Arthur J. Hopkins v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 11, 2005
Docket03-02-00743-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Arthur J. Hopkins v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (Arthur J. Hopkins v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality) 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
Arthur J. Hopkins v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-02-00743-CV
Arthur J. Hopkins, Appellant


v.



Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 126TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 97-06616, HONORABLE SUZANNE COVINGTON, JUDGE PRESIDING



M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



This is an appeal from the granting of judgment non obstante veredicto (JNOV) after a jury award to a plaintiff in a whistleblower case. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§ 554.001-.010 (West 2004). Arthur J. Hopkins sued his former employer, the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, (1) alleging that he was terminated from his position as a geologist in retaliation for reporting the misconduct of fellow employee Steve White. The case was tried to a jury, which found in favor of Hopkins and awarded damages of $704,000 and attorney's fees of $80,000. The district court, however, granted JNOV and entered a take-nothing judgment. Because Hopkins presented no evidence of a good faith report of a violation of law to an appropriate law enforcement authority, we affirm the district court's judgment.



FACTUAL BACKGROUND



Arthur Hopkins is a geologist who was employed by the Commission for more than sixteen years. Hopkins was assigned to the surface casing unit, which reviews applications to drill or reenter oil or gas wells. Hopkins would review geologic information from the designated area and would issue a recommendation, in letter form, stating the location of usable-quality groundwater and the required measures for its protection.

The surface casing unit was responsible for issuing recommendations for wells across the entire state. The unit was divided into four geographic sectors. Hopkins was assigned to south Texas, White to east Texas, John Estep to north Texas, and Jack Oswald to west and central Texas. Each geologist was also assigned to work as "back up" for one of the other areas. From time to time, it was necessary for the geologists to handle issues and recommendations involving all areas of the state. Each geologist was responsible for issuing between four and five thousand recommendations a year.

As early as 1994, Hopkins began to complain to superiors about the quality of his co-worker White's recommendations. Specifically, Hopkins noticed that White was not researching the location of water in making recommendations and was simply relying on the computer to automatically generate a response. He also found numerous errors in White's work that were not related to reliance on the computer. At trial, Hopkins discussed examples of White's various errors and testified that White's erroneous recommendations numbered at least in the hundreds. He emphasized that these erroneous recommendations created a risk for polluting drinking water in the state. Other geologists in the unit confirmed the poor quality of White's work.

Hopkins initially reported the problem to his immediate supervisor, Phil Carter, and to the other geologists in the surface casing unit. He also reported the problem to his friend Steve Wiley, who was a supervisor in the water well drillers section. In March 1995, Hopkins reported White's erroneous recommendations to Carter's supervisor, Mary Ambrose. Carter also relayed the problem to Steve Musik, manager of ground water assessment. In response, Hopkins was asked to monitor White's work. Hopkins testified that he reported fifty or sixty erroneous recommendations by White between March and September 1995. White was then placed on a performance improvement plan in an attempt to address the problem.

Hopkins also alleged that White had a history of harassing women at the Commission. Hopkins testified that White confided in him about his broken relationship with co-worker Irene Ritter and that Ritter complained to Hopkins about White's behavior. In early summer 1995, Hopkins secretly tape-recorded a conversation in which White discussed, in explicit detail, his sexual relationship with Ritter. (2) Within days of making the tape, Hopkins mentioned it to his friend Wiley, who was Ritter's supervisor. Hopkins testified that he witnessed White following Ritter around the office and recalled a conversation he had with Ritter and co-worker Mae Medearis in which Ritter expressed her frustration that White "won't leave me alone." Medearis testified about the incident in greater detail. She recounted that she was at her desk when Ritter rushed in "aggravated and agitated" and exclaimed that White had been following her and was nearby. Medearis confirmed that Hopkins also came by the door and overheard Ritter soon after the incident. Hopkins later reported White's harassment of Ritter to Carter, who was the head of the surface casing unit. Hopkins also told his friend Wiley.

Hopkins presented evidence at trial that White sexually harassed other women at the office. Jan Giessregan testified that she worked closely with the surface casing unit as a private consultant. She stated that White would stare at her, make comments about her breasts, and even called her office a couple of times to ask her out. Giessregan reported White's improper behavior to Hopkins, but did not complain to anyone else for fear that White would retaliate by delaying her clients' applications. Giessregan testified that her secretary suffered similar mistreatment from White. In January 1996, White made his own complaint against Hopkins. White sent documents that he obtained from Hopkins's cubicle to the Travis County District Attorney's office and alleged that Hopkins was using state property to publish a newsletter on roller pigeons. (3) Hopkins testified that this was around the time that he and Carter met with White to discuss his poor performance. When he was confronted about errors in his recommendations, White responded, "I have an ace up my sleeve." Following White's complaint against Hopkins, a Commission investigator witnessed Hopkins using his State computer for personal purposes. Hopkins received a written reprimand dated March 13, 1996, noting the investigator's observations of Hopkins's personal use of his computer and Hopkins's admission of personal use on one occasion. On March 20, Hopkins was placed on disciplinary probation for one year and suspended without pay for two weeks. The memorandum documenting the probation and suspension listed a number of specific occasions in 1994 and 1995 when Hopkins had used state computers and printers to generate personal correspondence and his newsletter. At trial, Hopkins denied ever having used Commission equipment to publish his newsletter.

While Hopkins served his two-week suspension, White was responsible for the recommendations in Hopkins's assigned area. Hopkins determined that approximately one fourth of the recommendations made by White in his absence were inaccurate. Hopkins again complained to his supervisor Carter.

White continued to make comments about Ritter to Hopkins. Hopkins again mentioned to Wiley the secret tape of White relating details of his sexual relationship with Ritter, intimating that it was bad.

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