Outstanding service! Hector and Sonia guided me through the entire process and worked to secure the best possible settlement. I highly recommend them if you’re dealing with a car injury claim.


A wet floor with no warning sign, a spill in the produce aisle that had sat too long, and a cracked tile near the checkout counter. Grocery store falls happen more often than most people think, and when they do, the injuries are frequently more serious than a bruised knee. Broken bones, head injuries, torn ligaments, and back injuries can all result from a single fall on a hard store floor.
If you suffered an injury in a grocery store fall in Eagle Pass, the store may owe you compensation for your medical bills, lost income, and pain. Our premises liability lawyers at Gonzalez & Associates P.C. can help you hold the responsible party accountable. Call us at (830) 757-8323 or contact us online for a free consultation.

Under Texas premises liability law, property owners and businesses owe a duty of care to people who enter their property. Grocery store shoppers are classified as “invitees,” which is the category that receives the highest level of legal protection. Because the store benefits financially from having you there, it owes you more than just a clean floor. It owes you a safe environment.
That duty includes regularly inspecting the premises for hazards, correcting dangerous conditions within a reasonable time, and warning customers about known risks that haven’t been addressed. The key legal question in most grocery store fall cases is whether the store had “notice” of the hazard. Notice can be actual, meaning an employee saw the spill, or constructive, meaning the hazard existed long enough that a reasonable inspection would have caught it.
Most grocery store falls involve conditions that could have been prevented with basic maintenance and attention. Common causes include:
Eagle Pass weather, including sudden rain and humidity, can also create slippery conditions at store entrances that businesses are responsible for managing.
After a grocery store fall, what you do in the next few hours can directly affect whether you’re able to recover compensation. If you are able, report the incident to a store manager and ask them to create an incident report. Request a copy before you leave. Use your phone to photograph the hazard, the surrounding area, your injuries, and any conditions, such as missing warning signs or spilled product. If another shopper or employee saw what happened, ask for their name and phone number.
Even if you feel fine at the scene, seek medical attention that day. Injuries like concussions and soft tissue damage often take hours or longer to show symptoms, and a medical record from the day of the fall connects your injuries to the incident. If the store’s insurance company contacts you, do not agree to a recorded statement or sign anything without speaking to an attorney first.
If the store’s negligence caused your fall, you can recover damages, including:
Texas allows you two years from the date of injury to file a premises liability lawsuit. If the injured person was a minor at the time of the fall, the two-year clock is generally tolled until their 18th birthday.
If a fall resulted in a life-altering injury, your case may also involve a catastrophic injury claim. And if a fall caused the death of a loved one, surviving family members can pursue a wrongful death case.
At Gonzalez & Associates P.C., we live and work in the same community you do. Our team knows Eagle Pass, and we understand how stores and their insurers try to minimize what happened or shift blame to the person who fell. We don’t let that happen. We investigate the scene, gather surveillance footage, review maintenance logs, and build a case that reflects what the store should have done and didn’t.
Our bilingual staff works with you in English or Spanish, and we handle cases on a results-based fee. From the first phone call through resolution, we handle everything so you can focus on getting better. You don’t pay unless we recover for you.
Stores are not required by default to preserve footage, and security cameras in most grocery stores record on a loop that overwrites within days. Once you notify the store of a potential claim or once an attorney sends a formal preservation demand, the store has a legal obligation to retain that evidence.
Texas follows a modified comparative fault rule, which means you can still recover compensation even if you were partially responsible for your fall. For example, a store might argue you ignored a posted warning sign, were looking at your phone, or were wearing inappropriate footwear. As long as your share of fault is not more than 50 percent, you can still recover, though your total compensation would be reduced by your percentage of fault.
Most grocery store fall cases in Texas settle before trial. Once we document the hazard, gather the incident report and footage, and establish the extent of your injuries and losses, many insurers are willing to negotiate a fair resolution.
A grocery store fall can leave you with medical bills, missed work, and pain that lasts far longer than you expected. If a store’s negligence caused your injury, our team at Gonzalez & Associates P.C. is ready to help. Call (830) 757-8323 or contact us online to schedule a free consultation. Se habla español.