Jackie Walter v. Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson Construction Company
Summary
The Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed a summary judgment against Jackie Walter in her slip-and-fall case against Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson Construction Company. The court found the hazard was open and obvious as a matter of law.
What changed
The Supreme Court of Alabama affirmed the Madison Circuit Court's summary judgment in favor of Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson Construction Company in the case of Jackie Walter v. Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson Construction Company (Docket No. SC-2025-0160). The court determined that the uneven concrete that allegedly caused Walter's fall outside a shopping center during a renovation project was open and obvious as a matter of law, thus upholding the dismissal of her claims.
This ruling means that businesses and construction companies in Alabama are not liable for injuries resulting from hazards that are readily apparent to individuals. While this specific case involves a slip-and-fall incident, the principle of 'open and obvious' hazards can apply to various premises liability situations. Regulated entities should ensure their premises are safe, but also be aware that obvious hazards may reduce liability in certain circumstances.
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Feb. 27, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note
Jackie Walter v. Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson Construction Company
Supreme Court of Alabama
- Citations: None known
- Docket Number: SC-2025-0160
Judges: Parker, J.
Combined Opinion
by [Tom Parker](https://www.courtlistener.com/person/3652/tom-parker/)
Rel: February 27, 2026
Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern
Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts,
300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other
errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is printed in Southern Reporter.
SUPREME COURT OF ALABAMA
OCTOBER TERM, 2025-2026
SC-2025-0160
Jackie Walter
v.
Branch Hays Farm SC Associates, LP, and Hudson
Construction Company
Appeal from Madison Circuit Court
(CV-22-900526)
PARKER, Justice.
SC-2025-0160
In May 2021, Jackie Walter tripped and fell outside a Huntsville
shopping center while she was walking through a construction zone that
had been established in front of a store entrance during a renovation
project. Walter sued various entities allegedly responsible for her fall, but
before trial the Madison Circuit Court entered summary judgment
against her on each of her claims. Because the uneven concrete that
allegedly caused Walter's fall was open and obvious as a matter of law,
we affirm the circuit court's judgment.
I.
We are reviewing a summary judgment entered against Walter and
in favor of various defendants. In doing so, we briefly recount the most
relevant undisputed facts, viewed in the light most favorable to Walter.
See Part II, infra.
A.
One clear, sunny morning in late May 2021, Walter was on the way
to her church to help plan an upcoming yard sale when she stopped by a
Staples office-supply store. The Staples store was located in what was
once known as the Haysland Square Shopping Center in Huntsville.
Walter needed to run inside to fax some papers for a neighbor.
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SC-2025-0160
At the time, the shopping center was undergoing renovations. A
grocery store was being built for a new anchor tenant; several smaller
retail stores were being added; and the Staples store was getting a new
facade, complete with new front sidewalks. As a result, when Walter got
out of her car, she had to walk through a construction zone to reach the
store's front entrance.
The construction zone featured safety precautions designed to warn
and guide prospective Staples customers. As Walter notes in her
appellate brief, the construction zone was surrounded by "barricades,
barricade tape, traffic cones, and signage." Walter's brief, p. 9.
Photographs in the record similarly show the presence of multiple, large,
orange-and-white-striped warning barricades, all connected with yellow-
and-black caution tape, restricting access to the surrounding sidewalks
and channeling customers directly to the front door of the Staples store:
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Although it is difficult to discern from the photographs, the sidewalk-
closure signs each contained a warning, in all capital letters: "SAFETY
FIRST."
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Despite those precautions, Walter tripped and fell as she walked
through the construction zone. Walter attributes her fall to the concrete
having been cut several days earlier as part of the sidewalk-replacement
project. This cutting had led to the settlement of some of the concrete.
And the settlement, in turn, had left a gap, or an elevation change,
between some of the sections of concrete. The gap was very slight,
probably between 0.1 and 0.6 of an inch. Recognizing the potential safety
risk, the general contractor sprayed orange or yellow fluorescent paint
over the affected area:
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The contractor sprayed the fluorescent paint shortly after the cutting and
well before Walter's arrival at the Staples store on the day in question.
There is no evidence in the record of anyone else having issues with
uneven concrete at that location in between those times.
B.
About a year after her fall, Walter sued various entities she believed
were responsible for her misfortune -- the shopping-center owner, the
general contractor on the renovation project, a subcontractor hired to cut
the concrete, and Staples, Inc.1 Walter's operative complaint asserted
claims of "negligence," "recklessness and wantonness," "premises
liability," and "respondeat superior," all premised on the defendants'
alleged improper handling of the construction zone. She specifically
faulted the defendants for, among other things, "[inviting] customers to
enter [the Staples store] through the active construction zone," "[failing]
1Walters later agreed to dismiss the concrete-cutting subcontractor
as a defendant. In addition, after the case was on appeal, Walters settled
with Office Superstore East, whom she had substituted for Staples, Inc.,
Of the original defendants, then, only the shopping-center owner (Branch
Hays Farm SC Associates, LP) and the general contractor (Hudson
Construction Company) remain in the case today.
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SC-2025-0160
to provide an alternative entrance," and "[failing] to provide warning, or
[providing] insufficient warning of the [relevant] hazards."
After some discovery, the shopping-center owner and general
contractor moved for summary judgment. See note 1, supra. They argued
that Walter could present only speculation as to the cause of her fall.
They also argued that the alleged defect in the premises was "open and
obvious."
The circuit court entered summary judgment as requested. In doing
so, however, the circuit court did not specify the basis or the reasoning
for its judgment. After filing what was ultimately an unsuccessful
postjudgment motion, Walter timely noticed her appeal.
II.
We review a summary judgment de novo, applying the same
standard used by the trial court. See Hooper v. Columbus Reg'l
Healthcare Sys., Inc., 956 So. 2d 1135, 1139 (Ala. 2006). Under that
standard, a trial court must render summary judgment "forthwith" if the
evidentiary materials on file "show that there is no genuine issue as to
any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as
a matter of law." Ala. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(3).
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SC-2025-0160
Applying that standard entails shifting burdens. First, a summary-
judgment movant must present evidence indicating the absence of any
genuine issue of material fact. Then, the burden shifts to the nonmovant
to show that a genuine issue of material fact does indeed exist. See
Nationwide Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co. v. DPF Architects, P.C., 792 So. 2d 369,
372 (Ala. 2000). At either step, meeting one's burden requires the
production of substantial evidence -- i.e., " ' " 'evidence of such weight and
quality that fair-minded persons in the exercise of impartial judgment
can reasonably infer the existence of the fact sought to be proved.' " ' "
Hooper, 956 So. 2d at 1135 (quoting Potter v. First Real Estate Co., 844
So. 2d 540, 545 (Ala. 2002)). In all events, a court must view the evidence
in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. See id.
III.
Because the circuit court did not explain its reasoning, Walter bears
the burden on appeal of overcoming each potential basis the circuit court
could have relied on for entering summary judgment against her. See,
e.g., Fogarty v. Southworth, 953 So. 2d 1225, 1232 (Ala. 2006). She thus
argues, contrary to the defendants' arguments below, that there was a
genuine issue of material fact with respect to the cause of her fall. She
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SC-2025-0160
also argues that any defect in the concrete outside the Staples store was
not an "open and obvious" condition. Finally, she argues that there was
sufficient evidence of wantonness to send that claim to a jury. As
explained below, we conclude that any defects in the concrete were open
and obvious as a matter of law. Because that single conclusion defeats
each of her claims, we need not reach Walter's other arguments.
A.
The duty a landowner owes to someone who enters its property
varies based on who, exactly, that someone is. See, e.g., Galaxy Cable,
Inc. v. Davis, 58 So. 3d 93, 98 (Ala. 2010). For example, the duty a
landowner owes to a trespasser is not the same as the duty a landowner
owes to a "licensee" (for example, a social guest). See id. And there is yet
another, distinct duty a landowner owes to an "invitee" -- that is, a person
who enters a premises for some purpose that materially or commercially
benefits the owner or occupier of the premises (for example, a customer).
See Ex parte Mountain Top Indoor Flea Mkt., Inc., 699 So. 2d 158, 161
(Ala. 1997).
Because the parties agree that Walter was an invitee when she
visited the Staples store, the responsible parties owed her a two-pronged
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duty of care. First (and ideally), "[t]he owner of premises owes a duty to
business invitees to use reasonable care and diligence to keep the
premises in a safe condition." Armstrong v. Georgia Marble Co., 575 So.
2d 1051, 1053 (Ala. 1991). Alternatively, "if the premises are in a
dangerous condition," the premises owner must "give sufficient warning
[to its invitees] so that, by the use of ordinary care, the danger can be
avoided." Id.
This duty to "maintain or warn" has its limits, though. A premises
owner cannot be liable to an invitee for an injury resulting from an
obvious danger -- in other words, a danger that should have been
observed in the exercise of reasonable care. See South Alabama Brick Co.
v. Carwie, 214 So. 3d 1169, 1176 (Ala. 2016). Instead, the duty to
maintain or warn applies only with respect to hidden (or nonobvious)
conditions. See Owens v. Ganga Hospitality, LLC, 352 So. 3d 1172, 1175
(Ala. 2021). The key question is whether a given hazard is objectively
open and obvious. See Dolgencorp, Inc. v. Taylor, 28 So. 3d 737, 742 (Ala.
2009). "A hazard is open and obvious if it would be apparent to, and
recognized by, a reasonable person in the position of the invitee." Owens,
352 So. 3d at 1175.
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SC-2025-0160
There is some inconsistency in our caselaw about the proper
framework for analyzing this open-and-obvious-hazard limitation. Some
decisions have treated it as an outer substantive limit on the duty a
landowner owes to invitees, which means an injured invitee must
overcome it as a part of his or her case-in-chief.2 Other decisions have
held that " '[an invitor's] argument that the condition that caused [an
invitee's] fall was open and obvious is an affirmative defense, on which
[the invitor] bears the ultimate burden of proof.' " Byrne v. Fisk, 385 So.
3d 973, 985 (Ala. 2023) (quoting Denmark v. Mercantile Stores Co., 844
So. 2d 1189, 1194 (Ala. 2002)) (emphasis omitted).
Here, though, the parties have treated openness and obviousness
as an affirmative defense. As explained next, whether to treat the
limitation as an affirmative defense or a substantive limit on the duty
makes no difference in this case.
2See, e.g., Sessions v. Nonnenmann, 842 So. 2d 649, 652 (Ala. 2002)
(describing the "openness and obviousness of a hazard" as "negat[ing] the
… invitor's duty," which "defeats the [invitee's] injury claim without the
operation of any affirmative defense").
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SC-2025-0160
B.
Under the undisputed record evidence presented by the defendants,
the "uneven concrete" that allegedly caused Walter's fall was objectively
open and obvious, thus defeating her claims as a matter of law.
First, because of the general contractor's multiple safety
precautions, it is likely that the entire construction zone was an open and
obvious hazard. Walter does not dispute that the construction zone in
which she fell was surrounded by warning signs, caution tape, and
barricades. Nor does she dispute that she had been aware of the
construction zone and had personally observed the warning signs, tape,
and barricades. Each of those safety features would have warned Walter,
or any other person, to be extremely cautious when entering the Staples
store.
What is more, the general contractor painted the affected concrete
with fluorescent paint soon after the concrete had been cut and
specifically for the purpose of making it visible to passersby. Walter did
not deny the existence of the paint. Nor did she deny the motivation of
the contractor in spraying it there. Her testimony instead was simply
that she had not personally noticed it.
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SC-2025-0160
The problem for Walter here is that the openness-and-obviousness
inquiry is objective, not subjective. The relevant question is thus not
whether Walter personally perceived the fluorescent warning paint but
instead whether it would have been "apparent to, and recognized by, a
reasonable person" in her position. Owens, 352 So. 3d at 1175. Even if we
were to wholly disregard the other safety precautions surrounding the
construction zone, the fact remains: the defendants presented evidence
of the fluorescent paint on the affected concrete, and Walter has not
provided any evidence to the contrary. Nor, in light of the photographs in
the record, has she presented substantial evidence demonstrating that a
reasonable person would have missed the warning paint.
This Court's precedents support our decision. For example, in
Owens v. Ganga Hospital, LLC, the Court affirmed a summary judgment
rejecting a hotel patron's negligence claim arising after the patron fell on
a raised platform on hotel property. 352 So. 3d at 1173-74. In Owens,
"[p]hotographs in the record depict[ed] the platform at night and
indicate[d] that the area [was] brightly lit and that the platform [was]
painted red, which clearly contrasts with the surrounding area." 352 So.
3d at 1175. In addition, there was no evidence indicating that any of
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SC-2025-0160
Owens's family members had been unable to see the platform or had
tripped on it. Id. On that record, the Court concluded that the difference
in elevation was open and obvious as a matter of law, just as we do here.
Owens, 352 So. 3d at 1178.
On the other hand, in McClurg v. Birmingham Realty Co., 300
So. 3d 1115 (Ala. 2020), this Court reversed a summary judgment
rejecting the claims of a shopping-center patron arising out of a fall the
patron suffered after stepping into a hole in the parking lot. There, the
Court reasoned, a jury could reasonably have rejected the shopping
center's open-and-obvious-hazard defense based on such factors as "[t]he
position and dimensions of the hole, the fact that the hole was of the same
color and material as the surrounding asphalt, and the fact that the hole
was unmarked." Id. at 1120.
The facts in the present case are analogous to Owens and
distinguishable from McClurg. Photographs in the record show warning
signs, caution tape, and barricades in the area in which the fall took
place. Moreover, a photograph of the change in elevation shows that the
change had been marked with fluorescent orange paint. As in Owens, the
photographic record evidence shows that the elevation change (if not
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SC-2025-0160
"[t]he difference in elevation" itself) was open and obvious to a reasonable
prospective Staples customer. Owens, 352 So. 3d at 1175. At the same
time, the facts here are dissimilar from the facts in McClurg, where the
tripping hazard was not marked and the tripping hazard was in fact the
same color as the surrounding asphalt. See McClurg, 300 So. 3d at 1120.
Although Walter cites testimony of two witnesses saying that they
could not perceive a tripping hazard from the photographs, that
testimony does not address the visibility of the warning paint. That
evidence, moreover, does not qualify as "substantial evidence" for
purposes of a summary-judgment motion given that photographs in the
record, like the ones reprinted above, clearly show the warning paint
alerting people to the open and obvious nature of the uneven concrete.
"When opposing parties tell two different stories, one of which is
blatantly contradicted by the record, so that no reasonable jury could
believe it, a court should not adopt that version of the facts for purposes
of ruling on a motion for summary judgment." Scott v. Harris, 550 U.S.
372, 380 (2007)); see also Ex parte City of Vestavia Hills, 372 So. 3d 1143,
1147 (Ala. 2022).
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SC-2025-0160
In her brief to this Court, Walter relies on Pittman v. Hangout in
Gulf Shores, LLC, 293 So. 3d 937, 941 (Ala. Civ. App. 2019). But Pittman
does not help Walter and in fact supports the defendants. In Pittman, the
Court of Civil Appeals reversed a summary judgment rejecting Pittman's
premises-liability claims, holding that a particular elevation change was
not open and obvious as a matter of law even though it was marked with
yellow paint. But Pittman involved what one expert described as a
" 'visually complex environment' " that would make it uniquely unlikely
for "a patron to be looking where he or she was walking." 293 So. 3d at
- There was also expert opinion "that the crowded environment and
the use of high-top tables in the lower elevation of the premises on the
date of the accident" contributed to Pittman's inability to perceive an
elevation change. Id. Here, for reasons already explained, "the
environment in which a particular hazard appears" cuts entirely against
Walter's claims given the numerous safety precautions the general
contractor had taken to alert prospective Staples customers to the
dangers looming in the construction zone. 293 So. 3d at 943.
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SC-2025-0160
IV.
On the day of Walter's fall, there were multiple indicators alerting
Staples customers to the presence of potential construction hazards
generally. There were also specific warnings about the uneven concrete
itself. Our premises-liability law requires a premises owner to maintain
the safety of its premises or to warn its invitees of any hidden dangers; it
did not require Staples to station an employee in the construction zone -
- or worse, to shut its doors entirely while construction was underway.
Because we conclude that the uneven concrete that allegedly caused
Walter's fall was open and obvious, Walter's negligence and wantonness
claims both fail as a matter of law. See, e.g., Dolgencorp, Inc. v. Taylor,
28 So. 3d 737, 745-46 (Ala. 2009). Therefore, the circuit court's judgment
is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Stewart, C.J., and Wise, Sellers, and Cook, JJ., concur.
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