Slip-and-fall cases in Midland-Odessa aren't easy — defendants (particularly major retailers) have decades of experience defending these claims. The notice requirement under Texas premises liability law (the {property owner} "knew or should have known" the hazard existed) creates a real evidentiary burden. But when surveillance footage, employee testimony, and inspection-policy records line up properly, these cases win.
The Longhorn Law Firm handles slip-and-fall cases throughout Midland-Odessa — including at HEB, Walmart, Target, Lowe's, and other retailers, restaurants, hotels, apartment complexes, and parking lots. See our full overview of slip and fall cases ?
Midland-Odessa context.
Major Roadways
I-20 (the east-west spine through both cities), Loop 250 in Midland, Loop 338 in Odessa, SH-191 (the Business Loop), and the FM-1788 connector.
Local Courts
Midland County Courthouse, Ector County Courthouse (Odessa), and the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, Midland-Odessa Division.
Trauma Care
Medical Center Hospital in Odessa (Level II trauma — the Permian Basin's primary trauma center), Midland Memorial Hospital, and Odessa Regional Medical Center.
Why It Matters Here
The Midland-Odessa metro is the operational heart of the Permian Basin oilfield — the most productive oil and gas region in the country. The result: heavy commercial truck traffic on every major road, particularly I-20, SH-191, and the surrounding rural highways. Permian Basin truck-related fatality rates are consistently among the highest in Texas. Oilfield work injuries and fatigue-related truck crashes are routine here.
What you have to prove.
Premises liability is more demanding than many people assume. To win, we have to show:
- The property owner created the hazardous condition, knew about it, or should have known about it through reasonable inspection
- The owner failed to fix it or warn about it in a reasonable time
- That failure caused your injury
- You suffered damages
The biggest battleground is usually the second element — "actual or constructive notice." Stores routinely argue that the spill "just happened" and they had no time to address it. We defeat that defense with inspection logs, sweep records, prior incident reports, surveillance footage, and the testimony of employees and witnesses.
Common Midland-Odessa fall scenarios.
- Wet floors at grocery stores — spills, leaking refrigeration cases, mopped floors without warning signs
- Produce-aisle falls — grapes, water, ice
- Parking lot hazards — cracked pavement, potholes, missing wheel stops, poor lighting
- Stairs and ramps — broken handrails, code-violating step heights, slippery surfaces
- Hotel falls — pool decks, bathtub falls, lobby and walkway hazards
- Apartment complex falls — broken stairs, dim hallways, ice or water
Do: Report the fall to the manager and ask for a written incident report. Photograph the hazard, your injuries, and the area. Get witness contact info. Save the shoes and clothes you were wearing. Get medical care.
Don't: Sign anything the store gives you. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept a quick "we'll cover your bills" offer in exchange for a release.
Common injuries.
- Hip and pelvis fractures (especially in older adults)
- Wrist and forearm fractures (from trying to catch yourself)
- Knee injuries, including ACL and meniscus tears
- Back and spinal injuries — including herniated discs
- Head injuries and concussions
- Shoulder injuries
Insurance companies routinely call victims within hours, sounding friendly, asking for a "quick recorded statement," and floating a fast lowball offer before the victim has seen a doctor. Don't give a recorded statement. Don't accept an offer. Read our full guide on insurance company tactics before you say anything.
Texas deadlines.
Two years from the date of the fall to file (Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code §16.003). Cases against governmental entities require notice within much shorter windows — sometimes as little as six months. Texas applies modified comparative fault: you can still recover if you were 50% or less at fault. More on comparative fault ?