Cliff Gustafson v. DeLoss Dodds

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 2001
Docket03-00-00644-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Cliff Gustafson v. DeLoss Dodds (Cliff Gustafson v. DeLoss Dodds) 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
Cliff Gustafson v. DeLoss Dodds, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-00-00644-CV

Cliff Gustafson, Appellant


v.



DeLoss Dodds, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 353RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 99-08507, HONORABLE F. SCOTT McCOWN, JUDGE PRESIDING

Cliff Gustafson elected to resign rather than be terminated from his position as head baseball coach at the University of Texas at Austin (the University). Gustafson responded by suing the Director of the Men's Athletic Department, DeLoss Dodds, in his individual capacity for fraud and infliction of emotional distress. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Dodds on the ground of official immunity. We hold that Dodds has made a prima facie showing that he is entitled to official immunity. Because Gustafson has not raised a question of fact as to Dodds's immunity, we affirm the trial court's judgment.

FACTS

Gustafson resigned from his position as head baseball coach in July 1996. The resignation, which ended a noteworthy career and many years of service to the University, (1) centered around Gustafson's summer baseball camp. From 1968 to 1996, Gustafson operated a summer youth baseball camp that utilized facilities both on and off the University campus. Dodds became aware of concerns regarding the camp in 1996. According to Dodds, the specific concern was whether payments to Deron Gustafson, Gustafson's son, who served the University as a volunteer coach, violated National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules that prohibited the University from paying volunteer coaches with sports camp income.

Dodds testified in his affidavit that he learned after questioning members of his staff that Gustafson had established a "non-University bank account wherein income from baseball summer camps had been deposited and payments had been made to Deron Gustafson and others." According to Dodds, both University and the Board of Regents' rules prohibit coaches from maintaining such accounts. Dodds informed University Vice President Ed Sharpe of his findings and Sharpe requested that the University's Office of Internal Audits investigate the camp's finances. That office performed an audit of the summer baseball camp for the years 1991 through 1996 and prepared an extensive report on July 17, 1996.

The audit "included reviewing all relevant University records and other documentation related to the summer baseball camp program and interviewing summer baseball camp coaches and administrative staff and other Athletics Department personnel." The report explained that Gustafson had deposited revenues from the summer camp in an outside bank account in violation of University rules. One rule states that "money received by all departments from all sources shall be deposited, using an official form, in the institutional business office, unless depositing directly to a special bank account has been specifically authorized." According to the report, the rule specifically addresses off-campus activities and reflects the University's policy, consistent with that of the NCAA, that "programs under the sponsorship of the University should be under the financial and operational control of the University in the same way that other academic, research, auxiliary and administrative activities are controlled by the University."

Gustafson contends that he established the outside bank account because it avoided bureaucratic delays, not because he wished to circumvent University rules. He explained in his affidavit that although he initially created an account for the baseball camp with the University business office, he began using an outside account when the camp's growth necessitated that the funds be accessible without delays, and after the business office had allegedly lost twenty thousand dollars of the camp's money which was never recovered. Gustafson maintains that the net revenues from the various University sports camps had always been distributed to the coaches in charge of the camps, and the use of a non-University bank account did not change this distribution scheme. He argues that since he owned the camp (2) he believed that the baseball camp money was his money to manage as he saw fit. The University states a different view in the audit report: "[T]he creation of a separate account violated University regulations, made it impossible for the University to fulfill its income tax withholding, accounting and reporting obligations and may have resulted in NCAA violations." The report included several recommendations, including that the University Athletics Department discuss the findings with the NCAA's Infractions Division.

After learning of the audit report's conclusions, then-President of the University Robert Berdahl met with Gustafson and his attorneys. Dodds, Vice President Sharpe, and Patricia Ohlendorf, who is Counsel to the President, also attended the meeting. Dodds contends that the purpose of the meeting was to give Gustafson an opportunity to respond to the audit report, and that the investigation and audit report were the focal points of the meeting. Gustafson alleges that a different document, a Coaches Outside Income Agreement for the 1995-96 academic year, played a significant role at the meeting.

NCAA regulations require each coach to report at the start of the academic year the estimated amounts of all athletics-related income that the coach expects to receive from outside sources during the year. Gustafson alleges that during the meeting, President Berdahl showed Gustafson his signed form, which listed no outside income; Berdahl then accused Gustafson of having committed an NCAA violation by listing no outside income. Gustafson claims that the blank form caused him to think that he had in fact committed a violation by failing to list his outside income as required and led to his subsequent resignation. Dodds, in his affidavit, had no recollection of President Berdahl presenting the outside income form to Gustafson at the meeting.

Dodds explained that based on the investigation and the audit report, he recommended to Berdahl that Gustafson be removed from his position as head baseball coach. The University gave Gustafson the option to resign in lieu of termination based on the alleged violations. Gustafson states that the "documentary evidence" of the blank outside income form was "undeniable," and it appeared to him at the meeting that he had violated NCAA rules, leaving him with no alternative but to resign.

Gustafson claims that about a year after the meeting, he discovered that the original outside income form for the 1995-96 year that he had properly filled out and signed had been altered with white-out to eliminate the estimated income that he had listed. Dodds stated in his affidavit that Leroy Sutherland, who is the University Athletics Department Compliance Coordinator, used white-out to erase amounts erroneously listed as outside income to ensure that the form complied with applicable NCAA regulations. There is evidence in the record that Sutherland had similarly altered other coaches' forms when amounts that were in fact University income were mistakenly listed as outside income.

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Cliff Gustafson v. DeLoss Dodds, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cliff-gustafson-v-deloss-dodds-texapp-2001.