Mary Hernandez, Individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Joseph Hernandez, Carlos Cruz Hernandez and Jose Cruz Hernandez v. Kroger Texas, L.P.
01-15-00836-CV
Tex. App.Apr 20, 2017Background
- Joseph Hernandez purchased and consumed a Kroger cantaloupe in September 2011; he later developed symptoms and was ultimately diagnosed with listeriosis by Dr. Burns, who opined the infection resulted from contaminated food but did not identify the specific food item.
- Plaintiffs (Mary Hernandez as personal representative and individually, and Joseph's sons) sued Kroger asserting negligence, strict products liability, breach of warranty, DTPA claims, and later wrongful-death/survivorship claims after Joseph's death.
- Kroger moved for summary judgment asserting two no-evidence grounds (no proof the cantaloupe was contaminated; no proof the cantaloupe caused Joseph's illness/death) and a traditional ground asserting the innocent-seller statute as an affirmative defense.
- Plaintiffs responded with affidavits, medical records, purchase receipts, reports on listeria outbreaks, and deposition testimony; they also pursued discovery and filed motions to compel/continue (with mixed rulings on continuances and no record ruling on the motion to compel).
- The trial court granted Kroger summary judgment without specifying the ground; plaintiffs appealed, arguing the no-evidence grounds were defeated and that the court erred in denying a continuance.
Issues
| Issue | Plaintiff's Argument | Defendant's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether summary judgment was improper because there was evidence triable issues on contamination and causation | Plaintiffs argued affidavits, medical records, receipts, and reports created genuine fact issues that the cantaloupe was contaminated and caused the infection | Kroger argued no-evidence showed lack of proof on contamination and causation; also asserted innocent-seller statute as an alternative traditional ground | Aff'd: Plaintiffs failed to defeat all grounds because they did not challenge the traditional innocent-seller defense on appeal; court may affirm on any unchallenged ground |
| Whether the innocent-seller statute (affirmative defense) was inapplicable | Plaintiffs contended public-policy/precedent (Jacob E. Decker & Sons / Griggs Canning) made sellers strictly liable for food; argued implied warranties preclude the defense | Kroger relied on CPRC §82.003 innocent-seller protection because it did not manufacture the cantaloupe | Overruled: Plaintiffs' appellate argument on policy was not preserved below; they had argued different exceptions in the trial court and did not raise the policy/Decker–Josey argument there, so it cannot be considered on appeal |
| Whether denial of a motion for continuance denied due process | Plaintiffs argued continuance was needed for overdue discovery to identify suppliers and evidence (e.g., growers, contamination) | Kroger implicitly opposed further delay; trial court denied/failed to rule on later continuance; factual record not developed on appeal | Waived: Plaintiffs' briefing lacked substantive legal argument or record citations, so the appellate complaint was inadequately briefed and waived |
| Whether appellate briefing preserved and adequately argued the issues | Plaintiffs relied on various legal authorities and factual exhibits but did not preserve some arguments in trial court nor brief others properly on appeal | Kroger relied on preservation and briefing defects to support affirmance | Affirmed: Court enforced preservation and briefing rules; issues not argued below or inadequately briefed were waived |
Key Cases Cited
- Star–Telegram, Inc. v. Doe, 915 S.W.2d 471 (Tex. 1995) (party must defeat every ground in a multi‑ground summary-judgment motion when the trial court does not specify basis)
- Carr v. Brasher, 776 S.W.2d 567 (Tex. 1989) (judgment may be affirmed on any unchallenged ground)
- Ellis v. Precision Engine Rebuilders, Inc., 68 S.W.3d 894 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002) (same principle applied at First District)
- Jacob E. Decker & Sons, Inc. v. Capps, 164 S.W.2d 828 (Tex. 1942) (historic Texas authority on implied warranties and seller liability for food)
- Griggs Canning Co. v. Josey, 164 S.W.2d 835 (Tex. 1942) (companion case on public policy regarding liability for food sold for consumption)
