If you get hurt on someone else’s property in Texas, your injury claim often falls into one of two categories: premises liability or negligent activity. The two sound alike, but they rest on different facts and follow different rules. The difference comes down to a dangerous condition versus a harmful action, and it shapes how you prove your case, which deadline applies, and who you hold responsible.
What Is Premises Liability
Premises liability covers harm from a dangerous condition on the property. The owner knew, or should have known, about the hazard and failed to fix it or warn about it. The claim rests on what the owner did not do.
Common examples include:
- A leaking or corroded gas line
- A broken stair or a missing handrail
- A wet floor with no warning sign, the basis of a slip and fall claim
- Weak security that allows a crime, the basis of a negligent security claim
Texas also weighs why you were on the property. A tenant or an invited guest is owed more care than a trespasser. When a hazard sat on the property and the owner ignored the duty to address it, an injured tenant or guest can recover.
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What Is Negligent Activity
Negligent activity covers harm from an action as it happens. Someone is doing something, the activity itself injures you, and the claim rests on that conduct.
Picture a work crew operating heavy equipment near tenants, or a contractor rupturing a gas line while boring into the ground. If the activity hurts you while it is underway, you may have a claim against the person or company doing the work.
Texas treats this as ordinary negligence, so you must show four things: the defendant owed you a duty of care, broke that duty, caused your injury, and left you with real harm.
Why the Difference Matters in Texas
Texas courts keep these two theories apart, and the line can decide your case.
A negligent activity claim requires your injury to flow from the activity while it happens. If a crew finishes a job and leaves behind a hazard that hurts someone later, Texas treats that as a premises condition. That means a single gas line rupture, like the one alleged in a recent Dallas apartment explosion, can point in different directions, depending on when the harm occurs.
The theories also carry different elements. A premises liability claim looks at the owner’s knowledge of the hazard and the duty owed to you. A negligent activity claim looks at the conduct itself.
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Can You Bring Both Claims?
You can raise both theories at the start of a case, and Texas does not force you to choose right away. But you cannot collect twice for the same injury, and the facts decide which theory reaches the jury. If your harm came from a condition, the court treats it as premises liability, even when an earlier activity created that condition. An attorney can plead the theory the evidence supports and keep your options open.
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Finding the Right Party to Hold Responsible
One incident can involve several possible defendants: the property owner, a general contractor, and a subcontractor. Each may carry its own coverage through a carrier regulated by the Texas Department of Insurance, and more than one policy may pay. Naming every responsible party can raise the compensation available to you.
Early on, the responsible party is hard to identify. Lawyers sort it out through investigation and discovery, the formal process they use to obtain records, contracts, and testimony. The burden sits with you, the injured party, to show who was at fault, so you want strong proof gathered early.
A Sugar Land injury lawyer can help gather evidence, preserve records, and build a strong claim on your behalf.
Talk to a Texas Injury Attorney
Whether your injury came from a dangerous condition or a careless act, you do not have to sort out the legal theory on your own. A Sugar Land personal injury attorney can match the facts to the right claim and pursue the parties at fault. These cases move fast and Texas sets strict deadlines to file, so early advice protects your claim. If you were hurt on someone else’s property, reach out for a review of your case.
Call or text (832) 346-9585 or complete a Free Case Evaluation form