintiff-favorable) |
| Gingeleskie v. Westin | Westin (AZ) | Ill-guest handling; guest death | Innkeeper duty to aid a guest known to be ill |
| Eggerton v. Detroit Marriott | Detroit Marriott RenCen | Upturned floor grid in ballroom; fractured shoulder | Summary judgment DENIED, affirmed — other grids taped down that day; no inspection schedule |
| Westin Operator v. Groh | Westin Denver Downtown | Negligent eviction of intoxicated guest (~3 a.m.) | TBI/persistent vegetative state; another occupant killed — CO Supreme Court affirmed innkeeper duty |
| Bruce v. Gaylord Rockies | Gaylord Rockies, CO | Trip over objects near stage | Appeal dismissed as frivolous; contractor settled |
| Hall v. Gaylord | Gaylord Opryland “ICE!”, TN | Slip on ice-slide; torn rotator cuff | Summary judgment for defendants affirmed |
| Corinaldi v. Columbia Courtyard | Courtyard, Columbia MD | Negligent security — shooting; death | Summary judgment REVERSED — staff knew of party + gun ~10 min before; 2 employees on duty |
| Residence Inn falling cabinet | Residence Inn, Charles Cty MD | Falling cabinet | Verdict $639,012 |
| Tobin v. Marriott | Marriott (MD) | Elevator-related | Mediation sanction reversed; merits resolved separately |
| Blanchard v. HRC | TownePlace Suites, Ft. Wayne IN | Raised cracked concrete (lot) | Jury: plaintiff 68% / hotel 32% — no recovery, affirmed |
| Anderson v. Marriott | Marriott, Rocky Hill CT | Wet marble lobby (tracked snow/ice) | Summary judgment DENIED on negligence (notice) |
| Anderson v. Fairfield Inn | Fairfield Inn, Middletown DE | Conclusorily pleaded fall | Appeal dismissed; conclusory complaint dismissed |
| Ace Fire Underwriters v. Sheraton VT | Sheraton Burlington VT | Ice in parking lot; Stradivarius (>$1M) damaged | Cross-motions on hotel + snow-contractor duty (subrogation) |
Hilton Worldwide — 25 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Curtis v. Hilton | Hilton Garden Inn, NY/Central Park | Detached bathroom door fell; spinal & knee, multiple surgeries | ~$32.1M jury ($30M punitive; reduced ~$12.1M) — broken handle reported the day before; year of prior complaints |
| Bellerive v. Hilton | Palmer House, Chicago | Worn/uneven stairs, bad light/handrail | Summary judgment REVERSED/remanded |
| Mullaney v. Hilton | Hilton Waikoloa Village HI | Expo booth fell on guest | Apportionment between hotel and third-party booth vendor |
| Yarbro v. Hilton | Denver Hilton | Fall through window over radiator; death | Architect immune (statute of repose) |
| Beaver-Gale v. Waldorf Astoria | Waldorf Astoria, NYC | Unmarked step-down at exit | Summary judgment for hotel GRANTED (open-and-obvious) |
| Miller v. Hampton Inn | Hampton Inn & Suites, Santa Monica | 300+ lb sliding bath door fell on wheelchair guest | Filed 2022, seeks ≥$8.5M (negligence + ADA + false imprisonment) |
| Karen K. v. Hilton | Hilton, Philadelphia | Slippery/defective shower | Lawsuit filed 2018 (general negligence) |
| Cattani v. DoubleTree | DoubleTree, Collinsville IL | Liquid on lobby floor | Transient-substance lobby slip suit (2010) |
| Dembitzky v. Hampton Inn | Hampton Inn, Woodbridge NJ | Wet-mopped floor at elevator; permanent knee, 3 surgeries | Settled $4.75M (eve of trial) |
| Walkoviak v. Hilton | Shamrock Hilton, Houston | Parking-lot assault (negligent security) | Summary judgment REVERSED — single-guard staffing faulted |
| Hilton Hotels v. Anderson | Embassy Suites, Orlando | Negligent security — robbery/shooting in lot | $1,702,066 (Embassy group 72% / SecurAmerica 28% / plaintiff 0%); fees affirmed |
| Yamada v. Hilton | Palmer House, Chicago | Intruder accessed room; assault/homicide | Defense verdict REVERSED, new trial |
| Wright v. Ellis Hotel | Hilton Garden Inn, PA | Grab/safety bar detached from wall; hand/finger injuries | Suit filed 2024 (failure to maintain/warn) |
| Uddin v. Embassy Suites | Embassy Suites, Columbus OH | Cloudy/murky pool water; drowning death (10-yr-old) | Affirmed in part/reversed in part — child’s reduced ability to appreciate danger |
| Hu v. DoubleTree | DoubleTree, Tucson AZ | Pool: steep slope, poor light, no safety rope; drowning death | Jury $5.5M, reduced to $2.75M (50/50 fault) |
| Bingaman v. Arizona Biltmore | Arizona Biltmore (Waldorf Astoria) | Bedbug infestation | Class action filed 2018, seeks >$300K (named brand + parent + manager) |
| Mays v. CO Jr. Buffs | Embassy Suites, Phoenix | Pool drowning, no supervision; death (13-yr-old) | Suit vs. club/coach (hotel not named — hazard illustration) |
| Hale v. SS Liquors | Hampton Inn, Shelbyville IN | Bathtub slip, no handrail | Summary judgment for both defendants affirmed |
| Easley-Jackson v. Hilton Hawaiian Village | Hilton Hawaiian Village HI | Premises injury | LLC operating entity named; disposition unconfirmed |
| Costales v. Hilton Mgmt | Hilton Waikoloa Village HI | Premises injury | Confidential settlement (layered owner + manager + Park Hotels) |
| Est. of Aliyah Jaico v. Unique Crowne/Hilton | DoubleTree Houston Brookhollow | Lazy-river drain entrapment (12–16″ gap); drowning death (8-yr-old) | Wrongful-death suit 2024, seeks >$1M; brand + operator sued |
| Hayes v. Vista Host | Hampton Inn, Austin TX | Slippery tub surface | Summary judgment for hotel affirmed (no notice) |
| Corinaldi (cross-listed) | Courtyard, Columbia MD | Negligent security — shooting death | (See Marriott) — innkeeper duty vs. foreseeable crime |
| DoubleTree Collinsville (owner) | DoubleTree, Collinsville IL | Lobby liquid slip | Suit vs. manager (Lodging Hospitality Mgmt.) + owner (Colholt LLC) |
| Hilton (Doe) franchisor | Hilton-flagged property | TVPRA / premises | Claims allowed to proceed against franchisor + franchisee |
Hyatt Hotels — 24 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dugan v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency, St. Louis | Security guard’s master-key sexual assault of sleeping guest | $177M ($28M comp + $149M punitive), affirmed — guard had prior history; post-assault obstruction |
| Kenton v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency, Kansas City | Skywalk collapse; broken neck, spinal cord, PTSD | $4,000,000 jury (remittitur set aside; full award reinstated) |
| Hyatt Regency walkway collapse | Hyatt Regency, Kansas City | Skywalk collapse — 114 deaths, 216 injuries | 300+ suits; ~$140M+ paid; largest single ~$12M; engineers lost licenses |
| Woods-Leber v. Hyatt | Hyatt Cerromar Beach PR | Rabid mongoose bite at pool | Summary judgment affirmed (unforeseeable wild-animal attack) |
| O’Connell v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency Cerromar PR | Slip-and-fall | Denial of late amendment affirmed (procedure) |
| Mayo v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency New Orleans | Fall down steps (3× legal limit + cocaine) | Summary judgment — guest 100% negligent |
| Jones v. Hyatt of Delaware | Hyatt Regency New Orleans | Water on waxed brick corridor | Award reduced ~$935K → ~$423,355 (ordinary care) |
| Banks v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency New Orleans | Inadequate security — shooting just outside entrance; death | Jury found Hyatt + Refco negligent, $975,000 |
| Thomas v. Grand Hyatt | Grand Hyatt, Washington DC | Slippery substance on stage | Judgment for hotel affirmed (speculative causation) |
| Juisti v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency Baltimore | Stair injury during fire-alarm evacuation; collapsed lung | Summary judgment VACATED/remanded (proximate cause) |
| Houston v. Hyatt Regency Indianapolis | Hyatt Regency Indianapolis | Fall at NYE event | Summary judgment affirmed; security contractor sanctioned for discovery misconduct |
| Fitzpatrick v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency Savannah | Fall off conference stage | Reported reversal (not independently confirmed) |
| Hoover v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency Bellevue WA | Freight-elevator gate / worn astragal; alleged TBI | Summary judgment for Hyatt & Otis affirmed |
| Hyatt Place Doral slip | Hyatt Place, Doral FL | Wet/mopped cafeteria floor; quad tear | Settled $18,000 BI + $5,000 MedPay |
| Carter v. Hyatt | Hyatt Ziva Puerto Vallarta | Open unprotected window, missing pane (9th floor); death (23-mo-old) | Wrongful-death suit 2023 vs. U.S. parent + Playa |
| Riaz Ali v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency Houston/Galleria | Housekeeper left floor wet, no warning; severe injuries | Suit filed 2024, seeks up to $1M, pending |
| Ramirez v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency La Jolla CA | Premises injury | Pending (brand + operating LLC + individuals) |
| Clark v. Hyatt | Hyatt Place Boulder CO | CO poisoning, faulty boiler/ventilation; alleged brain injury | CPLA claim proceeds; parent/franchisor dismissed; AIC >$5M |
| Knodle v. Waikiki Gateway | Waikiki Gateway (Hyatt operator) | Inadequate security; intruder strangled flight attendant; death | VACATED, remanded — landmark: duty is a question of law |
| Simmons v. Hyatt | Hyatt Regency San Antonio Riverwalk | Wet exterior stairs (rooftop pool to elevators) | Dismissed (settlement) — invitee duty + gross negligence pleaded |
| Grand Hyatt stage (DC) | Grand Hyatt, Washington DC | Fall on stage; “something” on floor | Need causation proof (defense) |
| Hyatt Regency Baltimore (4th Cir.) | Hyatt Regency Baltimore | Toxic fumes / forced evacuation; pneumothorax | Summary judgment VACATED — “field of danger” proximate cause |
| Hyatt Cerromar (1st Cir.) | Hyatt Cerromar PR | Slip-and-fall | Late-amendment denial affirmed (Rule 16 good cause) |
| Hyatt Place Doral (dup. source) | Hyatt Place, Doral FL | Cafeteria water; torn quad | Settled ~$18,000 + $5,000 MedPay |
IHG (Holiday Inn / Crowne Plaza) — 31 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Laguerre v. Peachtree | Crowne Plaza, Atlanta-Midtown | Falling metal pipe from pool deck; traumatic brain injury | $5M compensatory + $500,336 punitive, affirmed |
| Polisetty v. Crowne Plaza | Crowne Plaza, LAX | Fall from 11th-floor operable window; critical injuries | Filed; alleged >$16M medical; operable windows + faulty locks |
| Carter v. Bullitt Host | Holiday Inn Express, KY | Ice under porte-cochère; broken ankle | SJ REVERSED — KY Supreme Court abolished the ~50-yr no-duty rule for natural outdoor ice (landmark) |
| Gress v. Lakhani Hospitality | Holiday Inn, Chicago-Skokie | Guest drugged at on-site bar, raped by on-duty security guard (duplicate key) | Dismissal REVERSED vs. operator; affirmed dismissal of IHG franchisor |
| Dvorak v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn | Wet exterior stairs forming water “catch-basin” | Directed verdict REVERSED — design/maintenance defect a jury question |
| Gray v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn, Port Allen LA | Bathtub slip; hot-water surge; torn retina, hip | ~$24,000 (owner liable; franchisor dismissed) |
| Ehrman v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn | Slip on greasy substance at garage entrance | Plaintiff verdict on appeal (constructive notice of recurring condition) |
| Parker v. Holiday Hospitality | Holiday Inn Express | Collapsing shower bench (reported loose, tightened, then collapsed); T7–T9 fractures | Defense win (concealed independent-contractor work, no notice) |
| Murphy v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn | Slip on A/C drain water on walkway | Summary judgment for franchisor affirmed — leading franchisor-liability case |
| Flanders v. Crane Co. | Holiday Inn | Bathtub slip, no slip-resistant surface; back surgery | SJ for franchisor REVERSED — apparent agency to the jury |
| Hayward v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn | Premises injury (franchisor-agency) | Operating manuals as control evidence |
| Guest v. JIN Hospitality | Holiday Inn Express, Houston | Slip on water at carpet-to-tile junction | Filed (failure to warn/remedy) |
| Hall v. Candlewood Suites | Candlewood Suites, Port Arthur TX | Fell into deep hole in walkway | Filed (unmaintained walkway defect) |
| Schmidt v. IHG Reservations | IHG-branded inn, Lexington KY | Ice on sidewalk after employee directed guest outside | Summary judgment DENIED (open-and-obvious to jury) |
| Taylor v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn (E.D. Ky.) | Ice/snow exterior slip | Docket exists; ruling unconfirmed |
| Fumbanks v. Harrods Hotels | Holiday Inn of Victoria TX | Slip/premises hazard | Summary judgment for hotel (defense) |
| Barrese v. Holiday Inn Express | Holiday Inn Express (W.D. Pa.) | Premises fall | Memorandum opinion (sanctions/SJ) |
| E.Z. v. Holiday Inn Express | Holiday Inn Express, Pittsburgh North | Collision with sharp metal gag-prop sign | Filed; contested |
| Kutz v. Koury | Holiday Inn Four Seasons | Bathtub slip; half non-slip strips missing | Defense (directed verdict; contributory negligence) |
| Case v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn, Asheville | Intruder knocked guest unconscious, robbed | SJ for franchisor affirmed (“inertia is not reliance”) |
| Crinkley v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn, Concord NC | Armed “Motel Bandits” beat guests; manager knew, added no security | Plaintiff win $400,000 + $100,000 — franchisor liable via apparent agency |
| Miller v. Rosehill Hotels | Holiday Inn Express, IN | Snow/ice parking-lot slip, not salted | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Beaver v. John Q. Hammons | Holiday Inn Convention Ctr | Wet floor at hotel restaurant; back/knee | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Ventura v. Winegardner | Holiday Inn, Star City WV | Fall over unlit steep embankment during horseplay | Plaintiff verdict reversed (trial errors); remanded |
| Kerl v. SPF Real Estate | Holiday Inn Houston S-NRG | Slip on wet exterior sidewalk; severe/permanent injuries | Filed 2024 (owner LLC + manager + operator) |
| McKinney v. HI Hotels | Holiday Inn Express Westchase, Houston | Elevator suddenly fell two stories; trapped ~2 hours | Filed 2024 (>$250K, <$1M) |
| Cantu v. Holiday Inns | Holiday Inn, McAllen TX | Slip/trip and fall | SJ for franchisor affirmed (licensor-only, no control) |
| Houston man v. JIN Hospitality | Holiday Inn Express, Houston | Slip on water at carpet-to-tile junction | Filed (interior wet-floor) |
| Crowne Plaza (Atlanta) appeal | Crowne Plaza, Atlanta-Midtown | Falling pipe (subcontractor) | GC vicariously liable; punitives affirmed |
| Holiday Inn (Asheville) franchisor | Holiday Inn, Asheville NC | Negligent security | No franchisor liability absent agency |
| Holiday Inn Express (PA) sanctions | Holiday Inn Express, PA | Premises fall | PA premises standard, diversity |
Wyndham Hotels & Resorts — 30 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Shiv-Ram v. McCaleb | Ramada Inn, Anniston AL | Sharp protruding bed-frame rail; known recurring defect, prior ankle injuries; no inspection on takeover | $176,572.82 comp + $500,000 PUNITIVE, affirmed |
| Jones v. All Ready Rentals | Days Inn, Jefferson City MO | Hot-tub drowning; failure to monitor spa camera (~21 min); death | Settled ~$1.19M (widow + three minor children, structured) |
| Davis v. Commack Hotel | Howard Johnson, NY | Negligent security — son stabbed to death at room party; security no-show | Plaintiff granted summary judgment on liability, affirmed |
| Taboada v. Daly Seven | Days Inn, VA | Negligent security — criminal assault in lot | Demurrer REVERSED — landmark VA “utmost care and diligence” innkeeper duty |
| Vlasic v. Wyndham | Wyndham Aruba Beach Resort | Palm tree fell onto poolside guest; fatal crush | Dismissed — forum non conveniens (Aruba) |
| U.S. Security Services v. Ramada | Ramada | Negligent security — desk clerk refused phone to call police | Plaintiff verdict; Ramada 50% / vendor 35% / plaintiff 15% — duty is non-delegable |
| Allen v. Ramada Inn | Ramada Inn South, CO | Intruder through window (bars removed); rape, high-crime area | Defense verdict REVERSED & remanded — Restatement §344 duty |
| Ray v. Ramada Inn North | Ramada Inn North, OH | Over-waxed hallway — maid fell same spot ~90 min earlier, warned management | Summary judgment REVERSED (actual notice) |
| La Quinta Inns v. Leech | La Quinta, GA | Fall/jump from 7th-floor window (no window stops); death | Failure-to-prevent claim survives SJ; accidental-fall theory reversed |
| Bright v. Sandstone Hospitality | Wingate Inn, GA | Grab bar detached exiting tub; head + back surgery | Affirmed vs. franchisor; REVERSED vs. owner (premises claim reinstated) |
| Kerr-Morris v. Equitable | Ramada, OH | Shower fall — voluntarily-installed non-slip strips worn away | Summary judgment REVERSED (duty to maintain safety devices) |
| Rappaport v. Days Inn | Days Inn, NC | “Pitch dark” parking lot, no functioning lighting | Directed verdict/nonsuit REVERSED — to jury |
| Duval v. OM Hospitality | Days Inn, NC | “Pitch dark” exterior stairwell, light timer deactivated | Contributory-negligence SJ REVERSED — to jury |
| Hayman v. Ramada Inn | Ramada, Winston-Salem NC | Negligent security — assault; failure to warn of area crime | SJ for franchisor affirmed (leading NC case) |
| Carter v. Innisfree | Travelodge, AL | Peeping — hole behind scratched mirror; similar mirrors in 13 rooms | Affirmed on fraud/outrage; privacy/negligence reinstated |
| Owens v. Ganga Hospitality | Baymont Inn & Suites, AL | Trip on raised painted platform (guest nearly blind) | Summary judgment affirmed (open-and-obvious) |
| Moser v. Dillon Investments | Super 8, Addison TX | Bathtub floor shifted; severe head/brain, neck, back | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Bed-bug settlement — Ramada | Ramada by Wyndham, Rockville MD | Bedbug infestation/bites | $50,000 settlement |
| Chittenden v. BRE/LQ | La Quinta, TN | Ice in parking lot | Summary judgment affirmed (natural accumulation) |
| Krueger v. La Quinta | La Quinta, Baton Rouge | Slip and fall | Decided 2014; disposition unconfirmed |
| Brothers v. LQ Management | La Quinta (Harris County TX) | Slip and fall | Memorandum opinion; invitee notice |
| Coleman v. Ramada Hotel | Ramada (Lake Lawn Lodge WI) | Fall on slide stairs in obstacle course; fractured ankle | Summary judgment affirmed (assumption of risk) |
| Stanciel v. Ramada Lansing | Ramada, MI | Broken grab bar at hot tub | Settlement-enforceability dispute |
| Kyle v. Days Inn | Days Inn | Fall at premises | 1982 ruling on jurisdiction/venue |
| Eastham v. V.P. Management | Microtel, Beckley WV | Snow/ice on walkway; shoulder | Pending |
| Wyndham Bonnet Creek carpet-tile | Wyndham Bonnet Creek, FL | Loose carpet tiles over wet glue; L5-S1 herniation | Pending |
| Javier v. Howard Johnson | Howard Johnson, Allentown PA | Premises injury (hazard unconfirmed) | Docketed suit |
| Epple v. LQ Management | La Quinta, IL | Trip on uneven pavement/curb | Summary judgment REVERSED (permitted-use exception) |
| Williams Investment v. Girardot | Days Inn, GA | Slip on wet sidewalk (room→pool) | REVERSED — SJ for hotel (equal knowledge) |
| Ramada (Lansing) settlement | Ramada, Lansing MI | Defective hot-tub grab bar | Altered Medicare addendum dispute |
Choice Hotels — 14 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tamarac Hotels v. Johnson | Comfort/MainStay Suites, FL | Slip near leaking ice machine, no mat (pregnant guest) | Final judgment $960,225.82, affirmed (45% hotel / 55% plaintiff) |
| Louisville SW Hotel v. Lindsey | Comfort Inn, KY | Pool drowning of 5-yr-old; cloudy water, overcrowded, understaffed | ~$3.1M punitive; hotel grossly negligent (to KY Supreme Court) |
| Est. of Dior Thedford | Comfort Suites, Cordova TN | Pool drowning of 4-yr-old; door unlocked, unsupervised, midnight | Wrongful-death suit (pending) |
| Motel Properties v. Miller | Comfort Inn, GA | Fall near “approach” area | REVERSED — injury not on an “approach”; no duty |
| Sullivan v. Triad Hospitality | Quality Inn & Suites, NC | Loose pool-ladder rung; leg injury | Summary judgment affirmed (res ipsa inapplicable) |
| Leavins v. Nayan | Quality Inn, GA | Slippery bathtub (65-yr-old) | Summary judgment affirmed (fall alone ≠ liability) |
| Anderson v. Turton Development | Comfort Inn, GA | Slip on handicap parking ramp (ANSI access) | Franchisor (Choice) liability limited absent design control |
| Whitfield v. McIntosh Motor Inns | Quality Inn, Media PA | Loose/shifting 3rd-floor staircase landing; severe/permanent | Filed 2024 (multiple LLC/individual defendants) |
| Sweeney v. Choice Hotels | Choice (Broadway Saybrook Motel CT) | Slip and fall | Jury $172,304.23 (reduced $156,515.70); REVERSED & remanded |
| Peck v. Clarion Inn | Clarion Inn, New London CT | Bedbug infestation; bites, rashes | Plaintiff jury verdict: $15,000 + $1,000 + $500 |
| Wakefield v. Tygate Motel | Econo Lodge, VT | Ice on sidewalk near entrance | Jury instructions held adequate (dissent) |
| Comfort/MainStay ice machine | Comfort/MainStay Suites, FL | Wet floor near leaking ice machine | Lumbar/cervical disc displacement, radiculopathy — verdict upheld |
| Quality Inn pool ladder (NC) | Quality Inn & Suites, NC | Pool-ladder rung twisted underfoot | Defense (no exclusive control) |
| Comfort Inn handicap ramp (GA) | Comfort Inn, GA | Slip on handicap ramp | Appeal from SJ for hotel defendants |
Best Western — 19 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jenkins/Williams CO deaths | Best Western Blue Ridge Plaza, Boone NC | CO poisoning from failed pool-water-heater vent beneath Room 225 | THREE deaths in the same room; survivor with permanent brain damage; manager charged with 3 counts manslaughter |
| Best Western Greenway Plaza v. Pruitt | Best Western, Houston | Slip on water outside restroom | Plaintiff win $6,600 + interest, affirmed — hotel had actual notice of water |
| McIntosh v. Best Western Steeplegate | Best Western | Ice on walkway; deicing applied after the fall | REVERSED — post-fall deicing admissible as proof of prior icy condition |
| Williams v. GK Mahavir | Best Western Dawson Village, GA | Slip on water in lobby | Summary judgment REVERSED (constructive knowledge a jury question) |
| Underwood v. Best Western Westbank | Best Western, LA | Trip on parking-lot ramp; fractured ankle, surgery | SJ dismissing co-defendant affirmed |
| Primeaux v. Best Western Plus Houma | Best Western Plus, LA | Trip on elevated yellow curb; head injury | Summary judgment affirmed (open-and-obvious) |
| Hall v. Naper Gold | Best Western, Naperville IL | Ice in parking lot | Defense (appeal dismissed; SJ stood) |
| Raspberry v. Best Western JFK | Best Western, NY | Trip over empty milk crate in hallway | SJ for defendants (open-and-obvious) |
| Miller v. Grewal Bros. | Best Western Napoleon Inn, OH | Ice under canopy; clerk said area slick, needed salt; fractured fibula | Defense (natural accumulation; equal knowledge) |
| Giamo v. Congress Motor Inn | Best Western West Greenwich RI | Ice on driveway after overnight snow; fractured arm | Summary judgment DENIED — proceeded |
| Williamson v. Haynes Best Western | Best Western, Alexandria LA | Alleged electrocution turning off light | Defense verdict (accident found staged), affirmed |
| Carson v. Best Western Westbank | Best Western, LA | Bathtub slip; no non-slip surface/grips | Filed; sought >$1.45M |
| Desi v. Best Western Plus Westbank | Best Western Plus, LA | Slip on slick/off-center floor tile | Filed |
| Gallagher v. Best Western Cottontree | Best Western, ID | Slip on wet floor | Dismissed time-barred; remanded (relation-back) |
| Best Western Greenway Plaza (operator) | Best Western, Houston | Slip-and-fall (operator as appellant) | Trial judgment AFFIRMED for plaintiff |
| Best Western Houma curb (LA) | Best Western Plus Houma, LA | Elevated yellow curb; struck glass doors | Defense (marked curb not unreasonably dangerous) |
| Best Western Naperville ice (IL) | Best Western, Naperville IL | Parking-lot ice | Defense (natural accumulation) |
| St. Paul Mercury v. Williamson | Best Western (Haynes) | Companion coverage/RICO litigation | SJ for insurer on counterclaims |
| Best Western (Haynes) injunction | Best Western, Alexandria LA | Alleged electrocution (injunction posture) | 5th Cir. affirmed refusal to permanently enjoin |
G6 Hospitality (Motel 6 / Studio 6) — 12 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motel 6 G.P. v. Lopez | Motel 6, El Paso TX | Slippery shower floor, no grab bars | Defense — TX Supreme Court take-nothing (no notice) |
| Lopez v. Motel 6 | Motel 6, El Paso TX | Slippery shower, no grab bars | Failure-to-install theory revived, then reversed |
| Trask-Morton v. Motel 6 | Motel 6, Indianapolis | Lobby fall + alleged in-room sexual assault | Summary judgment affirmed (no proof of assault/causation) |
| Pearce v. Motel 6 | Motel 6, WA | Dangerous shower-pan surface | Reversed/remanded — instruction made motel an “insurer” |
| Hoke v. Motel 6 Jackson | Motel 6, Jackson WY | Premises injury | Dismissed (late service / SOL) |
| Wimpy v. Motel 6 | Motel 6, TX | Premises fall | Summary judgment for Motel 6 (no response filed) |
| Motel 6 v. Dowling | Motel 6, FL | Slip on water from faulty ice machine; knee | Plaintiff verdict $31,150.43 |
| Jackson v. Motel 6 | Motel 6, Dallas | Premises/guest injury | Memorandum opinion (G6 corporate-family defendants) |
| Walker v. Spring Hill Hotel | Motel 6, Ocala FL | Slip on liquid leaking from wall in guest room | Settlement in progress (2025) |
| S.R. v. G6 Hospitality | Motel 6 / Studio 6 (parent G6) | Premises negligence | Active federal docket (2026) — parent G6 named directly |
| T.H. v. G6 Hospitality | Motel 6 / Studio 6 (parent G6) | Premises negligence | Active federal docket (2026) — parent G6 named directly |
| Bonafini v. G6 Hospitality | Motel 6, Chicopee MA | Innkeeper failure to prevent guest suicide; death | Defense — no duty absent knowledge of a recent attempt/stated intent |
Extended Stay America — 4 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Marshall v. ESA Management | ESA, Houston (NRG) | Puddle of water on hard room floor | Summary judgment affirmed (no notice) |
| Vernon Jackson v. ESA | ESA, Dallas Market Center | Premises slip-and-fall | Memorandum opinion |
| Nelson v. Extended Stay America | ESA, NJ | Tub fall; wall towel bar pulled out | Judgment for hotel — towel bar is not a grab bar |
| Kilic v. HVM | Extended Stay, Montgomery AL | Negligent exterior stairwell; fall down stairs | Summary judgment DENIED — open-and-obvious rejected |
Red Roof Inn — 8 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rising-Moore v. Red Roof Inns | Red Roof Inn, IN | Ice on entrance ramp | Defense (diversity-jurisdiction dispute) |
| Demo v. Red Roof Inns | Red Roof Inn, Kalamazoo MI | Outdoor stairs, suspected ice; back/leg | Summary judgment affirmed (cause speculative) |
| Grieve v. Red Roof Inns | Red Roof Inn, Corpus Christi TX | Unmarked short step (below code) in lot | Fact question on hotel knowledge (plaintiff-favorable on appeal) |
| Balke v. Red Roof | Red Roof Inn, GA | Protruding metal stake on footpath | Defense (stake on adjacent property) |
| Dennis D. v. Red Roof Inn | Red Roof Inn, PA | Tub — no traction, no grab bar, no mat | Filed; prior complaints/negative reviews alleged as notice |
| Cuevas v. Red Roof Inn & Suites | Red Roof Inn, Houston-Humble TX | Uneven sidewalk slab (~1–1.5″ lip) | Filed Nov. 2024 (failure to inspect/warn) |
| Grieve (trial) | Red Roof Inn, Corpus Christi TX | Low/uneven unmarked step (below code) | Defense at trial; on appeal (expert fact issue) |
| Parker v. Red Roof Inn | Red Roof Inn, Akron OH | Fall over unguarded embankment/retaining wall; wrist | Summary judgment REVERSED (open-and-obvious a fact issue) |
Drury Hotels — 7 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ex parte Drury (Diaz) | Drury Inn & Suites, Montgomery AL | On-site sexual assault & robbery of housekeeper | Mandamus DENIED — premises-security tort claims proceed past workers’-comp bar |
| Frank v. Drury Hotels | Drury Hotels, Duval Co. FL | Personal injury (premises) | Dismissed at pleading; 11th Cir. affirmed |
| Beitler v. Drury Properties | Drury Plaza Pittsburgh Downtown | Fall through cut-out plywood over dumpsters; wrist fracture, surgery | Filed 2017 (defective temporary walkway) |
| Barlow v. Drury Hotels | Drury Hotels (W.D. Tex.) | Personal injury | Filed 2025; pending |
| Guerra v. Drury Hotels | Drury Hotels (W.D. Tex.) | Personal injury | Filed; pending (2026) |
| Phillips v. Drury Southwest | Drury Southwest, MO | Slip on water in restroom (recurring plumbing leak) | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded (recurring condition) |
| Ex parte Drury (Diaz) | Drury Inn & Suites, Montgomery AL | Inadequate security / on-premises assault of housekeeper | Claims proceed (workers’-comp exclusivity rejected) |
Omni Hotels & Resorts — 12 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Howard v. Omni | Omni San Diego | Slippery bathtub surface; serious fall | Summary judgment for Omni (no notice) |
| Thomas v. Omni | Omni Homestead Resort VA | Ice on walkway near fountain; hand/wrist, rib | Summary judgment affirmed (no notice) |
| Porter v. Omni | Omni, Atlanta Airport | Slippery outdoor stairs (dew, pine straw) | Summary judgment affirmed (equal knowledge) |
| Sanford v. Omni | Omni Jacksonville | Step camouflaged by patterned carpet | Summary judgment REVERSED (jury question) |
| Wang v. Omni | Omni New Haven at Yale | Wet lobby floor; mid-shaft tibia fracture | Omni’s summary judgment DENIED (constructive notice + video) |
| Mu v. Omni | Omni Providence | Assault by third parties in lobby (security) | Summary judgment REVERSED (foreseeable crime; spoliation) |
| Smith v. HCD Operating | Omni Houston Hotel | Strawberry on exposed marble lobby floor; knee | No-evidence summary judgment affirmed (no constructive notice) |
| Broussard v. Omni | Omni Corpus Christi (restaurant) | Fall down inadequately lit restaurant stairs; ankle broken in multiple places | Take-nothing REVERSED — excluded prior similar accidents + code error |
| Omni San Diego (Kohler) | Omni San Diego | Inadequately slip-resistant tub | Leading cite: notice requirement applies to hotels |
| Omni Houston (constructive notice) | Omni Houston Hotel | Strawberry on marble floor | Time-notice rule applied in hotel-invitee context |
| Omni Houston (no-evidence SJ) | Omni Houston Hotel | Strawberry on exposed marble | Constructive notice requires time evidence |
| Omni Corpus Christi (stairs) | Omni Corpus Christi (bar & grill) | Short/steep dim carpeted stairs, no nosing; broken ankle | Take-nothing REVERSED & remanded |
Loews Hotels — 1 verified case
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anonymous v. Loews Sapphire Falls | Loews Sapphire Falls Resort, Universal Orlando | Wet bathroom floor (shower water buildup); disfigurement, disability | Filed seeking >$15,000 (invitee duty) |
Four Seasons / Luxury — 7 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Parker v. Four Seasons | Four Seasons Hotel Chicago | Sliding glass shower door exploded; known recurring defect | $20K (→$12K); punitive-damages bar REVERSED — rented a room with a known defect |
| Norkin v. J.V. Associates | Four Seasons Resort Palm Beach | Trip over long tablecloth; broken ribs, spine; death | Defense verdict affirmed |
| Howard v. Accor Management | Sofitel LA at Beverly Hills | Handheld shower head dismantled/fell apart; cut hand, backward fall | Summary judgment affirmed (no notice; expert excluded) |
| Bamesberger v. Four Seasons | Four Seasons (B.W. Hotel LLC; PSAV) | Premises/personal injury | Settled & dismissed with prejudice (2021) |
| Stephens v. Fairmont Kea Lani | Fairmont Kea Lani, Maui | Employee directed guest to off-site state beach; broken neck, paralysis | Defense — duty not extended to a state beach miles away |
| Four Seasons Chicago (shower door) | Four Seasons Hotel Chicago | Exploding shower door (“do not sell” list) | Punitive bar reversed & remanded |
| Four Seasons Chicago (failed stoppers) | Four Seasons Hotel Chicago | Shattering shower door (failed track stoppers; prior shatter) | Known recurring defect = jury question on willful/grossly negligent conduct |
Casino-Hotels (MGM, Caesars, Wynn, Sands, Hard Rock, Boyd) — 76 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cox v. MGM Grand | MGM Grand, Las Vegas | Fall on dark backstage “runaround” route (Copperfield show) | Defense verdict, affirmed (negligence but not proximate cause) |
| Atkinson v. MGM Grand | MGM Grand, Las Vegas | Fell ~20 ft into unguarded excavation pit | Negligence per se (NRS 455.010); reversed & remanded |
| Morrison v. MGM Grand | MGM Grand, Reno | Armed robbery in hotel elevator (prior similar robbery) | Summary judgment DENIED — foreseeable third-party crime |
| Richardson v. Mandalay Corp. | Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas | Falling arch event sign toppled onto guest | $524,068.86 (rejected $2.5M offer) |
| Fenton v. Nevada Property 1 | The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas | Slip on spilled drink + ice/broken glass; CRPS | $15,000,000 unanimous (~75 min) |
| O’Connell v. Wynn | Wynn Las Vegas | Slip on sticky liquid in atrium | $400,000 (60/40) → $240,000, affirmed (constructive notice) |
| Lozano v. Paris Las Vegas | Paris Las Vegas (Caesars) | Slip on spilled drink on wet marble; back | ~$3.4M (50% comparative fault) → ~$1.7M |
| Southwell v. Flamingo | Flamingo Las Vegas (Caesars) | Escalator malfunction — foot trapped/mangled | Pending (+ Schindler Elevator) |
| Venetian v. EJDC (Sekera) | The Venetian, Las Vegas | Slip on liquid on marble; 73 prior slip-and-falls in 3 years | Discovery of prior-incident reports compelled (notice/foreseeability) |
| Thomas v. Boyd Biloxi | IP Casino Resort Spa (Boyd) | Fall descending stairs to pool deck; 2 prior falls | Summary judgment REVERSED (jury question) |
| Est. of Webber v. Aquarius | Aquarius Casino, Laughlin | Fall exiting elevator; neck fracture → quadriplegia → death | Pending (>$2.5M; res ipsa loquitur) |
| Beltran v. Hard Rock | Hard Rock Palm Springs | Premises liability | Ongoing (trial set 2026) |
| Seminole Tribe v. Pupo | Seminole Hard Rock Hollywood FL | Slip and fall | Denial of dismissal affirmed (limited waiver of tribal immunity) |
| Lucas v. Genting | Resorts World Casino NYC | Fall on exterior walkway | Summary judgment affirmed (cause unidentifiable) |
| Est. of Arroyo v. Harrah’s Laughlin | Harrah’s Laughlin (Caesars) | Slip in hotel-room shower; C5-C6 fracture → paralysis → death | Pending wrongful death |
| Harrah’s Laughlin v. Madison | Harrah’s Laughlin (Caesars) | Fire-sprinkler valve flood/water surge; neck surgery | ~$1,158,558 (verdict + interest + additur), affirmed |
| Est. of Nakashima v. Excalibur | Excalibur (MGM), Las Vegas | Slip on pool steps in shallow water; near-drowning (16-yr-old) → death | Pending wrongful death (lifeguard failures) |
| Est. of Bernales v. Boyd | Suncoast (Boyd), Las Vegas | Moving-walkway “hump”; shirt caught, dragged; head injury; death | Pending wrongful death (+ TK Elevator) |
| Paul v. Imperial Palace | Imperial Palace (now LINQ), Las Vegas | Slip on oily rug in buffet line; rotator cuff | Jury verdict reinstated (new trial reversed) |
| Anderson v. Mandalay Corp. | Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas | Employee with keycard entered room & sexually assaulted guest | Summary judgment REVERSED — assault foreseeable |
| Bower v. Harrah’s Laughlin | Harrah’s Laughlin (Caesars) | Negligent security — 2002 Hells Angels/Mongols brawl (3 killed) | Jury found Harrah’s LIABLE (brawl foreseeable) |
| Hawkes v. Casino Queen | Casino Queen, E. St. Louis IL | Trip over open vanity cabinet door in restroom; ruptured C5-C6 | $1.87M → $1.309M (30% comparative), affirmed |
| Sandlin v. Harrah’s Illinois | Harrah’s Joliet (Caesars) | Slip on wet floor (fatal) | Settled; architect-indemnity SJ affirmed |
| Austin v. Argosy Alton | Argosy Alton (Penn) IL | Slip on wet substance in restroom | Summary judgment GRANTED (no notice) |
| Renault v. Argosy Alton | Argosy Alton (Penn) IL | Trip on hump/uneven gaming floor; knee | Filed (>$50K) |
| Grabowski v. Harrah’s Joliet | Harrah’s Joliet (Caesars) | Slip on liquid near main entrance | Complaint filed |
| Allen v. Sands Bethlehem | Sands Bethlehem (Sands) PA | Slip and fall; shoulder | Discovery ruling — social-media credentials DENIED to casino |
| Minelli v. Harrah’s AC | Harrah’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Slip and fall | Dismissal REVERSED — bankruptcy stay tolled the 2-yr SOL |
| Crook v. Harrah’s AC | Harrah’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Slip on wet stone staircase (nightclub); knee | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| McKiski v. Harrah’s AC | Harrah’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Spilled liquor + broken glass on marble (~83 sec) | Summary judgment affirmed (insufficient time) |
| Seeley v. Bally’s AC | Bally’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Wet/slippery restroom floor; multi-level lumbar fusion | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Collier v. Borgata | Borgata, Atlantic City (MGM/Boyd) | Slip at revolving-door exit | Defense verdict (“no cause”) affirmed |
| Romeo v. Harrah’s AC Propco | Harrah’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Slip on spilled beverage (~4 min; supervisor near spill) | Summary judgment DENIED (constructive notice a jury question) |
| King v. Harrah’s AC | Harrah’s Atlantic City (Caesars) | Trip on exposed bed-frame corner; head/leg | Summary judgment GRANTED (not unreasonably dangerous) |
| Casino buffet slip (AC) | Atlantic City casino-hotel | Spill at buffet; neck surgery, subdural hematoma | $800,000 settlement |
| Casino wet-marble walkway (AC) | Atlantic City casino-hotel | Wet marble walkway; fractured elbow | Confidential (“significant”) settlement |
| Casino ice/ramp (AC) | Atlantic City casino-hotel | Ice on sidewalk / non-code ramp; tibial-plateau knee, surgeries | $300,000 settlement |
| Lewis v. Jazz Casino | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Slip on food (“smushed grape”) on marble | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Beggs v. Harrah’s New Orleans | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Slip in restroom puddle; back | $26,222.56 (50% comparative) → $13,111.28, affirmed |
| Magri v. Jazz Casino | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Employee moved barstool out from under patron’s foot | $601,689.31 (70% casino / 30%), affirmed |
| Thomas v. Caesars | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Slip/fall on something on floor | Summary judgment GRANTED (defense) |
| Cheek v. Jazz Casino | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Slip on wet restroom floor; no warning | Filed |
| DiNatale v. Treasure Chest | Treasure Chest (Boyd) LA | Slip-and-fall | Pending (removed to federal court 2024) |
| Cook v. Treasure Chest | Treasure Chest (Boyd) LA | Wet bathroom floor during cleaning; sign placed after fall | Filed |
| Mizenis v. Sands Motel | Sands Motel, OH | Snow/ice-covered exterior stairway (no alternate route) | Guest-favorable — did not assume the risk |
| Albitus v. Greektown Casino | Greektown (Penn) MI | Slot-machine chair back collapsed; arm/shoulder/neck | Summary judgment affirmed (no notice) |
| Ottman v. Four Winds | Four Winds (Pokagon Band) MI | Slip on black ice on sidewalk | Summary judgment affirmed (open-and-obvious) |
| McBroom v. Greektown | Greektown (Penn) MI | Negligent security — third-party stabbing after valet escort | REVERSED & remanded (favorable to casino) |
| Confidential v. Detroit casino | Detroit casino | Defective carpet (indentation under new carpet); back surgery, broken foot | $485,000 settlement |
| Green v. MGM National Harbor | MGM National Harbor, MD | Electrified handrail (~12V energized to ~120V); child cardiac arrest + TBI | Confidential settlement (MGM + contractors) |
| Johnson v. MGM National Harbor | MGM National Harbor, MD | Premises personal injury | Pending (2025) |
| Isaac v. MGM Resorts | MGM Resorts | Personal injury / product liability | Pending (2025) |
| Gold Strike v. Cushing | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Standing water from leaking drink machine (≥30 min); fractured elbow | $250,000, affirmed (constructive knowledge) |
| Elston v. Gold Strike | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Puddle in lobby near live plants; leg/knee | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Treadwell v. Gold Strike | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Fall at buffet (dry floor; leg buckled) | Summary judgment affirmed (no dangerous condition) |
| Garson v. Gold Strike | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Protruding metal bed frame; fractured ankle | Summary judgment affirmed |
| Jacox v. Gold Strike | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Slip from overflowing toilet | Summary judgment affirmed (no causation/medical evidence) |
| Harris v. Casino Vicksburg | Waterview Casino & Hotel, MS | Moved chair slid out as she sat | Summary judgment affirmed (with dissent) |
| Patricola v. Imperial Palace MS | IP Casino Resort Spa (Boyd) MS | Puddle on marble lobby from A/C condensation drip | Summary judgment REVERSED & remanded |
| Cofield v. Imperial Palace MS | IP Casino (Boyd) MS | Puddle near elevators | Summary judgment affirmed (expert speculative) |
| Bonner v. Imperial Palace MS | IP Casino (Boyd) MS | Wet substance/grape near buffet; knee | Summary judgment affirmed (no notice) |
| Jones v. Imperial Palace MS | IP Casino (Boyd) MS | Trip over misaligned concrete parking bumper | MS Supreme Court reinstated SJ for casino |
| Richardson v. Grand Casino Gulfport | Grand Casino Gulfport MS | Fall down gray stairs blending with flooring | Summary judgment affirmed |
| McCullar v. Boyd Tunica | Sam’s Town Tunica (Boyd) MS | Slip from ceiling P-trap leak (room above) | Summary judgment affirmed |
| Spangler v. Beau Rivage | Beau Rivage Biloxi (MGM) | Large puddle around commode (high-limit restroom) | Summary judgment affirmed (no knowledge) |
| Lee v. MGM Resorts MS | Gold Strike Tunica (MGM) | Patron detention; arm/elbow fracture | Judgment for casino affirmed (probable cause) |
| Griffith v. Choctaw Casino | Choctaw Casino Pocola (Choctaw Nation) OK | Stepped into flowerbed after guard redirected; face/head | Dismissal REVERSED — negligence claim remanded |
| Navajo Nation v. Dalley | Northern Edge Navajo Casino, NM | Slip on wet bathroom floor | Must proceed in tribal court (IGRA) |
| Mandalay Bay falling sign (case-no.) | Mandalay Bay, Las Vegas | Falling sign near pool toppled in wind | $524,000 (rejected $2.5M offer) |
| Cosmopolitan (Chandelier Bar) | The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas | Liquid + ice + broken glass on bar floor; CRPS | $15,000,000 — lessee-of-space defense rejected |
| Paris Las Vegas (trial detail) | Paris Las Vegas (Caesars) | Wet marble main thoroughfare; back (injections/stimulator/surgery) | ~$3.445M; 50% fault → ~$1.7M (NRS 41.141) |
| Venetian / Sekera (2022 writ) | The Venetian, Las Vegas | Wet marble; 73 prior slip-and-falls in 3 years | Writ DENIED — prior-incident reports discoverable |
| Flamingo escalator (refiled) | Flamingo Las Vegas (Caesars) | Escalator entrapment — foot trapped | Pending (casino + maintenance vendor) |
| Vinci v. Las Vegas Sands | Sands Hotel, Las Vegas | Trip-and-fall | Trip-fall claim dismissed by stipulation |
| Wong v. Las Vegas Sands | The Venetian (Sands) | Premises/guest injury | Motions for summary judgment DENIED; proceeding |
| MGM National Harbor (handrail detail) | MGM National Harbor, MD | Energized handrail (rushed pre-opening) | Owner + GC + electrical contractor released |
| Harrah’s New Orleans (restroom) | Harrah’s New Orleans (Caesars) | Restroom puddle; failure to follow water-hazard policy | Breach of own policy = breach of reasonable care |
| Cosmopolitan (lessee defense) | The Cosmopolitan, Las Vegas | Spilled drink; multiple surgeries | $15M; beat $2.75M offer and $12M demand |
Independent & Boutique Hotels — 163 verified cases
Single-property operators — and where many of the largest catastrophic verdicts and the controlling doctrines live.
| Case | Property / state | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goodwin v. Galt House | Galt House, KY | Slippery tub, no bathmat | Summary judgment REVERSED (duty even if open/obvious) |
| Strahan v. McCook Hotel Group | McCook, NE | Tub floor not slip-resistant | Summary judgment affirmed (bare “slippery” insufficient) |
| McNeilly v. Greenbrier Hotel | Greenbrier, WV | Slippery tub, wet grab bar; fell onto marble, head | Jury question on reasonable care |
| Miller v. Shull | FL (1950) | Slippery tub | Judgment for hotel (early tub precedent) |
| Legacy Vacation Resorts | FL | Slick tub, no usable handrail | $250,000 settlement (prior online complaints raised value) |
| Slaats v. Gansevoort South | FL | Camouflaged pool step-down + sun glare | Summary judgment REVERSED (expert “special hazard”) |
| Mina v. Boca Ciega Resort | FL | Dark, partially-drained, unlit hot tub; no warning | ~$7.6M jury verdict ($7,556,438) |
| Parker v. Manchester Hotel | Claridge, CA (1938) | Uneven elevator stop + slippery lobby | Verdict for plaintiff affirmed (high duty re elevators) |
| Planchard v. New Hotel Monteleone | LA | Wet marble lobby; non-standard wet-floor signs | LA Supreme Court REVERSED for hotel (adequate signage) |
| Dingman v. Linchris Hotel | NY | ~¼″ tile/subfloor height differential | Trivial-defect doctrine analysis |
| The Jane Hotel verdict | NY (2025) | Wet marble outside communal shower; no drainage/slip resistance | $2,021,000 jury verdict (constructive notice) |
| Reznicki v. Strathallan Hotel | NY | Ice/packed snow in lot | Issue of fact; contractor SJ denied |
| Moranto v. St. Charles Station Casino | MO | Black ice at handicap lot (staff hosed area); comminuted tibia/fibula | $187,500 settlement (created condition) |
| AC casino icy sidewalk | NJ | Ice off bus; code-noncompliant ramp; tibial plateau | $300,000 settlement |
| Dempsey-Vanderbilt v. Huisman | FL (1943) | Broken tile stair tread; manager admitted “I knew about it” | $2,500 verdict affirmed (admission = notice) |
| Smith v. Basin Park Hotel | AR (8th Cir.) | Riser-height variance, one handrail (2 req’d), slick carpet, low light | Summary judgment REVERSED |
| Burrell v. Mayfair-Lennox Hotels | MO (1969) | Worn cupped tread concealed by carpet + poor light | $23,000 → $18,000 (remittitur) |
| Seamans v. Standard Hotel | Lobero, CA (1947) | Unlit ~6″ step-down at patio exit | Judgment for defendant REVERSED |
| Von Normann v. Newport Channel Inn | CA (2012) | 2nd-story railing ~8″ below code; skull fx/TBI; guest BAC .267 | $38.6M verdict — 85% hotel / 15% plaintiff |
| Confidential v. Orlando Resort | FL | Sloped painted walkway, rain pooling, no non-skid; fractured patella | $850,000 confidential settlement |
| Wedding-reception tablecloth trip | NJ (2013) | Oversized tablecloth pooled in walkway; humerus fx | $195,000 settlement |
| McClure v. Hotel Crescent Court | TX (2025) | Fall into unlit, unguarded drained fountain basin (Storm Uri); 4 surgeries | $9.45M verdict — 95% hotel / 5% plaintiff |
| Confidential (Dali “Leda” table) | Luxury hotel, CA | Unstable heavy Dali art table tipped onto foot; CRPS | $9,225,000 settlement |
| Confidential housekeeping supervisor | NY | Slipped on plaster debris, fell down metal stairs; L3-5 fusion, total disability | $3,125,000 settlement |
| McCray v. HG Hotel / Crescent Mgmt | TX (2025) | Premises slip/trip | Per curiam (owner + manager joinder) |
| Mitchell v. Baker Motel of Dallas | TX (1975) | Ballroom slip-and-fall | Summary judgment for hotel REVERSED |
| Gussie Fox v. Dallas Hotel Co. | TX (1922) | Defective elevator | Foundational TX elevator/innkeeper duty |
| Flagship Hotel v. Hayward | TX (2006) | Crumbling concrete ramp; worker carrying sink | $500,000 verdict REVERSED (defense) |
| Flagship / Galveston v. Garza | TX (2003) | Car backed off unguarded pier notch; 2 drownings | ~$10.5M verdict REVERSED (Recreational Use Statute) |
| Landry v. S.C. Beach Hotel | Dream Inn, CA (2013) | Knocked down on stairs by other guests’ children | Summary judgment affirmed (not foreseeable) |
| Downing v. Solage Hotel | CA | Unspecified PI at resort | Result not confirmed |
| Gravador v. California Suites | CA | Unspecified PI | Pending |
| Aslanian v. Standard Hotel | CA | Unspecified PI | Dismissed w/ prejudice (settlement) |
| Westgate Palace v. Parr | FL (2017) | Lobby puddle; fractured patella | ~$396,725 (45/55); remanded re juror |
| Dudowicz v. Pearl on 63 Main | FL (2021) | Unbeveled tile/carpet elevation change | SJ REVERSED — building-code violation = prima facie negligence |
| Sutley v. Ocean Trillium Suites | FL (2025) | Abrupt elevation sidewalk→pool ramp | Summary judgment REVERSED |
| Georges v. Resorts World NYC | NY (2020) | Snow/ice in lot | Contractor SJ denied (must show didn’t create/worsen) |
| Enstrom v. Garden Place Hotel | NY (2006) | Whirlpool grab handle came off | Adverse-inference granted (spoliation) |
| King v. Diplomat Hospitality | NY (2023) | Intruder via ground-floor window (security) | Summary judgment for hotel affirmed |
| Eldorado/Horseshoe Club v. Graff | NV (1962) | Lettuce leaf on receiving ramp | $50,000 verdict REVERSED |
| Wiegman v. Hitch-Inn Post | IL (1999) | Wet floor at stairs near pool/sauna | $52,500 net (−20% comp), affirmed |
| Hall v. Noble-Interstate | GA (2019) | Bathtub fall; tub resurfaced after; head injury | Summary judgment REVERSED |
| Coral Hospitality v. Givens | GA (2022) | Uneven walkway at park-lodge cabin | SJ denial REVERSED (for operator) |
| Briddle v. Cornerstone Lodge | GA (2007) | Wet floor from toilet overflow she reported | Summary judgment for lodge (equal knowledge) |
| Ballew v. Summerfield Hotel | GA (2002) | Trip in elevator lobby | Summary judgment for hotel (static defect) |
| MAC Intl-Savannah v. Hallman | GA (2004) | Slip/fall on hotel steps | SJ denial affirmed (proceeds) |
| Rischack v. New Perry Hotel | GA (1996) | Depression in grassy strip; broke ankle | Summary judgment for hotel + city affirmed |
| Coates v. Mulji Motor Inn | GA (1986) | Premises fall at motel | Proprietor liability = superior knowledge |
| Oudolsky v. Mount Airy Casino | PA (2024) | Slip on marble near hand-sanitizer dispenser | Summary judgment for casino REVERSED |
| Schwartz v. Warwick-Philadelphia | PA (1967) | Asparagus/sauce on ballroom dance floor | Nonsuit analysis (PA Supreme Court) |
| Morin v. Traveler’s Rest Motel | PA (1997) | Thin ice glaze in lot | Defense (hills-and-ridges doctrine) |
| Graham v. Mohegan Sun Pocono | PA (2017) | Outdoor fall near construction | Defense verdict |
| Greenwood Gaming (Parx Casino) | PA (2014) | Wet substance on casino floor | Suit filed (>$150K) |
| Spicer v. Trump Plaza owner | PA (2012) | Wet floor from leak; pregnant | Filed; removed to federal court |
| Tucci v. Tropicana Casino | NJ (2003) | Mis-leveled elevator | Dismissal of elevator contractor REVERSED |
| Jenkins v. Borgata | NJ (2007) | Alleged wet restroom floor | Defense verdict |
| Sayre v. PNK / L’Auberge Du Lac | LA (2016) | Corridor fall; 3 rib fx + rotator cuff | Defense verdict REVERSED → $216,026.54 (adverse-presumption error) |
| Foster v. Pinnacle / Boomtown Belle | LA (2016) | Cracked tile, <1/16″ offset | Summary judgment for casino (negligible offset) |
| McDonald v. PNK / Boomtown Bossier | LA (2020) | Slip-and-fall | Affirmed (merchant liability §9:2800.6) |
| Allen v. Pinnacle / L’Auberge | LA (2019) | Trip on gaming-hall carpet; shattered wrist (elderly) | $832,479 upheld (not “abusively high”) |
| Riles v. Golden Nugget Lake Charles | LA (2022) | Water on restroom floor | Filed (>$250K) |
| Matthies v. Pinnacle / L’Auberge | LA (2016) | Wet restroom floor; struck head | Filed (premises + cleaning contractor) |
| Moses v. LA A-1 Gaming / Boomtown | LA (2014) | Water on restroom floor | Filed |
| Denny v. Riverbank Court Hotel | MA (1933) | Worn ramp cleats, poor light; death | Directed verdict; jury-question rule (wrongful death) |
| Sterns v. Highland Hotel | MA (1940) | Revolving door / step-down (pushed) | Judgment for hotel (open-and-obvious) |
| Daniele v. Hotel Kimball | MA (1950) | Wet/soapy marble stairway | Verdict for plaintiffs upheld |
| Denton v. Park Hotel | MA (1962) | Heel caught in trap-door ring on dance floor | Plaintiff-favorable (prior trips on rings) |
| LaBart v. Hotel Vendome | MA (1963) | Smooth tub, no mat; T-12 compression fx | Summary judgment for hotel |
| MA Developer v. Seaport Hotel | MA (2025) | Partially obscured staircase at gala | Newly filed |
| Lang v. Holly Hill Motel | OH (2009) | Two unrailed steps over code; broke hip, died 3 mo later | Affirmed for motel (open-and-obvious) |
| Detrick v. Columbia Sussex | Holiday Inn, OH (1993) | Women’s restroom slip | Summary judgment dismissing complaint |
| Nichols v. Staybridge Suites | OH (2009) | Wet indoor pool deck (knew it was wet) | Summary judgment for hotel (open-and-obvious) |
| Naso v. Victorian Tudor Inn | OH (2022) | Slip/trip on steps | Summary judgment for inn |
| McGrane v. Lighthouse Inn | OH (2007) | Negligent alcohol service; assault at reception | Judgment for inn affirmed |
| Chardon Lakes Inn v. MacBride | OH (1937) | Unlighted stairway fall | Plaintiff judgment (inn appealed) |
| Coyle v. Beryl’s Motor Hotel | OH (1961) | Guest premises injury | Directed verdict vs. plaintiff (appealed) |
| Shaheen v. Boston Mills Ski Resort | OH (1992) | Collision with fence skiing | Summary judgment for resort (assumption of risk) |
| Brown v. Holiday Inn Express (P&S Hotel) | OH (2018) | Feces-covered towel; battery/IIED/negligence | Negligence + neg.-supervision claims REINSTATED |
| McMurtry v. Weatherford Hotel | AZ (2013) | Inadequately guarded window; fatal 3-story fall; BAC .263; dram-shop | Summary judgment VACATED (both claims) — open-and-obvious doesn’t auto-relieve |
| Robertson v. Sixpence Inns | AZ (1990) | Failed to warn security guard of armed robber; guard killed | SJ/directed verdict REVERSED (duty to warn) |
| Woodty v. Weston’s Lamplighter | AZ (1992) | Defective HVAC unit; wrongful death of guest’s visitor | Visitor owed invitee-level duty |
| Page v. Sloan (Ocean Isle Motel) | NC (1972) | Water-heater explosion; guest killed | Innkeeper’s nondelegable duty; res ipsa |
| Barnes v. Hotel O. Henry | NC (1949) | Slip on waxed/oiled floor | Judgment for hotel (no res ipsa) |
| Ford v. Red Lion Inns | WA (1992) | Ice in parking lot | Summary judgment for Red Lion affirmed |
| Strom v. Red Lion Hotels | WA (2011) | Heel caught in floor crack under raised carpet | Summary judgment for hotel (slight deviation) |
| Bartlett v. Hantover | WA (1974) | Inadequate security; employee shot | Verdict for plaintiff affirmed (foreseeable crime) |
| Audette v. TBWC Properties | Mackinaw Bay, MI (2023) | Protruding ramp screws | Summary judgment for owner (lease shifts duty) |
| Hunt v. Sonee Hospitality | Mountain Host, MI (2026) | Slip at motel entrance; rotator cuff | $500,000 default judgment, affirmed in part |
| Tarpley v. Troy-Madison Inn | Days Inn, MI (2003) | Pavement incline at exit | Summary judgment for hotel (open-and-obvious) |
| O’Donnell v. PNK (River City) | MO (2021) | Ice on sidewalk in ice storm | SJ for casino; contractor REVERSED (Massachusetts Rule) |
| Wilder v. Chase Resorts | Four Seasons Lodge, MO (1976) | Resort stairway fall | Resort/innkeeper duty to registered guests |
| Milliken v. Trianon Hotel | Muehlebach, MO (1962) | Soapy/wet stairway | $13,185 set aside; new trial (notice essential) |
| Shute v. Prom Motor Hotel | MO (1969) | Unlit steps (off-premises power failure) | Plaintiff on liability; $10,000 (statutory duty to keep hotel lit) |
| Strauss v. Hotel Continental | MO (1980) | Assault by athletic-club attendant | Defendants prevailed |
| Demko v. H&H Investment | MO (1975) | Packed snow/ice in restaurant-motel lot | Verdict for defendants affirmed |
| Maldonado v. Gateway Hotel Holdings | MO (2003) | No ringside ambulance at hotel boxing match; catastrophic brain damage | $13.7M compensatory affirmed (inherently-dangerous activity) |
| Marden v. Radford | MO (1935) | Guest-vs-tenant status | Status-factors decision |
| Burnison v. Souders | MO (1931) | Innkeeper duty (general) | Core duty to furnish reasonably safe premises |
| Unnamed MO hotel pool drowning | MO (2022) | Murky water, no supervision, disconnected chem monitor; 10-yr-old drowned | $3,300,000 settlement |
| Gray v. Turner (Colburn Hotel) | CO (1960) | Ice/snow on driveway/sidewalk | Directed verdict REVERSED |
| Atkinson v. Ives (X Bar X Ranch) | CO (1953) | Loose flagstone, unlit patio | Verdict REVERSED → dismiss (needs knowledge) |
| New Albany Hotel v. Dingman | CO (1919) | Innkeeper-guest duty | Foundational CO innkeeper-guest relationship |
| DeCandia v. Remington Lodging | VA (2024) | Tripped over dark “wet floor” sign in dim area | Summary judgment for hotel DENIED |
| Malfunctioning bathroom door | VA (2024) | Door hardware fell on guest; notice via reviews | $250,000 mediated settlement |
| Nelson v. Great Eastern (Massanutten) | VA (2003) | Snow-tubing collision | Resort verdict REVERSED; new trial |
| Crosswhite v. Shelby Operating | VA (1944) | Defective window screen; child fell out window | Jury question (duty to take every reasonable precaution) |
| Kirby v. Moehlman | VA (1944) | Rocking chair missing a rocker | Favorable to injured guest |
| Alpaugh v. Wolverton | VA (1946) | Innkeeper duty re guest property/safety | Restated heightened duty |
| Flax v. Monticello Realty | VA (1946) | Found property (diamond brooch) | Innkeeper-possession presumption |
| Gellerman v. Shawan Road Hotel | MD (1998) | Uneven curb/sidewalk joint | Summary judgment for hotel (open-and-obvious) |
| Dent v. Plim Plaza Hotel | MD (2011-13) | Legionella in water system; one guest died | Federal suit + 11-plaintiff suit settled |
| Ocean City vacation-rental bedbugs | MD | Bedbug infestation (100+ bites) | $300,000 settlement |
| Lincoln Operating Co. v. Gillis | IN (1953) | Soap-scum tub, no mat; broke kneecap | $15,000 → $7,500 affirmed |
| Ellis v. Luxbury Hotels | IN (1996) | Desk disclosed room number; third-party assault | Summary judgment for hotel |
| Staub (Weeks) v. Myrtle Lake Resort | MN (2021) | Degraded/cracked exterior staircase; spine fx; death | SJ REVERSED — circumstantial evidence can prove causation (landmark) |
| Harrison v. Vold (Silver Cliff Motel) | MN (2010) | Hole/depression in lawn; broke leg | Summary judgment for motel (speculation) |
| Cohen v. Little Six (Mystic Lake) | MN (1996) | Slot-machine chair collapsed | Dismissed (tribal sovereign immunity) |
| Hanson v. Christensen (Harbor Resort) | MN (1966) | Undisclosed shallow water; 13-yr-old broke neck diving | Negligence + contributory negligence for jury |
| Confidential resort trip | MN | Trip-and-fall; closed head injury | $1,500,000 settlement |
| Perry v. Mohegan Tribal Gaming | CT (2025) | Ice (melt/refreeze) on sidewalk; trimalleolar fx | Judgment for plaintiff |
| Minerva v. Mohegan | CT (2024) | Puddle near concierge desk (attendant passed without acting) | Plaintiff on liability (33% comparative) |
| Lowy v. Mohegan | CT (2023) | Water in lobby (1:54 before fall) | Judgment for defendant (<2 min) |
| Palmer v. Mohegan | CT (2023) | “Slimy juice” at buffet | Judgment for defendant (no duration proof) |
| Barreto v. Mohegan | CT (2022) | Liquid at buffet | Judgment for defendant |
| Leahy v. Mohegan | CT (2024) | Water on pool-deck walkway | Judgment for defendant (expected pool-deck water) |
| Granata v. Mohegan | CT (2024) | Divot under carpet | Judgment for defendant (no notice) |
| Tomassetti v. Mohegan | CT (2022) | Clear liquid on floor | Defendant AFFIRMED on appeal |
| Diaz v. Mohegan | CT (2017) | Tripped over slot-repair worker’s feet | Apportionment to contractor allowed |
| Rogers v. Mashantucket Pequot | Foxwoods, CT (2016) | Defective shower-door seal | Judgment for enterprise (release barred claim) |
| Goodman v. Foxwoods | CT (2021) | Liquid in concourse; spill ~20 min on video; leg/ankle | $1.3M settlement (employees ignored spill) |
| Mohegan Sun lobby slip (defense) | CT | Clear substance; ~100 people crossed safely | Defense verdict (recent clear substance) |
| Veterinarian motel-ice | CT | Ice near motel entrance; ankle fx (3 places) | $1.8M verdict → $2.5M settlement |
| 88-yr-old hotel interior stairs | CT | Interior stairs lacked handrail; broke hip | $150,000 settlement |
| Marshall v. Roadway Inn | AL (2007) | Health-dept-closed cloudy pool kept open, no rescue gear; 19-yr-old drowned | $3,766,000 plaintiff verdict |
| Lehner v. Dover Downs | DE (2018) | Trip-and-fall (cause unidentifiable) | Summary judgment for casino |
| Hynson v. Dover Downs | DE (2015) | Third-party assault on exit (security) | Proceeded (may owe duty) |
| Belyea v. Shiretown Motor Inn | ME (2010) | Assault in lot (non-guest of lounge) | Summary judgment for inn (no duty to non-guest) |
| Brewer v. Roosevelt Motor Lodge | ME (1972) | Assault on guest in room (locks present) | Judgment for defendant (intervening, unforeseeable) |
| Torrey v. Congress Square Hotel | Eastland, ME (1950) | Steps + inadequate lighting | Directed verdict for defendant |
| Mutterperl v. Lake Spofford Hotel | NH (1965) | Negligent wiring → dark room; fractured hip | Verdicts for plaintiffs |
| Melcher v. Modern Hotel | NH (1971) | Stairway slip to men’s room | Defense verdict |
| Soraghan v. Mt. Cranmore Ski Resort | NH (2005) | Fell into crevasse; severe knee | Summary judgment for resort REVERSED |
| Currier v. Newport Moose Lodge | NH (2022) | Negligent alcohol service | Liquor-liability standard applied |
| Buxton v. Springfield Moose Lodge | VT (2014) | Patron injured in fight (security) | Dismissal affirmed |
| Anderson v. SW Gaming (Harlow’s Casino) | MS (2024) | Wet restroom floor | Summary judgment for casino affirmed |
| Cossey v. Cherokee Nation Enterprises | OK (2009) | Casino patron PI (jurisdiction) | State-court jurisdiction upheld |
| Charleston-area hotel wet stairs | SC (2022) | Wet exterior stairs (staff hosed breezeways); 5 surgeries | $1.25M settlement (notice/causation) |
| Carini v. Chanticleer Inn | WI (2008) | Open/unguarded stairwell; prior fall ~6 yrs earlier = notice | Jury $589,858.44 (70/30); dismissal REVERSED |
| Dempsey v. Alamo Hotels | NM (1966) | Tub, missing non-slip mat | Summary judgment for hotel |
| Paver/leaf fall v. Heritage Hotels | El Monte Sagrado, NM (2025) | Loose/broken pavers under leaves; surgery | Newly filed |
| Confidential hotel-entryway trip | WI | Uneven entryway surface; hip aggravation | $125,000 settlement (eggshell plaintiff) |
| Steigman v. Outrigger Enterprises | HI (2011) | Wet lanai below friction standard; foot trapped | Verdict VACATED, new trial — known/obvious danger no longer a complete bar (landmark) |
| Richardson v. Sport Shinko | Queen Kapiolani, HI (1994) | Staple embedded in carpet pierced knee | Defense verdict affirmed |
| Helfrich v. Valdez Motel | Pipeline Inn, AK (2009) | Ice on back-exit path; broke leg | Affirmed for motel |
| Craig v. White Plaza Hotel | TX (1956) | Slippery tile at barber-shop entrance | Limitations/misnomer ruling |
| Blake v. Intco (Sierra Royale Hotel) | TX (2003) | Carpet overlapping step = “false foothold” | No-evidence summary judgment affirmed |
| Flanagan v. RBD San Antonio | TX (2017) | Premises / negligent security (Davidson + G4S) | Summary judgment for defendants |
Resort & Theme-Park Hotels (Disney, etc.) — 5 verified cases
| Case | Property | Hazard | Outcome / holding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Disney Polynesian character-breakfast | Disney’s Polynesian Resort, FL | Server spilled hot coffee on guest’s lap | $668,000 jury verdict (Disney refused pre-trial settlement) |
| Disney Riviera fountain water | Disney’s Riviera Resort, FL | Recurring water at hallway drinking fountain | Pending (>$50K; constructive notice) |
| Hanfling v. Walt Disney | Animal Kingdom Lodge pool, FL | Wet substance near pool edge | Pending (>$50K) |
| Disney Riviera character-breakfast slip | Disney’s Riviera Resort, FL | Accumulated water near fountain (recurring) | Pending (>$50K) |
| Wilson v. Walt Disney Parks | Walt Disney World, FL | Struck by cart operated by a Disney employee | $59,840 verdict (40% Disney / 60% plaintiff) |
The 8 controlling premises-liability authorities (the rules every hotel case runs on)
These are the controlling appellate decisions — not hotel cases — that set the Texas notice, causation, and operator-control rules we deploy in the Texas-law section above.
| Case | Court / year | Rule it sets | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Reece | Tex. 2002 | The “time-notice rule” — temporal evidence of how long the hazard existed is required; proximity alone is insufficient | Judgment for the store |
| Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Gonzalez | Tex. 1998 | The quantum-of-evidence rule for constructive notice — circumstantial evidence must make duration more likely than not | Judgment for the store |
| H-E-B, L.P. v. Peterson | Tex. 2026 | Reaffirms the strict time-notice rule — prior leaks elsewhere and generalized policies are not substitutes for temporal evidence | Take-nothing |
| Perez v. Hibachi Buffet | Cal. Ct. App. 2022 | Causation by reasonable inference — a commonplace explanation (an employee’s spill) is not impermissible speculation | $850,000 verdict reinstated |
| Oliva v. Sapporo Seafood, Inc. | Cal. Super. 2023 | Mopping near closing without warning cones supports a negligence finding | $806,000 verdict |
| Kidd v. WKS Restaurant Corp. | Kern Cty. 2018 | Cost-cutting on cleaning labor that creates a slippery floor while open = operator liability | $16,232,416.83 verdict (TBI + torn quadriceps) |
| Corbin v. Safeway Stores, Inc. | Tex. 1983 | The invitee-duty framework and the recurring-condition theory (the surviving Texas route to constructive notice) | Foundational invitee-duty holding |
| CMH Homes, Inc. v. Daenen | Tex. 2000 | Restates the four invitee elements and the constructive-notice outer limit | Judgment for defendant (insufficient notice) |
What really happened to you — the physics
You did not “just fall.” That is the story the hotel wants on the incident report, because a clumsy guest who “just fell” has no case. The truth is physical, and it is on your side.
Walking is a controlled near-fall. Your center of mass sits at your navel, about 55% of your height. The instant it leaves the small base of support under your feet, gravity wins in about 0.3 seconds — faster than you can react, which is why people can’t get a hand out in time. A slip throws you backward (hip, tailbone, back of the head); a trip pitches you forward onto your hands, knees, and face; a missed step-down loads your ankle or pitches you headfirst down a stairwell.
And the floor that hurt you was very likely more slippery than the recognized standard allows. A slip happens the instant the friction your stride demands exceeds the friction the floor provides — usually at heel strike. National floor-safety standards set a measurable wet traction line — a dynamic coefficient of friction of 0.42 or higher for surfaces walked on when wet (and a static benchmark near 0.5). Polished stone and glazed tile routinely fall below it the moment they get wet, and the slip-probability curve is brutally steep — it climbs from near-zero to near-certain across a narrow band. When a tribometer proves the floor you slipped on tested below that line, “I just fell” becomes “the floor was, by the numbers, a trap.” We hire the expert who measures it.
Then there is the stop. The force a fall delivers is set by how fast your body decelerates (force ≈ energy ÷ stopping distance). On carpet over a pad your body keeps moving a few inches and the force spreads out. On the marble, terrazzo, granite, or polished concrete a hotel chooses for its lobby and bathrooms, you stop in milliseconds and the force spikes — a floor impact produces roughly 38% higher peak head acceleration than a softer surface. The numbers are not subtle:
- Hip: a sideways fall delivers peak forces of roughly 5.6–7.1 kilonewtons — at or above the fracture strength of an older adult’s femur. That is why a “minor” fall breaks a hip. A sideways landing carries about 5–6 times the hip-fracture risk of a forward or backward fall.
- Head: real reconstructed falls average ~50 g, and a hard strike runs well past the concussion threshold (~100 g linear). The thin temple bone fractures at only ~3.5 kN. A biomechanist can show your head impact plausibly exceeded these thresholds — how we prove the “mild” brain injury the defense wants to call imaginary.
- Wrist: the distal radius bears about 80% of the load when you catch yourself — the signature “fall on an outstretched hand” fracture. There is no single universal fracture-force threshold; a bone breaks when the load exceeds its strength, which is why osteoporosis turns a survivable force into a fracture.
The hotel chose that surface. It chose not to mat it, not to mark it, not to keep it dry. That is not your clumsiness — it is a decision, and a measurable aggravator of how badly you were hurt.
If a hotel employee told you “these things happen” or “you should be more careful,” understand what that was: the first move in a defense, made before you even knew you had a case. Say nothing more, and call me.
Where Houston hotel injuries actually happen
Across our 499 verified cases, the danger is not random. It clusters in the same handful of places, hotel after hotel — which means the hotel knew, or should have known, exactly where the risk was.
| Zone | Share of cases | Why it’s dangerous |
|---|---|---|
| Lobby / interior floor / entrance | ~32% (the #1 zone) | Tracked-in rain, spills, mopping without warning, high-shine stone |
| Bathroom / tub / shower | ~18% | Slick tub, no grab bars, wet tile — where most serious and elderly falls occur |
| Stairs / steps / ramp / curb | ~12% | Worn nosings, uneven risers, bad handrails, poor lighting |
| Parking lot / exterior walkway | ~10% | Uneven pavement, wheel stops, ice, darkness, and crime |
| Pool / spa / hot-tub deck | ~4% | Wet high-gloss tile, algae and oil residue, no fencing or supervision |
The national data say the same thing. The guest bathroom is the densest injury zone in any building — roughly 234,000 bathroom injuries a year among people 15 and older, and 81% are falls, overwhelmingly at the wet, hard-edged tub and shower; getting out of the tub injures over four times as many people as getting in. Stairs add about 1.08 million injuries a year. Roughly 80% of ice-and-snow falls happen in parking lots and on walkways. The CPSC counts more than 2 million floor-related falls a year. And about 7% of our verified cases involve a death — these are not all “just slips.”
One hard truth runs through all of it: the bathroom and lobby generate the volume of claims, but stairwells, balconies, and water generate the claims that exceed the insurance limits — the brain injuries, the drownings, the deaths. Houston piles on its own multipliers: year-round Gulf humidity and tropical downpours that flood entrances and feed condensation onto polished floors, convention-district foot traffic, and Galleria, downtown, Medical Center, and airport hotels running 24 hours a day. Every one of those is a foreseeable hazard — and “foreseeable” is the word that wins cases.
Your injury, ranked by severity & settlement value
The insurer wants to value your case off today’s emergency-room bill. We value it off your life. The injuries that happen most often are not the ones that pay the most — and we make sure your case is valued for what it really is.
- Soft-tissue sprains, strains & contusions — most frequent
- Ankle sprains, wrist and knee sprains, back strains, tailbone bruises. The everyday workhorse of premises claims; full-recovery cases commonly resolve in roughly the $10,000–$50,000 range. The defense attacks causation and “pre-existing” — exactly where our medical proof and the eggshell rule matter.
- Fractures — high frequency, high consequence
- The wrist (distal radius / Colles’) is the signature fall-on-an-outstretched-hand fracture — about 16% of all skeletal fractures. The hip is the feared one for older guests, with one-year mortality around 9.8% (femoral neck) to 17.5% (intertrochanteric). Also ankle, vertebral compression, pelvis, shoulder. Imaging makes these objective; a surgical hip case can settle for $75,000 or far more with residual disability.
- Traumatic brain injury — lower frequency, catastrophic value
- Falls are the leading cause of TBI (~35% of all TBIs), and fall-related TBI deaths rose ~17% in a decade. The spectrum runs concussion → contusion → subdural/epidural/subarachnoid hemorrhage and diffuse axonal injury. Average TBI settlements commonly run $700,000–$1.2 million and climb far higher in severe cases; a documented hotel tub fall with no grab bar and a brain injury settled for $2.4 million.
- Spinal cord injury & catastrophic polytrauma — rarest, highest value
- Paraplegia or tetraplegia from a burst or cervical fracture. Lifetime medical costs alone run roughly $1.1 million to $4.7 million — before lost earnings, home modification, or attendant care — which is why clear-liability catastrophic cases reach the $1 million–$5 million range and beyond.
Other documented hotel benchmarks from the record: a wet marble-lobby slip at $185,000; a pool-deck fall fracturing a wrist at $145,000; an unmarked parking-lot wheel stop at $95,000; and a fatal fall from a corroded balcony railing at $9.5 million.
Physiology by body region — what the injury actually does to you
We document the medicine the defense glosses over, region by region, because the science is what turns “a fall” into a fully-valued injury.
- Head & brain
- The skull stops; the gel-like brain keeps moving, striking the inner skull at the impact (coup) and rebounding to the opposite wall (contrecoup — often worse). Rotation shears the axons (diffuse axonal injury). About 10–30% of concussions become persistent post-concussion syndrome; a second hit before recovery can be fatal in minutes; falls cause ~80% of TBI in adults 65+.
- Spine, neck & back
- The weak points are the mobile cervical segments and the thoracolumbar junction (T12–L1). Falls cause roughly 30% of all spinal-cord injuries and are the #1 cause in adults over 45. In older guests a hyperextension fall can cause central cord syndrome — arms worse than legs — with no fracture at all. Herniated discs and cauda equina syndrome are surgical emergencies.
- Hip & pelvis
- About 319,000 older adults are hospitalized for hip fractures every year, ~70% women. Only 40–60% regain their prior mobility; one-year mortality runs 17–30% — three to four times that of their peers. A broken hip is a sentinel event, not an orthopedic inconvenience.
- Wrist, shoulder & upper extremity
- The “catch-yourself” injury: distal radius and scaphoid fractures (notorious for normal initial X-rays), radial-head fractures, anterior shoulder dislocations, and rotator-cuff tears. Disabling for anyone who works with their hands.
- Knee, ankle & lower extremity
- ACL and MCL tears, meniscus tears, the “unhappy triad,” tibial-plateau and ankle-mortise fractures, and calcaneus fractures from a heel-first drop — about 10% of which hide a thoracolumbar spine fracture, which is why we always check the back.
- Face, dental & soft tissue
- Face-first impact in older, fainting, or intoxicated guests with no protective reflex. The nasal bone fractures at as little as ~100 N. A knocked-out tooth must be re-implanted within minutes. Permanent scarring and disfigurement are recognized, compensable harms.
The hidden complications the insurer won’t mention
A serious fall does not end when you leave the hospital. The defense values your case as if it does. We document the cascade they hope you never connect to the fall — each one a real, compensable harm:
- A brain bleed that shows up days or weeks later. Chronic and delayed subdural hematomas can appear days to two months after a “minor” fall with an initially normal CT — especially in older or blood-thinned patients (up to ~25% bleed after even mild trauma). This is how we defeat “the scan was clear.”
- Second-impact syndrome & post-concussion syndrome. The brain stays metabolically vulnerable for 7–10 days; a second hit in that window can be fatal in minutes.
- Fat embolism after a long-bone or pelvic fracture — a life-threatening complication of the very breaks hotel falls cause.
- Blood clots and pulmonary embolism from immobilization — bed rest after a fracture raises clot risk several-fold, and PE carries high mortality.
- Compartment syndrome — a surgical emergency where a delay of hours costs the limb.
- Complex Regional Pain Syndrome (CRPS) — chronic, often permanent disabling pain; a fracture is its most common trigger. (The Cosmopolitan jury awarded $15 million for exactly this.)
- Post-traumatic arthritis — after an ankle fracture, roughly a third develop arthritis within three years and up to 70% in severe injuries: a lifetime of future medical care.
- Pressure ulcers, pneumonia, and sepsis from immobilization — largely preventable, which makes them negligence.
- The psychological injury — post-traumatic stress, depression, and a fear-of-falling spiral (it affects 40–73% of prior fallers).
- The “long lie.” An older guest who can’t get up and lies on the floor over an hour can suffer kidney failure, pressure injuries, and sepsis — a whole second injury distinct from the fall.
Many of these mechanisms are preventable, and many are how people ultimately die after a fall — exactly what frames a wrongful-death and survival claim. The total U.S. medical cost of older-adult falls is roughly $50 billion a year.
Children, seniors & the eggshell rule
The same fall does not injure everyone the same — and the law does not let the hotel pay less because you were more vulnerable.
- Older guests. Osteoporosis turns a low-energy slip into a hip fracture, and a broken hip is often the beginning of a fatal decline. About 95% of senior hip fractures come from falling sideways, and a guest on blood thinners can suffer a deadly brain bleed from a “minor” bump — sometimes hours later.
- Children. A child’s heavy head means they lead with the skull. Pools and stairs are the two deadliest pediatric hotel hazards — drowning is the leading cause of death for kids ages 1–4, almost always in pools, and the absence of four-sided fencing, self-latching gates, alarms, or supervision is where hotel liability lives.
- Mobility-impaired guests. Roughly 69% of wheelchair users with spinal-cord injury fall at least once a year, clustered at exactly the transfers an inaccessible bathroom forces. Accessible rooms are marketed to and occupied by them — so the danger is acutely foreseeable.
- Intoxicated guests. A hotel will try to blame the guest who’d been at its own bar — but Texas does not erase the hotel’s duty because a guest drank, and over-service can add a dram-shop claim against the hotel itself. In one case a guest at over three times the legal limit was assigned only 15% of the fault and still recovered nearly $33 million.
The eggshell-skull rule is the answer to all of it: a defendant “takes the victim as it finds them,” and a pre-existing fragility that makes an injury worse does not reduce liability — it often increases the damages.
Who is actually liable — piercing the corporate shell
Here is the trick the hotel industry plays, and it is the single biggest reason injured guests walk away with nothing. The hotel you stayed at is rarely one company. It is usually four, on purpose:
- A franchisee operating LLC — often a single-asset shell with little money and a thin policy. This is who they want you to sue.
- A third-party management company (Aimbridge — the world’s largest — Highgate, Crescent, Pyramid, Davidson and the like) that actually controls staffing, maintenance, and safety, and is solvent. Nearly half of branded U.S. hotels are run by one of these.
- A property owner or REIT that holds the real estate (a REIT can’t legally operate the hotel, so it leases to a taxable subsidiary — another suable entity with its own insurance).
- The national brand — Marriott, Hilton, Hyatt, IHG, Wyndham, Choice, Best Western — with the deepest pockets of all, which will tell you it “only licenses the name.”
Sue the empty shell and stop, and your case dies the day that shell runs out of insurance. In Texas, liability follows whoever controlled the injury-causing condition — not whose name is on the building. So we name every layer and use the doctrines that make the structure crumble:
- Apparent agency. You booked a “Marriott.” The sign said Marriott, the app said Marriott, the key said Marriott. Texas law lets us hold the brand responsible for the property it held out as its own. Baptist Memorial Hospital System v. Sampson; Crinkley v. Holiday Inns.
- Right of control & the brand-standards manual. When the brand dictated and inspected the very safety standard that failed, it controlled the thing that hurt you. Exxon v. Tidwell.
- Premises duty by control. A management company that runs the place owes the same duty as an owner, even though it holds no title. General Electric Co. v. Moritz.
- Non-delegable duty. An owner cannot hand its duty to keep you safe to a management company or a vendor and walk away — both answer for it.
- Negligent undertaking. Every brand-safety promise the company made and broke becomes a duty we enforce against it. Torrington Co. v. Stutzman.
- Federal trafficking & assault liability (TVPRA, 18 U.S.C. § 1595). Where a hotel profited from a venture it knew or should have known was harming guests, the brand answers in federal court — the first such jury verdict against a hotel was $40 million.
The mechanics matter, and the clock is short. We hunt the entities through public records — the Secretary of State, the Comptroller, DBA filings, the deed and county appraisal district, the certificate of occupancy, and the franchise and management agreements — name the franchisee, the manager, the owner, and the brand, and serve each properly (registered agent, or the Secretary of State as substitute) before the two-year deadline runs. That is the difference between a settlement that matches your medical bills and one that matches your life.
The games hotels play — and how we beat them
I’ll show you the actual playbook, move by move, because once you see it you can’t be fooled by it. For every game there is a counter — and we run the counter the day you hire us.
Game 1: “We lost the video.”
Security cameras record over themselves on a 30-day loop. The hotel “preserves” the three seconds of you falling — never the 45 minutes of the hazard sitting there, or the employee who walked past it. Counter: a certified preservation letter to the hotel, the brand, and the manager on day one, demanding the native file, the full time window, and the camera map. If they let it overwrite after that, Texas law (Brookshire Bros. v. Aldridge) lets us ask the jury to assume the video would have buried them.
Game 2: “We had no notice.”
They claim they never knew. Counter: we attack the inspection system itself. No sweep logs means no inspections — which means the hazard sat there long enough that a reasonable hotel would have found it. (The Wynn lost on exactly this; the Venetian had 73 prior falls on the same floor; a Foxwoods spill sat 20 minutes on video.)
Game 3: “Wrong defendant — we just license the brand.”
The shell game. Counter: we subpoena the franchise agreement and the brand-standards manual, name every entity, and reach the brand on apparent agency and control before the clock runs on the people who actually have money.
Game 4: “It was your fault — the danger was open and obvious.”
Counter: code and slip-resistance violations exist precisely because people don’t notice hazards. We bring the standards, the measurements, and the hotel’s superior knowledge, and drive your share of fault down — in Texas you recover as long as you’re not more than half at fault.
Game 5: The fast lowball, the recorded statement, the blanket medical release.
The adjuster calls within days — friendly, with a quick check, a recorded statement that locks in admissions, and a release to dig through your entire medical history. Counter: you say nothing, sign nothing, and route every call through us.
Game 6: “That was an independent contractor.”
Housekeeping, maintenance, security, valet — suddenly all “vendors.” Counter: the duty to keep guests safe is non-delegable. We hold the hotel and the vendor, reaching two insurance towers instead of one.
Game 7: They quietly fix the hazard and write no report.
The loose tile or broken lock gets repaired with no paper trail. Counter: the repair still comes in to prove they controlled and could have fixed it — and the missing incident report becomes its own weapon.
Game 8: They bury the prior incidents and the crime history.
To defeat foreseeability, they hide the other falls and the on-property crime grid. Counter: we get prior-similar-incident reports in discovery and pull police call-for-service data ourselves. Understaffed security on a property with a known crime history is where punitive damages live.
Game 9: Forced arbitration buried in the loyalty-program fine print.
Counter: we attack formation and unconscionability — a “browsewrap” you never knowingly agreed to is often unenforceable, and a “booking dispute” clause usually doesn’t reach a bodily-injury claim. We preserve the actual sign-up screen as evidence.
Game 10: Bankruptcy & insurance games (self-insured retentions, captives, stays).
Counter: we identify the real risk-bearer early through the mandatory insurance disclosures and 30(b)(6) testimony, and pursue the operating entity’s assets and excess towers.
Game 11: Surveillance of you / social-media mining.
Counter: we counsel you early, preserve (never delete — that’s your spoliation), compel disclosure of their surveillance, and put “good days” back in context with your treating doctor.
Game 12: The defense doctor who calls everything “degenerative.”
Counter: we box the exam into its proper scope, get the doctor’s defense-volume and income history to show bias, and deploy the eggshell rule — a pre-existing condition the fall made worse is fully compensable.
Game 13: Delay-and-attrition to outlast an injured plaintiff.
Counter: aggressive scheduling, motions to compel with fee-shifting, and a documented record of their stonewalling for sanctions. We push toward trial; that’s what moves the number.
Where they’re most exposed, and where we hit first: (1) the lost video, (2) the missing inspection logs, (3) building-code violations as negligence per se, (4) understaffed security on a documented crime history, (5) brand-standards manuals proving control, (6) the non-delegable-duty vendor dodge, (7) the quiet repair with no report, and (8) any gross-negligence fact pattern that unlocks punitive damages — the $30 million the Hilton jury added for ignoring a complaint, the $149 million the Hyatt jury added for a guard’s assault and the cover-up.
The Warchest — the doctrines we deploy
A hotel case is won with weapons, not adjectives. Here is the arsenal — the same doctrines that produced the verdicts above — in three engines: reach the deep pocket, prove the breach, run the number up.
Engine A — reach the deep pocket (Association)
- Apparent agency / ostensible agency — reach the brand (Baptist Memorial v. Sampson; Crinkley v. Holiday Inns).
- Actual agency / right-of-control — where the brand controlled the specific safety instrumentality (Exxon v. Tidwell; Massage Heights v. Hagman).
- Non-delegable innkeeper duty & negligent undertaking — the owner and brand answer for safety they promised and controlled (Torrington v. Stutzman).
- Joint enterprise, joint venture & alter ego — collapse the layers (Texas DOT v. Able; Tex. Bus. Orgs. Code § 21.223; Castleberry v. Branscum).
- TVPRA § 1595 — federal beneficiary liability reaching brand, manager, owner, and parent (Doe #1 v. Red Roof Inns; M.A. v. Wyndham).
- Respondeat superior — the employer for an employee’s on-the-job negligence (Goodyear v. Mayes).
Engine B — prove the breach (Liability)
- Invitee duty + the time-notice rule (Corbin v. Safeway; Wal-Mart v. Reece; Wal-Mart v. Gonzalez) — the hotel had to inspect for and find the hazard.
- Recurring-condition theory (Corbin) — a repeating hazard is notice without timing one spill. (Texas rejects “mode of operation” — H.E.B. v. Resendez — so we route through recurring condition.)
- Negligence per se — a building-code or safety-statute violation is breach as a matter of law (Nixon v. Mr. Property Mgmt.; Perry v. S.N.).
- Spoliation → adverse inference (Brookshire Bros. v. Aldridge) — the destroyed-video weapon.
- Innkeeper duty vs. foreseeable crime (Timberwalk v. Cain) — for assault and negligent-security cases.
- Dram-shop, the VGB Pool & Spa Safety Act, CO/smoke-detector statutes, and res ipsa loquitur (Mobil Chemical v. Bell) — for over-service, drownings/entrapment, poisonings, and falling fixtures.
Engine C — run the number up (Damages)
- Gross negligence → exemplary (punitive) damages — when the hotel knew and chose to ignore it; in assault, sexual-assault, and trafficking cases the usual cap comes off entirely (the felony uncap).
- Joint & several liability — a defendant over 50% at fault pays the whole judgment.
- The Stowers demand — a clean policy-limits demand that, if unreasonably refused, exposes the insurer to the entire verdict, even above its limits (Stowers; Garcia).
- Wrongful death & survival, loss of consortium, future care, eggshell plaintiff, and bad-faith leverage (Ch. 71; Coates v. Whittington; Insurance Code Ch. 541/542) — the full ladder of damages.
Texas landmines we never step on: Single Business Enterprise is dead here (SSP Partners v. Gladstrong); standalone “negligent franchising” isn’t a recognized Texas tort; and mode-of-operation is rejected — so we plead the doctrines that actually work in Texas.
The Texas law that decides your case
You don’t need a law degree — but you should know the rules the whole fight turns on, because the insurer is counting on you not knowing them.
- You are an invitee — the highest duty there is.
- As a paying guest you’re owed not just protection from dangers the hotel knew about, but a duty to inspect for and discover the ones it should have found. “We didn’t see it” is no defense if a reasonable inspection would have. Corbin v. Safeway; CMH Homes v. Daenen.
- Notice — and the time-notice rule.
- The hotel is on the hook if the hazard existed long enough that it should have found and fixed it. We build that timeline with the video, the sweep logs, and the physical evidence. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Reece, 81 S.W.3d 812 (Tex. 2002); Wal-Mart v. Gonzalez; H-E-B v. Peterson.
- Comparative fault — the 51% rule.
- Under Chapter 33, you recover as long as you’re not more than 50% at fault, with your award reduced by your share; a defendant over 50% responsible can be made to pay the whole judgment (§ 33.013).
- The two-year deadline.
- You generally have two years from injury to file (§ 16.003). Wait, and no lawyer can save the claim. The evidence deadline is far shorter — the video is often gone in 30 days.
When the hotel’s conduct crosses from careless to conscious indifference, Texas allows exemplary (punitive) damages on top of everything else — and in assault, sexual-assault, and trafficking cases the usual cap can come off entirely. Unlike medical-malpractice cases, Texas does not cap most pain-and-suffering damages in an ordinary hotel-injury case.
These rules aren’t abstractions — they were set in a handful of controlling decisions: Wal-Mart v. Reece and Wal-Mart v. Gonzalez (the time-notice and quantum-of-evidence rules), H-E-B v. Peterson (reaffirming them in 2026), and the reasonable-inference and operator-control cases (Perez v. Hibachi Buffet, Oliva v. Sapporo, Kidd v. WKS) — the same eight non-hotel authorities listed at the end of the verified ledger above.
The safety standards a hotel must meet
“Reasonable care” is not a vibe — it is written down. We measure the hotel against the published standards it is supposed to meet, and a violation becomes the backbone of the breach.
| Standard | What it requires |
|---|---|
| ASTM F1637 — Safe Walking Surfaces | Slip-resistant surfaces; flags changes in level over ¼ inch; requires marking/guarding of edges and obstructions; covers ramps and short-flight stairs (it does not cover pools, tubs, or showers — those use the pool and anti-scald standards below) |
| NFSI / ANSI B101.1 & B101.3 | A floor is “high-traction” only at a wet static COF ≥ 0.60 or a wet dynamic COF ≥ 0.42 — the measurable line a slippery lobby or bathroom floor fails |
| OSHA 29 CFR 1910.22 — Walking-Working Surfaces | Surfaces kept clean, dry, and free of hazards; regularly inspected; hazards corrected or guarded before reuse — powerful evidence of the standard of care |
| ADA / ICC A117.1 | Stable, firm, slip-resistant surfaces; code-compliant grab bars; thresholds capped at ½ inch (beveled) |
| IBC stair & guardrail geometry; ASME A17.1 | Consistent riser/tread dimensions (variation capped at ⅜ inch), graspable handrails, 42-inch guardrails, baluster spacing under 4 inches; elevator/escalator safety |
| Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act + ASTM F2461 | Federal anti-entrapment drain-cover and barrier requirements for pools and spas (use these for pools — not F1637) |
| Anti-scald (ASSE 1016/1070) & CO/fire codes | Hot tap water capped at 120°F via thermostatic mixing valves; carbon-monoxide and smoke detectors per state statute and NFPA 101 |
We cite the right standard for the right hazard — because mis-citing one is how lesser firms lose the authority they’re trying to claim. Free, authoritative data backs every figure: the CPSC’s injury database (where stairs and floors rank #1), the CPSC pool-submersion report, and CDC fall and TBI data.
How we prove your case — experts & evidence
This is the part most firms skip and the part that scares insurers. We build your case like it’s going to trial, because that’s what moves the number.
- Day-one preservation of surveillance video, key-card and maintenance logs, and incident reports — before they vanish (footage routinely overwrites in 24–72 hours).
- A walkway / human-factors expert and a tribometrist who field-tests the floor’s actual coefficient of friction.
- A biomechanical engineer to tie the hazard to the injury mechanism, and a neuropsychologist for the brain injury the CT missed.
- A premises / hospitality-operations expert on what a reasonable hotel must do, a certified pool operator for drowning cases, and a security expert for assault and negligent-security cases.
- A certified life-care planner and a forensic economist to build and present-value the lifetime cost.
- Demonstratives — scene photos and video, 3D laser scanning, floor-traction reports, prior-incident discovery, and day-in-the-life video that makes a jury feel it.
What your hotel-injury case is worth
Anyone who promises a number before doing the work is lying to you. What I can tell you is what goes into the number — and how we make it as large as the truth allows.
- Past and future medical care — not today’s bills, but the surgeries, therapy, and lifetime care a life-care plan documents.
- Lost income and lost earning capacity — proven by vocational and economic experts; for a younger worker the lost-capacity component alone can run $500,000 to several million.
- Pain, suffering, mental anguish, disfigurement, and impairment — the human cost, anchored to evidence. Texas does not cap these in ordinary premises cases.
- For families who lost someone — wrongful-death damages for the family and a survival claim for what your loved one endured: two recoveries from one death.
- Exemplary (punitive) damages — when the hotel’s conduct was grossly negligent.
And we don’t ask politely. When liability and damages are clear, we make a policy-limits demand built so that if the insurer unreasonably refuses, it can owe the entire verdict — even above its limits. That is the pressure that moves carriers (the Stowers doctrine), and it’s why we prepare for trial from day one.
Every case is different. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome, and no result is promised.
Beyond slips — the other hotel cases we win
A hotel injury is not just a fall. Some of the most serious — and highest-value — hotel cases come from very different facts, and each turns on its own law and its own proof. We handle them all, and the verified verdicts below show what they’re worth. We lead with three: sex-trafficking (TVPRA), negligent security, and carbon monoxide — the highest-value, highest-leverage, and highest-certainty cases in the category.
| Case type | Typical value | The hook & a verified outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Sex-trafficking liability (TVPRA § 1595) ⭐ | $5M–$40M | “Knew or should have known” standard + mandatory fee-shifting + punitive exposure. First hotel jury verdict: $40 million (Northbrook); $37.5M & $24.5M arbitration awards; $17.5M (three Philadelphia hotels) |
| Negligent security / assault, robbery, rape, shooting ⭐ | ~$1M avg; eight-figure ceilings | Innkeeper duty vs. foreseeable crime (Timberwalk). To $12 million (Chesapeake Motel beating death) and ~$10M (Motel 6 rape); $3.68M (Fojutowski); $1.7M (Newark airport) |
| Carbon-monoxide poisoning ⭐ | $1M–$15M+ | Objective carboxyhemoglobin biomarker, near-zero fault against a sleeping guest, negligence per se via detector statutes. $15M (Rainbow Ranch), $12M (Best Western Boone, three deaths) |
| Legionnaires’ / waterborne illness | $500K–$5.2M | Hot tubs, fountains, cooling towers; strongest with a molecular strain match. $4.5M (Wingate Inn hot tub), $2.27M (JW Marriott fountain — liability admitted), $4M (FL hot-tub death) |
| Swimming-pool drowning & drain entrapment | $3.5M–$26M+ | No fence, no alarm, no supervision; federal VGBA drain violations. Recoveries to $26M and $25M (drain entrapment); $31M partial (defective drain) |
| Food poisoning (Salmonella, E. coli/HUS, Listeria, norovirus) | $5K–$50K (far more for severe) | Strict product liability + health-department outbreak findings. Wyndham Anatole Salmonella (650 ill); Mohonk norovirus $875K class fund; severe E. coli/HUS into the millions |
| Burns / scalding & structural-collapse falls | $500K–$5M+ | Anti-scald (120°F) and building-code violations as negligence per se. $10.9M (Ramada — toddler through a missing railing spindle), $2M (Econo Lodge scald death), ~$223M aggregate (MGM Grand fire) |
| Bedbug infestation & unsanitary conditions | $10K–$80K (punitive outliers higher) | The fastest to monetize; punitive conduct drives the big numbers. $186,000 punitive per plaintiff in the landmark Motel 6 case (Mathias v. Accor, Judge Posner); $2M total (Shores Inn) |
We are also building the next wave of hotel verticals: short-term rental (Airbnb/VRBO) premises liability, parking-garage assault, elevator & escalator injuries, balcony, railing & window falls, ADA website/reservation accessibility, gym/spa/sauna injuries, and valet & shuttle crashes. If what happened to you is on this list, do not assume it’s “small” — and the deadlines are just as short.
Texas & nationwide — the law changes the moment you cross a state line
We’re a Houston firm with offices in Austin and Beaumont, and our verified cases span 47 states — because hotel injuries happen on the road, and the law that governs them changes by state. That’s not a detail; it can decide whether you recover at all.
Houston — hotel injuries by district
We work every lodging district in the metro: Galleria/Uptown (luxury marble lobbies that turn “deceptively slippery” in rain), Downtown (convention-district pool, garage, and stairway falls), Texas Medical Center (extended-stay and elderly-guest bathroom/grab-bar exposure), Montrose and EaDo (boutique and nightlife properties), the Energy Corridor and Greenway Plaza (business hotels), NRG/Stadium (mega-event surge), and the IAH and Hobby airport-hotel clusters that run 24/7. The Gulf-Coast fact pattern — humidity and tropical rain tracked onto polished floors, HVAC condensation, hurricane water intrusion, outage-darkened corridors, mold within ~24 hours — turns the weather into a standard-of-care breach, and the constructive-notice clock starts at the storm.
How the rules change by state
| State | Fault rule | Deadline | Key doctrine |
|---|---|---|---|
| Texas | Modified, 51% bar | 2 years | Invitee duty; Reece time-notice; Ch. 33 |
| Florida | Modified, >50% bar (HB 837) | 2 years (cut from 4) | § 768.0755 transitory-substance burden |
| Louisiana | Pure → modified 51% (Jan 1, 2026) | 2 years (was 1) | Merchant Liability Act, high burden |
| Nevada | Modified, 51% bar | 2 years | Casino design as foreseeable hazard; over-service |
| California · Arizona · Washington · Missouri | Pure comparative | 2–5 years | Recover even if mostly at fault |
| Georgia | Modified, 50%+ bar | 2 years | “Superior knowledge” doctrine |
| Illinois · Ohio · Pennsylvania | Modified | 2 years | Natural-accumulation / “hills & ridges” snow doctrines |
| Colorado | Modified, 50% bar | 2 years | Premises Liability Act is the exclusive remedy |
| North Carolina · Virginia · Maryland · Alabama | Pure contributory — 1% bars you | 2–3 years | Aggressive strategy required; willful-wanton exception |
| Tennessee · Kentucky | Comparative | 1 year — act fast | Shortest deadlines in the country |
| Michigan | Modified, 51% bar | 3 years | 2023 ruling abolished the “open and obvious” no-duty defense |
| New Jersey · New York · Massachusetts | Modified | 2–3 years | “Ongoing storm” rule; sidewalk-clearing duties |
Three traps that decide cases: in the contributory-negligence states (NC, VA, MD, AL), being even 1% at fault can bar you entirely — we pre-empt the footwear/distraction defenses and plead the willful-wanton exception. In the one-year-deadline states (TN, KY, and historically LA), waiting a few months can end the claim. And Michigan’s 2023 reversal of “open and obvious” reopened cases that used to be dismissed. Whether your hotel was on the Galleria, the Las Vegas Strip, or in Orlando, we know the law that applies — and we associate trusted local counsel where the rules require it.
What to do right now — the 30-day video clock
If you can — or if you’re helping someone who was hurt — do these things, in this order, today:
- Get medical care and report every symptom, even the ones you’d shrug off. Some of the worst injuries are the quiet ones, and gaps in treatment are the insurer’s favorite argument.
- Report it and get a written incident report — and a copy. If they refuse, note who you told and when. Don’t guess about fault or say “I’m fine.”
- Photograph everything — the hazard, the area, the lighting, the missing signs, your injuries — from every angle, timestamped.
- Get witnesses — names and numbers of anyone who saw it or any staff who responded.
- Keep your shoes and clothing exactly as they were. They are evidence.
- Do not give a recorded statement, and do not sign anything — not a release, not a “routine” medical authorization.
- Call me. The single most important thing I can do in the first 48 hours is send the letter that freezes the surveillance video before it’s erased.
1-888-ATTY-911 — 24 hours a day. The call is free, and so is the consultation.
Why us — the lawyers the insurers trained
There are a lot of injury lawyers in Houston. Here’s what makes us the wrong firm to bet against.
- We learned their playbook from the inside. We come out of insurance defense — the world where claims get valued, minimized, and denied. We know the software, the scripts, and the stalls, because we used to run them.
- We come prepared to scare them. Real domain authority, not slogans: 499 verified cases, the doctrines, the standards, the experts — assembled before the first demand. Insurers settle differently when they see we’re built for trial.
- You are family, not a file number. Our clients say it more than anything else — kept informed, treated like people, and won cases other lawyers had dropped. We hold a firm-reported 4.9-star Google rating across 289 reviews and a 5.0 on Avvo.
- Bilingual, start to finish. Attorney Lupe Peña and our team handle your case in Spanish, directly — no interpreter between you and your lawyer.
- No fee unless we win, with live staff answering 24/7. When disaster strikes, you reach a Legal Emergency Lawyer™ — not an answering machine.
I’m Ralph Manginello, the firm’s managing partner. I’ve practiced since 1998, I’m admitted in Texas, New York, and the federal Southern District of Texas, I earned my J.D. at South Texas College of Law Houston, and our firm reports more than $50 million recovered for people the other side wrote off. When you hire us, you get me — and a firm that does not blink.
Attorney Lupe Peña is the heart of our edge: a former national insurance-defense attorney who spent years valuing and minimizing claims for the carriers — including defeating their “Colossus” claims software — and now uses that insider knowledge for you, in English or fully in Spanish. We practice from Houston (1177 West Loop South), Austin, and Beaumont, and we answer 24/7.
Reputation & proof
The trust signals behind the firm — verified, and exactly what an injured guest should look for.
- Ratings: a firm-reported 4.9★ across 289 Google reviews, a 5.0 on Avvo (with an 8.2 “Excellent” attorney rating), strong Birdeye and Yelp profiles. Clients single out case managers like Leonor, Crystal, and Melanie by name — and call Ralph “a BEAST” against the insurers.
- Recognition: State Bar of Texas good standing, Avvo 8.2 “Excellent,” and a Martindale-Hubbell “Preeminent” rating.
- In the press: our $10 million University of Houston / Pi Kappa Phi hazing case was covered by ABC13 Houston and Click2Houston/KPRC2 (Nov. 2025), both naming Ralph Manginello and Lupe Peña.
- On video & audio: our Attorney 911 YouTube channel answers the questions injured people actually ask (including what to do after a slip and fall), and our Attorney 911 podcast runs on Apple, Spotify, Amazon, Audacy, and more.
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Houston hotel-injury FAQ — every question, answered
The 118 questions injured guests and grieving families ask us most, grouped by topic. General information, not legal advice — for advice about your case, call me.
General hotel liability
When is a hotel actually legally responsible for my slip and fall injury in Texas?
In Texas, a hotel is not automatically responsible just because you were hurt on its property. As a paying guest you are an “invitee,” and the hotel is liable only if it knew about a dangerous condition (actual notice) or should have discovered it through reasonable inspection (constructive notice), failed to fix it or warn you, and that failure caused your injury. A wet lobby floor a manager was already told about is very different, legally, from a spill that happened seconds before you stepped in it. Because proving notice often depends on surveillance video and inspection logs the hotel controls, talk to a lawyer quickly before that evidence disappears.
What duty of care does a Texas hotel owe me as a paying guest?
A paying hotel guest is an invitee, the highest category of protection under Texas premises-liability law. The hotel owes you ordinary care to inspect the property for hidden dangers, to fix or make safe any unreasonably dangerous condition, and to adequately warn you of hazards it knows or should know about — covering rooms, hallways, lobbies, pools, and parking areas. It is not an absolute guarantor of your safety, but it must be actively, reasonably diligent, not just react after someone is hurt.
What is the difference between an accident and hotel negligence in Texas?
An “accident” with no negligence is when no reasonable inspection or precaution would have caught the hazard in time — for example, a drink another guest spilled moments before you walked through it. Negligence exists when the hotel breached its duty of reasonable care, such as ignoring a known leak, skipping required inspections, or failing to warn of a known hazard, and that breach caused your harm. Only injuries tied to negligence are compensable, which is why “how long was the danger there and who knew about it” is the heart of most hotel cases.
What is the difference between actual notice and constructive notice in a hotel slip and fall case?
Actual notice means the hotel or an employee actually knew about the hazard — for instance, a guest reported a wet floor and nothing was done. Constructive notice means the dangerous condition existed long enough that a reasonably careful hotel should have discovered and remedied it. Under the Texas Supreme Court’s “time-notice” rule (Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Reece), showing an employee was merely nearby is not enough; you generally need evidence about how long the hazard was present.
What makes a strong hotel injury case versus a weak one in Texas?
The strongest cases have clear evidence of notice and a clean causation story: surveillance video showing how long a spill sat, prior guest complaints, maintenance or inspection logs, an incident report, witness statements, and prompt medical treatment linking your injury to the fall. Weak cases usually lack proof of how long the hazard existed, involve an obvious danger you could easily have avoided, or have gaps in care that let the insurer argue you weren’t really hurt. Fast investigation that preserves the hotel’s footage and records — often within days — can strengthen a weak-looking case.
The hotel said the fall was my own fault. Does that mean I have no case in Texas?
No. A hotel telling you “it was your fault” is a defense strategy, not a legal ruling. Texas uses modified comparative fault under Chapter 33, so you can still recover as long as you are found 50 percent or less at fault, with your award reduced by your share; you are only completely barred at 51 percent or more. Because the hotel and its insurer have every incentive to inflate your blame, it is wise to avoid recorded statements and have a lawyer evaluate the fault picture before you concede anything.
If I was partly responsible for falling at a Texas hotel, can I still recover money?
Yes — partial fault does not automatically defeat your claim. Under the 51-percent bar rule, you can recover if your share of responsibility is 50 percent or less, with recovery reduced in proportion to your fault. For example, on $100,000 in damages with 20 percent fault, you recover $80,000. At 51 percent or more you recover nothing, which is why how fault gets apportioned is one of the most heavily contested issues in these cases.
How long do I have to file a hotel injury lawsuit in Texas?
In most Texas personal-injury cases, including hotel slip-and-falls, you generally have two years from the date of injury to file, under Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. Miss it and the court will usually dismiss your case no matter how strong. Separately, key evidence like surveillance video can be erased in days, so the practical deadline to start protecting your claim is far shorter than the two-year legal limit.
Can a national hotel brand like Marriott or Hilton be held liable, or only the local franchise owner?
It depends on the relationship and the facts. Many branded hotels are owned by independent franchisees, and the franchisor may argue it isn’t responsible for day-to-day operations. But under Texas agency principles a national brand can sometimes be liable through “apparent agency” — when its uniform branding, booking systems, and standards led you to reasonably believe you were dealing with the brand — or where the franchisor exercised significant control over the operations that caused your harm. Identifying every responsible party early can affect available insurance coverage.
What should I do right after getting injured at a Texas hotel to protect a possible claim?
Report the injury to management and ask that a written incident report be created, then request a copy. Photograph the hazard, the surrounding area, and any lack of warning signs, and get witness contact information. Seek prompt medical care so your injuries are documented and linked to the fall. Avoid giving the hotel or its insurer a recorded statement and avoid signing anything until you have spoken with an attorney, because surveillance footage and maintenance records can be overwritten quickly and may need to be formally preserved right away.
Does the hotel have to warn me about a dangerous condition, or just fix it?
Under Texas premises-liability law, a hotel generally satisfies its duty by either making the condition reasonably safe or giving an adequate warning, such as a clearly visible “wet floor” sign. The key word is adequate: a warning must be timely, conspicuous, and sufficient to let a reasonable guest avoid the danger, so a tiny or hidden sign may not count. If the hotel neither corrected a known hazard nor adequately warned you, that failure can support a negligence claim.
Is a hotel automatically liable just because I got hurt on its property in Texas?
No, Texas does not impose automatic or “strict” liability on hotels for guest injuries. You must prove the hotel breached its duty of reasonable care — typically by showing actual or constructive notice of a dangerous condition and a failure to fix it or adequately warn — and that this breach caused your injury. Open and obvious dangers, or hazards that appeared too suddenly for any reasonable inspection to catch, may not support a claim, so an early case evaluation tells you quickly whether the facts add up.
Texas premises law
How long do I have to file a lawsuit after getting hurt at a hotel in Texas?
You generally have two years from the date of injury to file a premises-liability lawsuit, under Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code Section 16.003. Miss that deadline and the hotel can ask the court to dismiss your case permanently. A few situations can shorten or extend the clock (a minor’s claim, or a government-owned property with its own short notice deadline), so talk to a Texas attorney quickly rather than assume you have the full two years.
What duty does a hotel owe me as a paying guest in Texas?
As a paying, registered guest you are an “invitee” — the highest level of protection. The hotel must use reasonable care to keep the premises reasonably safe, including inspecting for dangerous conditions you wouldn’t know about and either fixing them or warning you, across rooms, hallways, lobbies, pools, and parking areas. Because invitee status is so favorable, hotels often argue you were somewhere you weren’t invited or that the danger was open and obvious.
Do I have to prove the hotel knew about the hazard that hurt me?
Yes. An invitee must prove the hotel had either actual knowledge of the dangerous condition or constructive knowledge — meaning it existed long enough that the hotel reasonably should have found and fixed it. You can establish notice by showing the hotel created the hazard, actually knew of it, or that it had been there long enough to be discovered. This notice element is the single biggest battleground, so preserving evidence early is critical.
What is the difference between actual notice and constructive notice in a Texas slip-and-fall case?
Actual notice means the hotel genuinely knew — a maintenance log showing a reported leak, or staff who saw the spill. Constructive notice means it didn’t actually know, but the condition lasted long enough that a reasonably careful hotel should have discovered it. Most disputed cases turn on constructive notice, so we pursue surveillance video, cleaning and inspection schedules, and witness statements to show how long the danger existed.
What is the Texas time-notice rule and why does it matter for my hotel fall?
The “time-notice rule,” from Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Reece, holds that you must show some evidence of how long a dangerous condition existed before your fall. Proving an employee was nearby is not enough, because proximity shows only that the hotel could have discovered the hazard, not that it reasonably should have. That’s why timestamped video or proof of when an area was last inspected can make or break a case — and why we move fast to secure it before it’s overwritten.
How can I prove how long a spill or hazard was on the floor before I fell?
Because Texas requires evidence of duration, we use hotel surveillance footage, staff cleaning and inspection logs, work orders, prior guest complaints, and witness testimony about the hazard’s appearance — dried edges, footprints tracked through it, or cart-track marks all suggest it sat there. Much of this, especially video, is routinely deleted within days, so sending a prompt evidence-preservation (spoliation) letter is a major reason to contact an attorney quickly.
Can I still recover if the hotel says the wet floor was open and obvious?
Maybe. Hotels often argue a hazard was “open and obvious” or that you should have appreciated the danger, which can reduce or defeat a claim. But there are recognized exceptions — including when the hotel should have anticipated a guest would encounter the hazard anyway, or where the guest had no reasonable alternative route. Whether the defense applies is fact-specific and frequently disputed, so don’t assume an admitted-danger comment ends your case before a lawyer reviews it.
What is the 51% rule in Texas and can the hotel blame me for my own fall?
Texas uses modified comparative fault (“proportionate responsibility”) under Chapter 33. You can still recover if you are 50 percent or less at fault, but you are completely barred at 51 percent or more. If you’re partially at fault at or under 50 percent, your damages are simply reduced by your percentage. Hotels routinely try to push your fault percentage over the line — claiming you were distracted or wearing improper footwear — so how fault is framed can decide whether you recover anything.
If I was partly at fault for my hotel injury, how much will it reduce my settlement?
Your recovery is reduced in direct proportion to your share of fault, as long as you are not over 50 percent responsible. On $100,000 in total damages with 20 percent fault, you would recover $80,000. At 51 percent or more you recover nothing under the bar, so the fault allocation is one of the most contested parts of any Texas premises case.
Does Texas cap the pain and suffering money I can get for a hotel injury?
For an ordinary hotel premises-liability claim, Texas generally does not cap non-economic damages like pain and suffering or mental anguish. The well-known caps in Section 74.301 apply to medical-malpractice cases, not slip-and-falls. Narrow exceptions involve claims against governmental entities under the Tort Claims Act and the separate limits on exemplary (punitive) damages.
Can I sue the national hotel brand, or only the local owner that runs the hotel?
Many hotels operate as franchises, where a national brand licenses its name to a separate local owner who runs the property. Generally the franchisor is liable only if it controlled the day-to-day operations that caused your injury, or under “apparent agency” if the brand led you to reasonably believe it operated the hotel. Identifying every responsible party — the local owner, a management company, and possibly the franchisor — matters because each may carry separate insurance.
What is “mode of operation” and does it help my Texas hotel claim?
“Mode of operation” argues that a business’s chosen method of operating (self-service areas) predictably creates recurring hazards, so the owner should be charged with notice without proof of the specific spill’s timing. Texas courts have been skeptical of a broad mode-of-operation exception and still generally require actual or constructive notice, so it’s not a guaranteed shortcut. That said, evidence of a recurring or known dangerous condition — like a pool deck that is repeatedly wet — can strengthen your notice argument.
Who is liable / who to sue
If I got hurt at a Marriott or Hilton, can I sue Marriott or Hilton directly?
Usually not directly, because most are franchises — the national brand licenses its name to a local franchisee that owns and runs the building. Under the Texas Supreme Court’s 2025 decision in Massage Heights Franchising, LLC v. Hagman, a franchisor is liable only when it had “specific control” over the exact conduct that caused your injury, a high bar. The brand can still be a defendant under an apparent-agency theory or if the property is corporate-owned. Because identifying the right entities is technical and time-sensitive, have a lawyer pull the ownership records quickly.
Who is actually responsible when I slip and fall at a hotel — the brand or the owner?
Premises-liability claims are brought against the party that owned or controlled the premises at the time of injury — typically the franchisee LLC or the management company operating the hotel day-to-day, not the national brand. As an invitee, the controlling party owed you a duty to keep the property reasonably safe and to warn of dangers it knew of or should have found. Pinning down which entity controlled the lobby, pool deck, or stairwell where you fell is the central question.
What is the difference between the hotel franchisor, the franchisee, and the management company?
The franchisor is the national brand (Marriott, Hilton, Wyndham, IHG) that licenses its flag and standards. The franchisee is usually a single-purpose LLC that holds the franchise and maintains the property. The management company is a separate operator the owner may hire to run day-to-day operations, and the property owner — often a REIT or private fund — owns the land and building. Any of these can be a defendant depending on who controlled the hazard, which is why hotel cases frequently name several entities.
How do I find out who really owns the hotel where I was injured?
The brand on the sign rarely tells you who to sue. We dig into public records: the county appraisal district and deed records show the owner; the Texas Secretary of State and Comptroller filings reveal the franchisee LLC and its registered agent; and a liquor-license record names the entity in control of the premises. Cross-referencing these usually uncovers the franchisee, the manager, and the owner — work an attorney handles early so every responsible defendant is named before limitations expires.
Can I still hold the national hotel chain liable for a franchised location?
Sometimes, through apparent agency. Texas lets you hold a franchisor liable if you actually and reasonably believed the brand controlled the operation, you justifiably relied on that belief, and you were harmed — for example, when nothing signaled you were dealing with an independent franchisee. After Hagman, courts also examine whether the brand had specific control over the injury-causing conduct, so brand standards alone usually aren’t enough. Preserve your reservation, signage photos, and brand communications.
Can I sue the property owner if a different company manages the hotel?
Yes — both the owner and any entity that controlled the premises can owe a duty to invitees, so the property owner (often a REIT) and the management company can both be named. Liability turns on who had the right and ability to control the dangerous condition: an owner who hired a manager may still be liable, and the manager is liable for hazards it was responsible for maintaining. A lawyer sorts out which entity controlled the area where you were hurt.
A hotel employee hurt me — is the hotel responsible for what its worker did?
Often yes, under respondeat superior, which makes an employer vicariously liable for an employee’s wrongful acts within the scope of employment — a shuttle driver, maintenance worker, or front-desk staffer acting on the job. The employer is typically the franchisee or management company, not the national brand. If the harm was an assault or other intentional act, the analysis shifts toward negligent hiring, supervision, or security. Identifying the true employer determines whose insurance covers your claim.
I was assaulted or robbed at a Texas hotel — who can I sue for inadequate security?
You may have a negligent-security claim against the hotel’s owner or operator if a third-party criminal attack was foreseeable and the hotel failed to provide reasonable protective measures like working locks, lighting, or security personnel. Texas courts look at whether similar crimes occurred on or near the property, because a history of crime makes future attacks foreseeable. The proper defendant is usually the franchisee or management company that controlled security decisions, and prior-crime evidence fades fast.
Why does it matter which hotel company I name as the defendant?
Enormously — suing the wrong entity can waste your case. The two-year statute of limitations keeps running, and if you don’t name the correct owner or operator before it expires, your claim can be barred even though you filed something on time. Hotels are often layered behind LLCs and management companies specifically so the deep-pocketed owner or brand is hard to reach, so naming every responsible party protects you from a defendant pointing at an empty chair.
Can more than one company be sued for the same hotel injury?
Yes, and it’s common — a single case may name the franchisee LLC, the management company, and the property owner together, and sometimes the franchisor, because Texas allows recovery from multiple defendants who share responsibility. Under proportionate responsibility, a jury assigns each defendant a percentage of fault, so naming all responsible parties maximizes your potential recovery. Just watch the 51-percent bar on your own fault.
The franchisee LLC that owns the hotel looks like it has no money — can I reach the brand or owner instead?
Possibly, and this is one of the most important reasons to investigate ownership early. A thinly-capitalized franchisee LLC may carry limited insurance, but the property owner (frequently a well-funded REIT) and, in some cases, the national brand can be brought in through apparent agency, direct negligence, or by showing the entities did not truly operate separately. Reaching a deeper-pocketed defendant requires proof of control, which is fact-driven after Hagman — we trace the corporate structure and insurance to find a source of recovery.
Hazard-specific questions
I slipped on a wet lobby floor at a Texas hotel — how do I prove the hotel is responsible?
As an invitee you were owed a duty to keep the premises reasonably safe and to warn of hidden dangers. To win, Texas law (Reece) generally requires showing the hotel had actual or constructive knowledge of the wet floor — that an employee created or knew of the spill, or that it sat there long enough that staff reasonably should have found it. The most powerful proof is how long the water was on the floor (timestamps, video, tracked-through liquid), which is why securing the CCTV footage fast matters.
The hotel says there was a “wet floor” sign, so does that mean I can’t sue?
Not necessarily. A sign helps the hotel argue the hazard was open and obvious and that you share fault, but it doesn’t automatically defeat your claim. The questions become whether the sign was actually visible and placed near the hazard, whether the danger was greater than the sign disclosed, and whether the hotel should have cleaned the spill rather than just flagging it. Under comparative fault you can still recover if you’re 50 percent or less at fault, so the sign affects how fault is divided, not whether you have a case.
I fell in a hotel bathtub that had no grab bars — can I hold the hotel liable in Texas?
Possibly. The absence of grab bars, a slip-resistant tub surface, or a bath mat can be evidence the room was not reasonably safe, especially in an accessible/ADA room or where the hotel advertised accessibility. Strong proof includes photos of the smooth tub and missing fixtures, the hotel’s maintenance and renovation records, prior guest complaints, and whether the hotel skipped a low-cost safety upgrade the lodging industry treats as standard. Document the bathroom exactly as it was before you check out.
What should a hotel have done to prevent a bathroom or shower fall?
Reasonable hotels install slip-resistant tub and shower surfaces or strips, provide bath mats, mount secure grab bars (required in ADA rooms), keep floors free of leaks and standing water, and promptly fix dripping fixtures. When a hotel knew a tub was worn smooth, had earlier fall complaints, or removed a grab bar without replacing it, that can establish constructive notice. Proving the hotel ignored an inexpensive, industry-standard fix is often the heart of a bathroom-fall case.
I fell on a hotel staircase with a loose or missing handrail — is that a strong claim?
It can be. Defective stairs are a classic premises hazard, and a loose, missing, wobbly, or non-code handrail is concrete evidence the hotel failed to maintain a safe path. Helpful proof includes photos and measurements of the rail and step heights, building-code or inspection violations, repair logs, and prior complaints about the same stairwell. Because guests often must use the only available stairs, Texas courts may limit the hotel’s “open and obvious” defense.
How do I prove a hotel stairway or step was dangerous and not just my own clumsiness?
Texas juries look at objective conditions, so the goal is to document the defect, not your balance. Useful evidence includes uneven or non-uniform risers, worn or torn nosing/carpet, poor stairwell lighting, a wrong-height or wobbly handrail, and any building-code violation an expert can identify. The hotel’s maintenance records and prior incident reports for that staircase help show it knew or should have known — and photographing the stairs the same day, before any quiet repair, preserves the proof that matters most.
I slipped on ice or uneven pavement in a Texas hotel parking lot — can the hotel be at fault?
Yes — the hotel’s duty extends to the parking lot, sidewalks, and entrances it controls. For ice, the key questions are whether the hotel created or worsened an unnatural accumulation (a leaking gutter, sprinkler runoff, untreated entry path) and whether it had time to sand, salt, or warn. For cracked or uneven pavement, potholes, or wheel-stop trip hazards, photos with a size reference, the lot’s repair history, and the duration of the defect are central.
Does Texas’s natural-accumulation rule for ice mean I can never sue a hotel for an icy parking lot?
No, but it raises the bar. Texas courts are skeptical of claims based purely on a naturally occurring accumulation the owner didn’t cause. Your claim is much stronger when the ice was “unnatural” — created by the hotel’s own drainage, overflowing sprinklers, a leaking pipe, or refrozen runoff — or when the hotel undertook to treat the lot and did so negligently. Because these cases turn on the source and timing of the ice, getting photos and weather records quickly matters.
My child was injured or nearly drowned at a hotel pool — what safety rules did the hotel have to follow?
Texas public-pool rules and the federal Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act impose specific duties: anti-entrapment drain covers (and a second system on single-drain pools), accurate depth markers, “No Diving” and “No Lifeguard on Duty” signage, a self-closing/self-latching gate or barrier fence, accessible rescue equipment and an emergency phone, and properly maintained water clarity. A violation — a missing barrier, broken gate latch, cloudy water hiding the bottom, or a non-compliant drain — is powerful evidence the hotel breached its duty.
I slipped on a wet hotel pool deck — isn’t a wet deck just obvious and my own fault?
A wet deck near a pool is expected, so a slip there isn’t automatically the hotel’s fault — but it can be when the hotel adds an unreasonable danger: slick non-slip-rated tile that fails when wet, algae or slime buildup, a pooling equipment leak, broken or uneven coping, or missing required signage. Comparative fault means some responsibility may be assigned to you, yet you can still recover at 50 percent or less, and proof the deck surface or maintenance was substandard shifts fault toward the hotel.
What evidence should I gather right after a hotel pool or pool-deck injury?
Photograph the exact hazard before anything is fixed: a missing or unlatched gate, absent depth markers or signs, cloudy water, exposed or broken drain covers, algae, and the slick deck surface. Get staff and witness names, ask the hotel to complete an incident report and request a copy, and note whether a lifeguard was present or “no lifeguard” was posted. Seek medical care immediately and avoid signing any hotel release. With a two-year deadline, contacting an attorney quickly protects both the evidence and your filing window.
How long do I have to sue a Texas hotel for a slip, trip, or pool injury, and why act fast?
The deadline is generally two years from injury (Section 16.003), and missing it usually bars your case entirely. Just as important, the evidence that wins hazard cases — surveillance video, the wet floor, the missing grab bar, the broken gate latch — disappears or gets “repaired” within days or weeks. A prompt preservation letter can freeze that proof. Acting early protects both your deadline and the facts that prove what the hotel should have done.
Evidence & process
What should I do in the first 24 to 72 hours after slipping and falling at a hotel?
Report the fall to the front desk or manager immediately and ask that an incident report be created, then get a copy or the report number and the manager’s name. Before you leave, photograph the exact hazard and the surrounding area from several angles, and get witnesses’ names and numbers. Seek prompt medical care even if you feel only sore, because a treatment gap is one of the first things an insurer uses against you. These hours matter because hotel video is often overwritten within days.
How long does a hotel keep its security camera footage before it gets deleted?
Most hotels run loop-recording systems that automatically overwrite the oldest footage once the drive fills up — the industry-standard retention window is typically only about 30 days, with some keeping 60–90 days and a few far less. That means the video of your fall can be gone before you’ve finished your first round of doctor visits. Because the system erases footage on its own, a written demand to preserve it should go out as fast as possible — often the same day you call.
Can a hotel be held liable if it “accidentally” deleted the surveillance video of my fall?
Possibly. Under Brookshire Brothers, Ltd. v. Aldridge (2014), a hotel has a duty to preserve evidence once it knows or reasonably should know a claim is substantially likely and the evidence is relevant. If it destroyed video after that duty arose, a court can sanction it for spoliation. The harshest remedy — a jury instruction that the missing video would have hurt the hotel — generally requires intent to conceal or negligent destruction that completely prevents you from proving your case, so preserving the footage with a prompt letter is far better than fighting over a deletion later.
What is a litigation hold or evidence-preservation letter, and do I need one?
A litigation-hold (preservation) letter is a formal written notice to the hotel and its manager/insurer demanding they preserve specific evidence — most importantly the surveillance video, plus incident reports, inspection and cleaning logs, maintenance records, and 911 calls. It also helps trigger the hotel’s legal duty to preserve, so that if they “lose” the video anyway, you have a stronger spoliation argument. Given the 30-day overwrite window, getting one out within days of the fall is critical.
Why does the hotel surveillance video matter so much?
As an invitee, you generally must prove the hotel had actual or constructive knowledge of the hazard, and constructive knowledge often comes down to how long it existed. Time-stamped video showing a spill sitting for 20 or 30 minutes with employees walking past is some of the most powerful proof of that element. Video also rebuts the common defense that you caused your own fall or that the hazard was “open and obvious.” Because that footage is the best evidence and the most perishable, locking it down early can make or break the case.
Do I have to fill out the hotel’s incident report, and what should I be careful about?
It’s important that an incident report be created so there’s an official record that the fall happened and when — make sure it gets done and note the manager’s name and report number. But be careful: don’t guess about fault, downplay your injuries, or say things like “I’m fine” or “it was my fault,” because the insurer can later use those statements against you. Stick to the basic facts. You’re generally not required to give a recorded statement to the adjuster, and you should talk to an attorney before doing so.
What evidence should I gather myself before leaving the hotel?
If you’re able, photograph and video the hazard itself (the liquid, the broken tile, the unlit stairwell, the missing handrail or sign) before staff cleans it up, with wide shots showing the location. Capture your visible injuries, your footwear, and the lighting, and note the date and time. Collect witnesses’ names, numbers, and room numbers, and keep the shoes and clothing you were wearing unwashed. Save everything — your room key, receipts, and any messages with the hotel — because once you check out, your access to that scene is gone.
I already left the hotel and went back to my home state. Can I still pursue a Texas hotel injury claim?
Yes. Where you live doesn’t control your right to bring a claim; what matters is that the injury happened at a hotel in Texas, so Texas premises law and courts generally apply. You can pursue the claim, send a preservation letter, and even file suit without relocating, with much of the process handled remotely. The urgent issue isn’t your travel home — it’s that the surveillance video is overwriting on the hotel’s standard 30-day cycle, so the sooner a Texas lawyer demands preservation, the better.
How long do I have to file a hotel injury lawsuit in Texas (evidence vs. deadline)?
Section 16.003 generally gives you two years from the date of injury to file. Miss it and a court will almost certainly dismiss your case. A few narrow exceptions can change the timing, but never assume one applies. Note that this two-year filing deadline is completely separate from — and far longer than — the days-long window before the hotel’s video is erased: even though you have two years to sue, you have only days to save the evidence.
How long does a hotel slip-and-fall case take to resolve in Texas?
It varies widely. A straightforward claim with clear liability and preserved video can sometimes settle in a few months once you’ve finished treatment and your damages are known, while a disputed case in litigation can take one to two years or more. A major reason for the range is the fight over evidence and the invitee “notice” element. Settling too early, before you know the full extent of your injuries, is a common and costly mistake, so we usually wait until you reach maximum medical improvement before valuing the claim.
What inspection and maintenance records can prove the hotel knew about the hazard?
Beyond surveillance video, the hotel’s internal records can establish the actual or constructive knowledge Texas requires: cleaning and inspection logs, “sweep” or floor-check sheets, maintenance and work-order histories, prior incident reports for the same area, and guest complaints about the same hazard. If logs show a leak was reported days earlier or that required inspections were skipped, that’s strong evidence the hotel should have known. These are obtained through formal discovery and preservation demands — another reason to involve a lawyer before the records “cycle out.”
Should I give a recorded statement to the hotel’s insurance company after my fall?
Generally, no — not before speaking with your own attorney. The hotel’s adjuster works for the insurer, and a recorded statement is often used to lock you into early descriptions, get you to minimize injuries, or coax admissions that you were partly at fault. That matters under Texas’s 51-percent rule: if you’re found more than 50 percent responsible, you recover nothing. You can be polite and report the basic facts, but it’s reasonable to say you’ll follow up after consulting a lawyer.
Damages & value
How much is my hotel slip-and-fall case worth in Texas?
There is no flat number — value depends on the injury, your past and future medical bills, lost income and earning capacity, and the hotel’s conduct. Full-recovery soft-tissue cases commonly resolve in the tens of thousands; surgical fractures higher; and catastrophic brain, spinal, drowning, or death cases reach the millions. Where the hotel consciously ignored a known danger, punitive damages can add to it. We build a full damages model before talking numbers, and no result is guaranteed.
What is the difference between economic and non-economic damages in a Texas premises case?
Economic damages are the measurable losses — medical bills, future medical care, lost wages, and lost earning capacity. Non-economic damages compensate the human cost — pain, suffering, mental anguish, disfigurement, and loss of enjoyment of life. In an ordinary hotel case Texas does not cap the non-economic side, which is often the larger number for a serious permanent injury.
Does Texas cap pain and suffering damages in a hotel injury lawsuit?
Generally no. The well-known Texas caps apply to medical-malpractice cases, not ordinary premises-liability claims. The narrow exceptions are claims against governmental entities and the separate statutory limits on exemplary (punitive) damages — your everyday pain-and-suffering recovery in a hotel case is not capped.
How do insurance adjusters calculate the value of a slip-and-fall claim?
Adjusters start from your documented medical specials and often apply a “multiplier” (commonly 1.5 to 5 times) based on severity, then look hard for ways to discount — gaps in treatment, pre-existing conditions, and your share of fault. They also lean on the paid-versus-billed distinction to shrink the medical number. We counter with a fully documented life-care plan, expert testimony, and proof of the hotel’s conduct, which is what moves the number well past the adjuster’s first formula.
Can I recover future medical expenses for a hotel injury in Texas?
Yes. You can recover the reasonable cost of future treatment that is reasonably probable — surgeries, therapy, injections, and lifetime care. For serious injuries this is usually the largest part of the claim, and we prove it with treating physicians and a certified life-care planner, present-valued by an economist.
Can I claim lost earning capacity if my hotel fall keeps me from working?
Yes — Texas compensates not just the wages you actually lost but the diminished capacity to earn going forward, even if you return to some work. Vocational and economic experts quantify the difference over your working life. For a younger worker, this component alone can run from several hundred thousand dollars into the millions.
What is a life-care plan and when does it matter in a hotel injury case?
A life-care plan is a detailed, itemized projection — prepared by a certified planner — of every future medical and support need a serious injury creates: surgeries, therapy, equipment, medications, and attendant care, costed out and reduced to present value. It matters most in catastrophic cases (TBI, spinal cord, drowning/anoxic injury), where it both proves the true future cost and makes a policy-limits demand impossible for the carrier to reasonably refuse.
Will my settlement be reduced if I was partly at fault for falling?
Yes, in proportion to your share — as long as you are not more than 50 percent at fault. At 50 percent or less, your recovery is reduced by your percentage; at 51 percent or more, you recover nothing. Because a few points can swing the result, controlling the comparative-fault narrative with concealed-hazard and superior-knowledge proof is one of the most important things we do.
Can I get punitive damages against a hotel in Texas?
Sometimes. Exemplary (punitive) damages require clear and convincing proof of gross negligence — that the hotel was actually aware of an extreme risk and proceeded with conscious indifference, like renting a room with a known unrepaired hazard. In assault, sexual-assault, and trafficking cases the usual statutory cap can come off entirely. Verified hotel cases have produced $30 million and $149 million punitive awards for exactly this kind of conduct.
How long do I have to file before my claim loses value?
The legal deadline is generally two years, but value erodes long before that. Surveillance video overwrites in about 30 days, witnesses scatter, and the hotel quietly repairs the hazard — each lost piece of proof lowers what your case is worth. The sooner we preserve the evidence, the stronger and more valuable the claim.
Why are some hotel settlement offers so much lower than the case is really worth?
Because the first offer is built to close the file cheaply before you know your full injuries and before your lawyer preserves the proof. Adjusters bank on a quick check, a recorded statement, and a signed release. Once we document the future-care cost, the standard-of-care breach, and the hotel’s notice, the realistic value is usually a large multiple of that first number — which is why you should never sign before a lawyer values the case.
Does a hotel’s surveillance video or incident report affect how much I can recover?
Significantly. Time-stamped video that shows the hazard sitting there — or proof the hotel destroyed it — can establish notice and even trigger a spoliation finding, both of which raise value. A candid incident report (or a missing one) shapes the liability picture too. Locking down these records early often turns a disputed case into a clear-liability case worth far more.
Adjacent high-value cases
Can I sue a hotel in Texas if I was assaulted, robbed, or shot on the property?
Yes — this is a negligent-security claim. If a third-party criminal attack was foreseeable (often shown by prior crimes on or near the property) and the hotel failed to provide reasonable security like working locks, lighting, cameras, or guards, it can be liable. These are among the highest-value hotel cases — roughly a million-dollar average verdict, with eight-figure ceilings on death and rape cases. Police-call and prior-incident evidence fades fast, so call quickly.
How does a hotel negligent security case differ in value from a slip-and-fall?
Negligent-security cases usually carry much higher value because the injuries — assault, rape, shooting, death — are catastrophic, and gross-negligence facts (cut security on a property with known crime) can unlock punitive damages. The trade-off is that they turn on foreseeability, so case selection matters: documented prior crime makes them strong, while a truly random attack with no history is far harder.
Can I sue a hotel for bedbug bites in Texas, and is it worth it?
Yes — bedbug claims sound in premises liability, breach of the implied warranty of habitability, and sometimes intentional infliction of emotional distress. Typical values run in the tens of thousands, but where the hotel knew of the infestation and concealed it, punitive damages can drive far higher recoveries — a landmark Motel 6 case produced $186,000 in punitives per plaintiff. They are also among the fastest cases to resolve.
Can I sue a hotel if I caught Legionnaires’ disease from the pool, hot tub, or shower?
Yes. Hotels owe a duty to maintain their water systems — hot tubs, fountains, cooling towers, and plumbing — against Legionella, judged against standards like ASHRAE 188. The make-or-break issue is causation: matching the clinical strain to an environmental sample at the property. With a positive strain match these cases are strong and high-value, with verified recoveries from several hundred thousand dollars up to multi-million-dollar awards.
What can I do if I got carbon monoxide poisoning in a Texas hotel room?
Carbon-monoxide cases are among the strongest hotel claims: there is an objective biomarker (carboxyhemoglobin in your blood), a traceable equipment source (a faulty pool/spa heater, HVAC, boiler, or generator), and near-zero comparative fault against a sleeping guest. A missing or non-compliant CO detector can be negligence per se, and the operator, installer, and manufacturer can all be defendants. Verified outcomes range from roughly a million dollars to fifteen million and beyond.
Is a hotel liable if my child or family member drowned in the pool?
Often yes. These cases are built on objective safety failures — no fence or self-latching gate, no alarm, cloudy water hiding the bottom, an unmarked depth change, or a non-compliant drain that violates the federal Virginia Graeme Baker Act. Wrongful-death and survival damages apply, and verified hotel and resort outcomes run from the low millions to over twenty-five million. Recovery can be capped by the property’s policy limits, so we look hard for a deep-pocket defendant such as a drain manufacturer.
Can I sue a hotel restaurant or buffet for food poisoning in Texas?
Yes — and food cases can proceed on strict product liability, so you don’t have to prove negligence, only that contaminated food caused your illness. Causation comes from a lab-confirmed pathogen match and a health-department outbreak investigation. Most claims are modest, but severe cases — E. coli/HUS, Listeria, or death — reach six, seven, and eight figures, and outbreaks at weddings or banquets generate fast multi-victim recoveries.
Can a hotel be sued if I was a victim of sex trafficking on the property?
Yes. The federal Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act (18 U.S.C. § 1595) lets a survivor sue a hotel that knowingly benefited from a venture it knew or should have known was trafficking on its premises — a plaintiff-friendly “should have known” standard with mandatory attorney’s fees, punitive exposure, and a ten-year deadline. The first such jury verdict against a hotel was $40 million, and brands as well as operators can be named.
Can I hold the national hotel brand liable for these cases, or only the local owner?
Often the brand too. Trafficking claims reach the brand, manager, owner, and parent directly under the TVPRA, and for the other adjacent cases we use apparent agency, retained control, and the corporate-shell doctrines to reach the deepest pocket. As always, we name every entity and use discovery to pin each one before the deadline runs.
Which of these adjacent hotel claims are usually worth the most money?
The highest-value, highest-leverage trio is sex-trafficking (TVPRA), negligent security, and carbon-monoxide poisoning — together they pair catastrophic harm with plaintiff-friendly standards and (for trafficking and assault) the felony uncap on punitive damages. Pool drownings and Legionnaires’ can also be very high value when the proof is there. Food poisoning and bedbugs resolve faster but are usually lower value unless the conduct was egregious.
How long do I have to file these hotel injury claims in Texas?
Most are two years from injury (or from death for wrongful-death claims), but the windows vary: TVPRA trafficking claims have a ten-year deadline, and Legionnaires’ and food cases can run from discovery once the source is traced. Because some of these require time-sensitive investigation — a water strain match, an outbreak linkage, a crime-grid pull — fast intake matters even more than the calendar.
Out-of-state & nationwide
I was hurt at a hotel in another state but I live in Houston — can a Texas law firm still take my case?
Yes. Where you live doesn’t decide your case; where the injury happened generally does. We investigate, send the preservation letter, value the claim, and pursue it — associating trusted local counsel in the hotel’s state where the rules require. The urgent step is the same everywhere: freeze the surveillance video before it overwrites.
Where do I file my lawsuit if I got injured at a hotel out of state — in Texas or where the hotel is?
Usually in the state where the injury occurred, because that’s where the property, witnesses, and evidence are and where the court has jurisdiction over the hotel. There are exceptions (for example, a chain headquartered in Texas), so the right venue is a case-specific question we sort out early so nothing is filed in the wrong place before the deadline.
Whose law applies if I’m a Texan but I was hurt at a hotel in another state?
Generally the law of the state where the injury happened — its premises-liability rules, its comparative-fault system, and its filing deadline. That’s why crossing a state line can change everything from how much of your own fault bars recovery to how long you have to sue, and why we map the controlling state’s rules at intake.
Does the Texas 2-year deadline apply, or the other state’s deadline, if I was injured out of state?
Usually the deadline of the state where you were hurt controls, and it can be shorter than Texas’s two years — Louisiana, Tennessee, and Kentucky are as short as one year. Some are longer. Because guessing wrong is fatal to a claim, we confirm the exact deadline immediately rather than assume you have two years.
Can I sue a national hotel chain in Texas if it’s headquartered here, even though I was hurt out of state?
Sometimes — a chain’s Texas headquarters or contacts can support jurisdiction, and apparent-agency or control theories may reach the brand. But the property’s home state often remains the practical forum. It’s a fact-specific jurisdiction analysis, and we evaluate both options to put the case where it’s strongest.
The hotel was a Marriott or Hilton — can I hold the national brand responsible for what happened at the property?
Possibly. If the brand’s signage, app, and reservation system led you to reasonably believe you were dealing with the brand, apparent agency can reach it; so can proof the brand controlled the specific safety standard that failed, or a TVPRA claim in a trafficking case. We name the franchisee, the manager, the owner, and the brand, then use discovery to determine who controlled what.
I was injured on a work trip or vacation in another state — what should I do before I leave to come home?
Before you check out, do the evidence basics: report it and get a written incident report, photograph the hazard and the scene from every angle, get witness names and numbers, keep your shoes and clothing, get medical care, and sign nothing. Then call a lawyer the same day so a preservation letter goes out before the video is erased — once you leave, your access to that scene is gone.
Will the other state’s comparative-fault rule hurt my recovery if I was partly to blame?
It can, and the rules vary dramatically. A handful of states (North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland, Alabama) follow pure contributory negligence, where being even 1 percent at fault bars you entirely; others, like California and Arizona, let you recover even if mostly at fault. We pre-empt the blame-the-guest defense aggressively, and in the harshest states we plead the recognized exceptions.
The hotel’s website or contract says disputes must be arbitrated or filed in a certain state — am I stuck with that?
Not necessarily. We attack whether you ever knowingly agreed to those terms (a “browsewrap” buried in fine print is often unenforceable) and whether a clause aimed at “booking disputes” even reaches a bodily-injury claim. These provisions are frequently beatable on contract-formation and scope grounds, so don’t assume they end your case.
Is it better to hire a lawyer where the hotel is located or one back home in Houston?
You can do both — that’s the point of associating local counsel. A Houston firm that knows the chain, the defense playbook, and the injury science manages the case and partners with a vetted local attorney admitted where the hotel sits, so you get national hotel-liability experience plus on-the-ground reach without juggling two firms yourself.
How does an out-of-state hotel injury case actually get handled across two states?
We open the investigation and preservation immediately, value the claim, and either handle it directly or co-counsel with a trusted attorney licensed in the hotel’s state. You deal with one team; we coordinate the filing, discovery, experts, and strategy. Much of it is handled remotely, so you don’t have to travel for the day-to-day work.
I was hurt at a hotel in Mexico or the Caribbean on vacation — can a Houston firm help with an international claim?
Sometimes. International claims are more complex — forum and jurisdiction often favor the country where the injury occurred — but a U.S. parent company, a U.S. booking platform, or a brand’s domestic operations can sometimes provide a path to a U.S. court. We’ve seen claims pursued against U.S. parents for injuries at foreign-branded resorts, so it’s worth a free evaluation rather than assuming nothing can be done.
Injury-specific (head, hip, back, wrist)
I hit my head when I slipped and the ER said my CT scan was clear — can I still have a brain injury?
Yes. A normal CT does not rule out a concussion or diffuse axonal injury, which often don’t show on routine imaging, and a chronic or delayed subdural bleed can appear days to two months later — especially in older or blood-thinned patients. We document the injury the scan missed with the right imaging, neuropsychological testing, and a symptom timeline, and a biomechanist can show the impact plausibly exceeded the concussion threshold.
What are the warning signs of a serious brain bleed after a fall, and when should I go back to the ER?
Return to the ER immediately for a worsening or severe headache, repeated vomiting, increasing confusion or drowsiness, slurred speech, weakness or numbness, unequal pupils, seizures, or any loss of consciousness. These can signal a developing bleed, which in older or anticoagulated patients can appear hours or days after a “minor” bump. When in doubt, get re-checked — and document it.
My concussion symptoms didn’t start until a day or two after I fell — does that hurt my injury claim in Texas?
No. Delayed onset is medically common — brain injuries, soft-tissue injuries, and internal bleeds frequently surface 24 to 72 hours later — and Texas law does not require instant symptoms. The insurer will try to use the gap against you, which is exactly why prompt documentation and a clear medical timeline linking the symptoms to the fall matter.
My elderly parent broke a hip after a hotel fall — how serious is that, and is it worth a claim?
Very serious. A hip fracture in an older adult is a sentinel event: only 40 to 60 percent regain their prior mobility, and one-year mortality runs 17 to 30 percent — three to four times that of their peers. The future-care and loss-of-independence costs are large, so these are significant claims, and the eggshell rule means the hotel cannot pay less because your parent was older.
The hotel says my mom fell because she’s old and frail, not because of anything they did — does her age defeat the claim?
No. The eggshell-skull rule means a defendant takes the victim as it finds them — a pre-existing fragility that makes the injury worse does not reduce the hotel’s liability and often increases the damages. A hotel knows its guests include older travelers, so a slick tub with no grab bar is a foreseeable danger, not your mother’s fault.
I fell at a hotel and now have severe back pain — could it be a herniated disc, and what should I do?
It could. Falls commonly cause herniated or bulging discs (most often at L4-L5 or L5-S1), and severe or radiating pain, numbness, or leg weakness warrants prompt evaluation and imaging. Seek care right away — both for your health and to document the injury — and avoid signing anything for the hotel’s insurer until a lawyer reviews your case. Loss of bladder or bowel control is an emergency.
I already had back problems before my hotel fall — can I still recover if the fall made my old disc injury worse?
Yes. Texas law fully compensates the aggravation of a pre-existing condition — the hotel takes you as it finds you (the eggshell rule). The key is a clean before-and-after medical picture: a baseline of your prior condition and a treating physician drawing the line for what the fall added on top of it. The defense will call it “degenerative,” and we rebut that with the records and the eggshell instruction.
I broke my wrist catching myself when I fell at a hotel — is that common, and how does it heal?
Very common — the distal-radius (“Colles'”) fracture is the signature fall-on-an-outstretched-hand injury and one of the most frequent fractures of all. Treatment ranges from casting to surgery with plates and screws, and recovery can leave lasting stiffness, weakness, or — in some cases — complex regional pain syndrome. For anyone who works with their hands, the impact on earning capacity can be substantial.
My wrist didn’t look broken right after I fell but it’s been swollen and painful for days — should I get it checked?
Yes — get it imaged. Some wrist fractures, especially of the scaphoid bone, are notorious for not showing on the first X-ray and for being missed, yet they can lead to chronic problems or avascular necrosis if untreated. Persistent swelling and pain after a fall is a reason to be re-evaluated, and prompt documentation also protects a possible claim.
How long do I have to file a lawsuit in Texas for a head, hip, back, or wrist injury from a hotel fall?
Generally two years from the date of injury, regardless of which body part was hurt. Wrongful-death and minors’ claims can differ. And remember the evidence clock is far shorter than the legal one — the surveillance video is usually gone within 30 days — so it’s best to act quickly.
Will the hotel argue my injury was partly my own fault, and can that stop me from getting compensation in Texas?
The hotel will almost certainly try, but under Texas’s modified comparative fault you still recover as long as you are 50 percent or less at fault, with your award reduced by your share. We fight the blame-the-guest narrative with concealed-hazard, code-violation, and superior-knowledge proof to keep your percentage low.
What should I do in the first hours and days after a serious fall injury at a hotel to protect both my health and a possible claim?
Get medical care immediately and report every symptom; have an incident report created and get a copy; photograph the hazard, the scene, and your injuries; collect witness contact information; keep your shoes and clothing; do not give a recorded statement or sign anything; and call a lawyer the same day so the surveillance video and records can be preserved before they’re lost.
Fees & working with us
Does it cost anything to talk to a lawyer about my hotel injury?
No. The consultation is free and confidential, available 24/7 at 1-888-ATTY-911. We’ll tell you honestly whether you have a case and what it may be worth, with no obligation.
What does “no fee unless we win” actually mean for a Texas hotel injury case?
It means we take your case on contingency: we advance the case costs and are paid an attorney’s fee only out of a recovery. If there is no recovery, you owe no attorney’s fee. You never pay us out of pocket to fight your case.
How much does a hotel injury lawyer charge in Texas?
On a contingency fee — a percentage of the recovery, agreed in writing up front — rather than hourly. There’s nothing to pay unless and until we win, and the fee and case-cost terms are spelled out clearly before you sign.
Do I have to pay anything up front to hire you for a hotel slip and fall?
No. There are no up-front fees and no out-of-pocket costs to start. We front the expenses of investigating and building your case and are repaid only from a recovery.
The hotel already offered me money — should I take it?
Be very careful. A fast offer before you know the full extent of your injuries — and before the video is preserved — is usually far below what the case is worth, and signing a release ends your claim forever. Let a lawyer value the case, including future care, before you accept anything.
Should I give the hotel’s insurance company a recorded statement?
Generally not before talking to your own lawyer. The adjuster works for the hotel’s insurer and uses recorded statements to lock you into early descriptions, minimize your injuries, or get you to admit partial fault — which matters under Texas’s 51-percent rule. You can report basic facts but say you’ll follow up after consulting counsel.
Can I talk to a lawyer before I deal with the hotel’s insurance adjuster?
Yes, and you should. Talking to us first is free, and it lets us handle the adjuster for you, preserve the evidence, and keep you from saying something that gets used against you. Once we’re involved, the insurer goes through us, not you.
How fast should I call a lawyer after getting hurt at a hotel?
As fast as possible — ideally within days. The surveillance video typically overwrites in about 30 days, records “cycle out,” and hazards get repaired, so the first 24 to 72 hours are critical for preserving proof. Calling early also starts the clock on the preservation letter and protects your two-year filing deadline.
What happens during a free hotel injury consultation?
You tell us what happened, and we listen and ask the questions that matter — where you fell, what the hazard was, whether there was a report or witnesses, and your injuries and treatment. We give you a straight assessment of liability and value, explain the next steps, and, if you hire us, start preserving evidence immediately. There’s no pressure and no cost.
What if I’m not sure the hotel was at fault — is it still worth calling?
Yes. Fault often isn’t obvious until someone pulls the video, the inspection logs, and the prior-incident history — proof you can’t get on your own, and that disappears fast. A free call costs nothing and lets us tell you quickly whether the facts add up to a viable claim.
Is everything I tell the lawyer in a free consultation confidential?
Yes. What you share with us in seeking legal advice is protected and confidential, whether or not you ultimately hire us. You can speak freely.
Why shouldn’t I just handle the hotel injury claim myself to avoid fees?
Because the hotel’s insurer does this for a living and you don’t. Without a lawyer, you likely can’t preserve the surveillance video, compel the inspection logs and prior-incident reports, value future care, or counter the comparative-fault and “pre-existing” defenses — and unrepresented claimants routinely settle for a fraction of true value. On contingency, hiring us costs nothing up front and is paid only from a recovery, so the question is usually whether you net more with us, not whether you “save” the fee.
Talk to me now — free, 24/7
If you were hurt at a hotel, or you lost someone you love, do not wait and do not talk to their insurer first. Tell me what happened, and let me tell you — straight — what your case is really worth and how we win it. It costs you nothing to find out, and nothing unless we win.
Call 1-888-ATTY-911 (1-888-288-9911) — 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Or email me directly: ralph@atty911.com.
The Manginello Law Firm, PLLC — Attorney 9111177 West Loop South, Suite 1600, Houston, TX 77027
Houston: (713) 528-9070 · Toll-free: 1-888-ATTY-911
Also serving Austin and Beaumont / the Golden Triangle.
Hours: live staff 24/7. Languages: English & Español.