City of Fort Worth v. Zimlich

975 S.W.2d 399, 14 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 486, 1998 Tex. App. LEXIS 5489, 1998 WL 546347
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 1998
Docket03-97-00475-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 975 S.W.2d 399 (City of Fort Worth v. Zimlich) 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
City of Fort Worth v. Zimlich, 975 S.W.2d 399, 14 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 486, 1998 Tex. App. LEXIS 5489, 1998 WL 546347 (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Julius D. Zimlich sued the City of Fort Worth (the “City”), his employer, alleging retaliatory discrimination in violation of the Whistleblower Act. 1 The trial court rendered judgment on a jury verdict, awarding Zimlich $300,200 for lost earnings, $300,000 for mental anguish, and $1,500,000 in punitive damages. The City appeals. We will affirm the trial-court judgment.

THE CONTROVERSY

Julius Zimlich, a certified peace officer, was employed as a deputy marshal in the warrants division of the City Marshal’s Office. He had served as a peace officer for fourteen years, and in the Marshal’s Office for four years. By all accounts he was likeable, knowledgeable, and experienced — an “up and coming” young officer. In his four years at the Marshal’s Office he had good relationships with his supervisors and received excellent evaluations.

In May 1993, Zimlich and Ricky Estorga, a fellow deputy, were selected for positions in the City’s newly created Solid Waste Environmental Enforcement Program (“S.W.E.E.P.”). The position required working jointly with the Marshal’s Office and the Code Enforcement Division (“CED”) of the City to police illegal dumping. The program was created through a grant from the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission (“TNRCC”).

S.W.E.E.P. increased the enforcement powers of the City’s Code Enforcement Division. Before S.W.E.E.P., CED policed illegal dumping without the assistance of commissioned peace officers such as Zimlich and Estorga. The' S.W.E.E.P. officers, unlike CED officials, were authorized to carry firearms, wear badges, and make arrests in performing their duties. 2 And the duties of S.W.E.E.P. officers were broader than those of CED officials. The S.W.E.E.P. officers *403 were empowered to enforce state statutes and regulations as well as City ordinances pertaining to solid-waste disposal. CED officers, by contrast, were authorized to enforce only City ordinances; and their powers were restricted to issuing notices and citations.

As S.W.E.E.P. officers, Zimlich and Estor-ga answered to supervisory personnel in both the CED and the Marshal’s Office, although the hierarchy was not well-defined and the chain of authority is not entirely clear. Zim-lich’s direct supervisor in CED was CED assistant director Juan Mejia; Zimlich also continued to report to Chief Deputy Jack Scott in the Marshal’s Office.

Zimlich’s transfer to S.W.E.E.P. involved no change in salary or benefits and therefore was not technically a “promotion” under the City’s rales and regulations. However, both Zimlich and his fellow deputies viewed the transfer as a promotion for all practical purposes. S.W.E.E.P. officers were given new, specially equipped vehicles and were expected to utilize a full range of law-enforcement and investigative skills. A fellow deputy characterized Zimlich’s transfer as a “plume in his cap” for career purposes.

Zimlich and Estorga were sent to Austin for special training with the TNRCC, the Attorney General’s Office, and the Keep Texas Beautiful Program — specialized training not available to CED officials. When they returned to Fort Worth, they set up a “hot line” that allowed area residents to make anonymous telephone reports of illegal waste-disposal activities. When Zimlich or Estorga learned of an illegal site, they were permitted to investigate the circumstances as they saw fit.

In October 1993, the officers received a telephone call about an illegal disposal site being operated in a residential area of Fort Worth. Zimlich located the site by helicopter and photographed the area. He visited the site and concluded that it violated state statutes and regulations. The site was not an authorized disposal site and contained various materials Zimlich recognized as dangerous, such as asbestos, oil, and antifreeze. A stream ran through the property and it was located near a residential area, making disposal at the site even more hazardous.

Zimlich told Juan Mejia, assistant director of CED, that he was investigating the site. At this time, Zimlich knew the site address but not the name of the owner. In an unusual order, Mejia told Zimlich to report his finding to the Superintendent of CED, Rufi-no Mendoza. Mendoza told Zimlich to discuss the matter with the Director of City Services, Tom Davis.

As Director of City Services, Davis directed all CED operations and those of two other City departments. Zimlich visited with Davis and told him about the site. To Zim-lich’s surprise, Davis told Zimlich to stop his investigation because there was “nothing out there.” The order placed Zimlich in a difficult and awkward position. On becoming a certified peace officer, Zimlich had taken an official oath to uphold the laws of the State and to pursue any violations he found. He had never before been required to report his investigations to higher officials; he and Estorga had previously conducted their investigations independently and at their discretion.

Zimlich approached Norman Donoho, head of the Marshal’s Office, and told him that Davis and Mendoza were preventing Zimlich from investigating an illegal disposal site. Zimlich told Donoho he was considering reporting Davis and Mendoza to the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office for hindering a criminal investigation. Donoho told Zimlich he would look into the matter and that Zimlich should make whatever reports to appropriate authorities Zimlich felt were necessary. Zimlich and Estorga reported the illegal disposal site to the TNRCC, and Zimlich told the Texas Attorney General and the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office that Davis and Mendoza were obstructing a criminal investigation. Shortly after Zimlich reported the illegal site to the TNRCC, Davis sent a memo to Zimlich and Estorga ordering them not to seek assistance from outside agencies without CED permission.

The illegal disposal site belonged to Ted Peters, a former member of the Fort Worth City Council. The City had given Peters a permit to “fill” the land — which did not include permission to dump trash at the site— *404 but Peters apparently misunderstood the scope of the permit. Peters called Tom Davis after receiving a notice from CED that his property was in violation of waste-disposal laws. Davis met with Peters at the site during the lunch hour. Davis informed Peters that the site was not properly “permitted” and that Peters would have to cease dumping waste materials there. Davis ordered Peters to remove some of the waste and bury the rest. The meeting between Davis and Peters took place the same day Davis ordered Zimlich to stop his investigation because there was “nothing out there.”

In February 1994, a reporter from a Fort Worth television station contacted Zimlich and Estorga about helping the reporter with a telecast series on illegal waste disposal in Tarrant County. The station wanted to do a feature on the S.W.E.E.P. program. Zimlich and Estorga cooperated. The resulting telecast reported the controversy surrounding the Peters site. On the program, Davis told viewers the City was taking no action to clean up the site because it was not dangerous. Zimlich publicly aired his opposing view that Davis and Mendoza were hindering a proper clean-up of the site.

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975 S.W.2d 399, 14 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 486, 1998 Tex. App. LEXIS 5489, 1998 WL 546347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-fort-worth-v-zimlich-texapp-1998.