A woman identified as Patricia Sue Galloway allegedly refused to pay her bill at a Texas Roadhouse restaurant and declined to leave the premises until the full check was voided, according to details from a video posted by TikTok account @storieslee. The incident apparently took place in Rutherford County, with the restaurant located at 2535 Old Fort Road. The video, which appears to be bodycam footage from inside the restaurant, has since circulated widely online.
According to the video, Galloway had ordered a ribeye steak, an appetizer, a salad, and a baked potato. She allegedly consumed nearly all of the food before raising a complaint, claiming the steak had been overcooked and was not up to standard. Her server, identified as Haley, removed the plate and brought the matter to the attention of the manager on duty.
The manager, identified as 31-year-old Brandon Whitfield, was said to be already aware of the situation, as the host had radioed him about a guest at table 14. According to the video, Whitfield examined the plate, which showed a largely eaten ribeye, an empty appetizer basket, a cleaned salad bowl, and a finished potato, and photographed it on the kitchen’s stainless prep counter at 7:46 PM. That photograph, according to the video’s narration, was later entered into evidence.
The restaurant’s 40-minute timer policy and the escalating standoff at the table
Whitfield reportedly approached Galloway’s table at 7:48 PM, introduced himself, apologized that the steak had not met her expectations, and offered to prepare a replacement cut from the menu at no charge. According to the video, Galloway declined the offer. She allegedly wanted the entire bill voided, not just the steak.
Whitfield then explained that company policy allowed him to comp the steak in full, but not the appetizer, potato, or salad, as all three had reportedly been consumed without any complaint. The narrator said he offered a 50% discount on the total bill as a goodwill gesture, bringing the check down to $44.71. Galloway is said to have refused this offer as well and demanded a written apology, the contact information for Whitfield’s superior, and a corporate phone number.
According to the video, Whitfield provided the corporate guest relations number, writing it on the back of the check, and informed Galloway that the 50% offer was final. He then reportedly instructed the assistant manager to begin a 40-minute timer.
Per the video’s narration, this timer was based on a company policy developed by a national operations team in consultation with corporate legal counsel. Under that policy, if a guest had not paid or accepted the offer within 40 minutes of a manager presenting a final decision, local law enforcement would be contacted. The timer seems to have started at 7:51 PM.
Galloway did not leave the restaurant during that period. According to the video, she remained at her table, scrolled on her phone, and accepted a sweet tea refill, which Whitfield had instructed Haley to bring without comment.
The narrator said that she also made a phone call to a friend in a voice loud enough for nearby tables to hear. During that call, she reportedly said, “This is how they treat senior citizens in this town,” a phrase she allegedly repeated four times within the first ten minutes.
The narrator says that Whitfield returned to the table at 8:11 PM, 20 minutes into the window, and again asked whether Galloway would accept the offer or pay the bill. She told him to leave her alone. He returned again at 8:24 PM, at which point Galloway stated she was “not going anywhere” until she got what she came for. In another case, a woman dines at a restaurant under the care of an attentive server.
At 8:31 PM, 40 minutes after the final offer had been presented, Whitfield reportedly called the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office non-emergency line to report a theft of services in progress. The dispatcher is said to have logged the call at 8:33 PM. According to the video, Galloway was subsequently arrested by a female officer outside the restaurant, near the establishment’s outdoor grill area.
The incident reflects a broader challenge that restaurant owners say they encounter regularly. Seth Young, owner of Snappy Lunch, a nearly century-old diner in Mount Airy, North Carolina, told TODAY that not all patrons are on their best behavior, recounting similar instances of customers raising complaints only after finishing their meals.
Matt Leary, owner of Farley’s Famous Hot Dogs in Hurricane, West Virginia, told the same outlet that he sides with customers in most disputes, but said there are limits. “We’ll take care of them unless it becomes a repetitive issue,” Leary said. In another case, a couple visiting a Tokyo restaurant thought they ordered a 70 steak, then came the 700 bill.
As of the time of writing, no official statements from the Rutherford County Sheriff’s Office, Texas Roadhouse corporate, or legal representatives for any of the individuals named have been publicly reported.
The video drew a range of responses from viewers. TikTok commenter David Tolbert wrote, “I have never had a bad meal at Texas Roadhouse,” while Alan Ostaff described the chain as his favorite restaurant, adding, “they do everything to make you happy no matter what.”
A third commenter, Paul, described an alleged past experience at a Texas Roadhouse location where his burger was served burnt on the outside and raw on the inside. He wrote that the restaurant offered a replacement, which he declined due to a loss of appetite, and that he ultimately received full bill compensation. “I have not returned since then,” he added.
Published: Jul 9, 2026 06:26 am