OPINION
Opinion by
While visiting the restroom of a Whata-burger restaurant, Nancy Diane Brooks (Brooks) injured herself when she slipped on a wet floor and fell. Brooks’s experience precipitated this lawsuit against PRH Investments, Inc., and Whataburger of East Texas (collectively, PRH), the owners and operators of the restaurant. The moisture on the floor was occasioned by the mopping of the floor by a restaurant employee a few minutes before Brooks fell. Brooks’s suit alleged negligent activity and/or premises liability. After discovery, PRH filed a motion for summary judgment on both traditional and no-evidence grounds, and the trial court granted the summary judgment on both grounds, and no-evidence summary judgment as to both negligent activity and premises liability.
Brooks argues that the trial court erred in granting the motion for traditional summary judgment and no-evidence summary judgment because: (1) she adequately alleged and supported her claims for negligent activity and that there were material facts in dispute as to this issue; and (2) she adequately alleged and supported her claims for premises liability and there were material facts in dispute.
We sustain Brooks’s points of error regarding the granting of no-evidence summary judgment as to the premises liability claim; however, we affirm the trial court’s judgment because (1) Brooks’s fall was not contemporaneous to the action of mopping the floor; and (2) PRH provided Brooks with adequate cautionary warnings concerning the wet floor.
Facts
On May 23, 2007, Brooks was a customer at a Whataburger restaurant owned and operated by PRH. While attempting to leave the restroom, she was injured when she slipped and fell. The floor of the restroom had been mopped only a few minutes prior to Brooks’s fall.
Jayne Summers, the PRH employee who mopped the floor, testified that before she commenced mopping the floor, she put out the “wet floor” signs in the restroom and that she had “just about finished” mopping the restroom floor when Brooks entered the restroom. Summers testified that she told Brooks “to be careful” and “the floor was wet” because she had “just mopped in there.”
Brooks testified that the floor was dry when she entered the restroom and while she was in the bathroom stall, a lady “came in and mopped.” Brooks testified that when Summers was leaving the restroom, she told Brooks to “be careful, the floor may be a little damp.” Brooks was in the restroom stall for three to five minutes after Summers left the restroom and admits there was a wet floor warning sign in the room. When Brooks attempted to leave the restroom, she slipped and fell, causing injury to herself.
Standard of Review
When reviewing a summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to
*923
the nonmovant and indulge every reasonable inference and resolve any doubts in the nonmovant’s favor.
Limestone Prods. Distrib., Inc. v. McNamara,
A no-evidence summary judgment is essentially a pretrial directed verdict. We, therefore, apply the same legal sufficiency standard in reviewing a no-evidence summary judgment as we apply in reviewing a directed verdict.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Rodriguez,
Brooks’s Fall Was Not Contemporaneous to the Mopping
Brooks argues that the trial court erred in granting PRH summary judgment and no-evidence summary judgment on the negligent activity cause of action. 1 We disagree.
A trial court should not submit a negligent activity claim to the trier of fact unless the evidence shows that the injury was caused by or was a contemporaneous result of the negligent activity itself, rather than a condition created by the negligent activity.
Keetch v. Kroger Co.,
The Texas Supreme Court’s decision in
Keetch
guides us in determining what evidence is needed to establish that an injury was the contemporaneous result of the negligent activity itself, rather than a condition created by the negligent activity.
Keetch,
Similarly, in
Stanley Stores v. Veazey,
the Beaumont Court of Appeals applied the
Keetch
analysis to another slip and fall case where the plaintiff alleged a negligent activity.
Stanley Stores, Inc. v. Veazey,
Let’s assume that all of the evidence was proof positive (matter of law) that the liquid which caused Mrs. Veazey to slip and fall did indeed originate from the Pepsi display activity which was ongoing at the time of the fall. Thus, we have an ongoing activity (Pepsi display) in one area of the store and a slip and fall on substance generated from that activity in another area of the store. Keetch says, “Recovery on a negligent activity theory requires that a person have been injured by or as a contemporaneous result of the activity itself rather than by a condition created by the activity.” ... Even under our proof positive assumption, Mrs. Veazey slipped on a “condition created by the activity.”
Id.
Similarly, in
Kroger Co.,
the court of appeals reversed the trial court and held that there was no evidence of negligent activity when the plaintiff slipped and fell by stepping in water that was allegedly dripped onto the floor when a store employee transported frozen food from pallets to the frozen food cases.
The facts of this case are very similar to those in Keetch, Stanley Stores, and Kroger Co. in that the alleged negligent activity — mopping—was not ongoing at the time and place Brooks fell. Summers testified that she had finished mopping the restroom and verbally warned Brooks about the floor as Brooks entered the restroom. Brooks testified that she fell several minutes after Summers had ceased mopping, placed a “wet-floor” warning cone, verbally warned Brooks about the wet floor, and left the restroom. In either case, there is no evidence that the negligent activity itself caused Brooks’s injuries or that her fall was contemporaneous with Summers’s mopping. Rather, just as in Keetch and Kroger Co., all the evidence indicates that *925 Brooks slipped on a condition caused by the mopping activity. Therefore, PRH is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We affirm the trial court’s granting of summary judgment and no-evidence summary judgment as to Brooks’s negligent activity cause of action and overrule Brooks’s points of error deriving therefrom.
Adequate Warnings About the Floor Were Given
Brooks also contends that the trial court erred by granting summary judgment and no-evidence summary judgment as to her premises liability claims because she did provide supporting evidence and there were material facts in dispute. We disagree.
Tort liability depends on both the existence of and the violation of a duty.
Lefmark Mgmt. Co. v. Old,
To succeed in a premises liability suit, an invitee plaintiff must prove (1) that the defendant had actual or constructive knowledge of some condition on the premises, (2) that the condition posed an unreasonable risk of harm, (3) that the defendant failed to exercise reasonable care to eliminate or reduce the risk of that harm, and (4) that the defendant’s failure to use such care proximately caused the invitee’s injury.
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Gonzalez,
The case of
Bill’s Dollar Store, Inc. v. Bean
is strikingly similar to the present case.
In this case, the material facts are not in dispute. Brooks slipped and fell three to five minutes after the restroom floor was mopped. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Brooks, she saw the floor being mopped, saw the wet floor warning sign, and was verbally warned “to be careful” because the “floor may be a little damp.” Under these circumstances, whether the warning was given prior to or after Brooks entered the restroom, the warning was adequate as a matter of law to discharge the property owner’s duty to warn Brooks about the possible danger posed by the condition of the floor.
The pleadings and their attachments and exhibits present a prima facie cause of action for premises liability; therefore, we *926 sustain Brooks’s points of error regarding the granting of no-evidence summary judgment as to her premises liability claim. However, the material facts in this case are not in dispute and PRH is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s granting of summary judgment as to Brooks’s premises liability claims and overrule Brooks’s points of error deriving therefrom.
The traditional summary judgment was properly granted, and we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. In her argument, Brooks emphasizes that the floor was not mopped according to company procedures. Under our analysis of Brooks’s negligent activity claim, the product and procedure used to mop the floor is irrelevant in this case.
