Andrew B. James v. City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary Desvignes-Kendrick

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 2004
Docket14-03-00612-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew B. James v. City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary Desvignes-Kendrick (Andrew B. James v. City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary Desvignes-Kendrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew B. James v. City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary Desvignes-Kendrick, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion filed April 22, 2004

Affirmed and Opinion filed April 22, 2004.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-03-00612-CV

ANDREW B. JAMES, Appellant

V.

THE CITY OF HOUSTON, TEXAS, LEE P. BROWN, and

MARY DESVIGNES-KENDRICK, Appellees

On Appeal from the 189th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 00-34164

O P I N I O N

Appellant Andrew B. James sued appellees, the City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary DesVignes-Kendrick, alleging James was terminated in retaliation for his exercise of the constitutionally-protected right to free speech and that he was deprived of procedural due process at his post-termination hearing.  At issue is whether James is barred by the doctrine of collateral estoppel from asserting his state-law claims when his parallel federal-law claims were dismissed in a separate proceeding in federal court.  We affirm.


Factual and Procedural Background[1]

James was employed by the City of Houston as Assistant Director of the Administrative Support Division of the Department of Health and Human Services (ADHHS@).  James had been an employee of the City for twenty-five years and coordinated the City=s acquisition, development, and operation of Multi-Service Centers (AMSCs@), which provide information and services to the City=s residents.

In November of 1996, James purchased residential property in Houston=s Third Ward, at 3024 Holman.  The three owners signed quitclaim deeds transferring their total interest to James, who recorded the deeds in Harris County.  The original owners and James then contracted to give the original owners 82% of any sales proceeds if James sold the property within ten years of the date of transfer.  Thus, the contract terminated by its own terms in November of 2006, presumably leaving James with ownership of the real property and no further obligations to the original owners.  As an assistant director, James was required to report all personal financial holdings, but he failed to report the 3024 Holman property on his financial disclosure statement filed in October of 1997.


At work, James planned the development of an MSC for the Third Ward.  Construction was scheduled to begin in late spring or summer of 1998.  During early 1998, James Douglas, then president of Texas Southern University, began discussions with the Third Ward Redevelopment Council and the Houston Independent School District about working with the City to build a joint-use baseball complex next to the planned Third Ward MSC.  The City held a town-hall meeting on May 9, 1998, during which a Third Ward community leader proposed to Brown, then mayor of the City, that the Third Ward MSC be expanded to include the baseball complex.  The proposed expansion would require moving the MSC building approximately 155 feet.

James opposed the expansion.  According to his testimony in his federal case, James thought expansion would further delay the completion of the Third Ward MSC.  James voiced his opposition at various community and department meetings.  He could not identify precisely the various occasions at which he expressed his opposition, but he specifically recalled sharing his concerns with desVignes-Kendrick, the director of DHHS, and Earl Travis, James=s immediate supervisor, as well as at various community meetings.

As a follow-up to the town-hall meeting, the City organized a community gathering to discuss the proposal on June 11, 1998.  The next day, James and other City employees physically walked the land encompassed by the proposed expansion.  According to appellees, James Aeven then, failed to disclose his ownership of the very property they walked on.@  James did not disclose his ownership interest until early July of 1998.  According to desVignes-Kendrick, when she was informed of the ownership she immediately instructed James to recuse himself from the development of the Third Ward MSC.  Appellees claim that, after being asked to divorce himself entirely from the Third Ward MSC project, James attended at least one more community meeting and obtained a copy of the confidential report on the project=s feasibility.

Once James realized the City was abandoning the original plans in favor of expansion, he hired an attorney to represent him in the condemnation proceedings.  The City appraised James=s property at $117,899, and offered him that sum in December of 1998.  James did not accept the offer.  The summary-judgment evidence in the federal case does not reveal why.

In February of 1999, Brown initiated an investigation into whether James had acted illegally or improperly in connection with his purchase of 3024 Holman or the expansion proposal.  DesVignes-Kendrick reassigned James to work at home with full pay and benefits pending the outcome of the investigation by the Office of the Inspector General (AOIG@).


Concurrently on August 18, 1999, a grand jury considered evidence of James=s criminal wrongdoing and declined to indict. 

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Andrew B. James v. City of Houston, Texas, Lee P. Brown, and Mary Desvignes-Kendrick, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-b-james-v-city-of-houston-texas-lee-p-brown-and-mary-texapp-2004.