Lawsuit filed after tree dubbed 'Widow Maker' fatally crushes man at Texas BBQ restaurant

The family of a Texas father of four is suing after the man was allegedly "fatally crushed by the preventable falling" of a "diseased" pecan tree while he was eating at a BBQ restaurant.Kirk Foyle, 64, died after a May 19 when a tree fell on him at Green Mesquite BBQ in Austin, according to the lawsuit, Fox 7 reported.The tree was hanging over an outdoor patio area where Foyle was eating as storms moved through the area.The tree, which is referred to in the complaint as a "Widow Maker," was located at 1410 Barton Springs Rd, but parts of the tree extended into Green Mesquite’s outdoor patio area, where Foyle was seated, according to the outlet.WOMAN KILLED BY FLYING RESTAURANT UMBRELLA IN FREAK ACCIDENT AT SOUTH CAROLINA LAKESIDE RESTAURANTThe family of man who was killed by a falling tree at Green Mesquite BBQ in Austin, Texas, is suing the restaurant.
(Google Maps)The tree was allegedly never properly inspected by restaurant staff or management at a neighboring business, Aspen Hatter, despite being "located on, or in part on, property owned and controlled" by the businesses, according to the lawsuit.The complaint alleges that staff at the two local businesses allowed the tree, which allegedly showed signs of disease, to rot and decay without warning customers or taking action to maintain it or remove it.The lawsuit names Green Mesquite BBQ and nearby property owners as defendants.In the lawsuit, the tree that crushed Kirk Foyle is referred to as the "Widow Maker." (Google Maps)"Defendants knew, or in the exercise of reasonable care should have known, of the dangerous, diseased, decayed, and/or structurally compromised condition of this tree and failed to inspect, maintain, remove, and/or warn of its dangerous condition," the complaint alleges."Prior to May 19, 2026, the Widow Maker was in a dangerous, compromised, decayed, diseased, and/or structurally defective condition," it reads."Upon information and belief, the Widow Maker's dangerous condition was visibl...