In a lot of Azle incidents, the dispute isn’t about whether harm occurred—it’s about whether the property owner should have anticipated the kind of danger that led to your assault or threat.
Foreseeability can be tied to things like:
- Prior calls or incidents near the same entrances, parking areas, or common spaces
- Documented complaints about broken locks, poor lighting, or unsafe access
- Patterns of activity that made an attack more likely than the property claims
Texas courts generally want a clear link between what the owner knew (or should have known) and why reasonable security steps weren’t taken. That’s where many cases stall—because the right records weren’t requested early.


