Cox v. WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC.

300 S.W.3d 424, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 8385, 2009 WL 3490946
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 2009
Docket2-08-446-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 300 S.W.3d 424 (Cox v. WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC.) 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
Cox v. WASTE MANAGEMENT OF TEXAS, INC., 300 S.W.3d 424, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 8385, 2009 WL 3490946 (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

TERRIE LIVINGSTON, Justice.

Introduction

In nine issues, appellant Eric Cox appeals the trial court’s orders granting the separate summary judgment motions of appellees Waste Management of Texas, Inc. (Waste Management) and Tony Wad-ley, We affirm.

Background Facts

Waste Management hired Cox as a waste truck driver in July 2004. Wadley, a route manager, was Cox’s immediate supervisor, and Wadley and Cox became friends. During that friendship, Cox often called Wadley on Wadley’s business cell phone to discuss both personal and work-related matters. In the latter part of 2005, however, Wadley began aggressively seeking a closer relationship with Cox that Cox believed to be romantic and sexual in nature.

For example, according to Cox, Wadley began asking Cox to stay with him on weekends, come over to his house to watch movies, and go on fishing trips with him. He constantly asked Cox, “When are you going to give me some time?” He told Cox that he and Waste Management would take care of Cox and his family. Wadley sent Cox text messages saying things such as “Do u know who loves u,” “Just know who loves you,” and “I will always be here for you Eric.”

Cox said that “for a long time [he] thought [Wadley] was just being friendly and then it got worse and worse until [Cox] had enough.” Wadley never tried to kiss Cox or touch him inappropriately, and he never directly told Cox that he had any sexual intentions, but Cox inferred from Wadley’s statements and actions that Wadley wanted to have a romantic relationship. 1

Cox did not return interest in such an apparently romantic relationship, and he told Wadley to stop making such communications. When Cox told Wadley that he was happy with his current relationship situation, Wadley told Cox that such a statement made him angry and made him want to hurt Cox. Cox told Wadley to leave him alone and that he would transfer his work location to avoid Wadley, but Wadley told Cox three or four times that he would find Cox regardless of where Cox went. When Cox complained to Wadley about the communications, Wadley would “stop for a little bit and then he would start back up.”

*428 On January 2, 2006, Cox finally determined that he was being sexually harassed when he got a text message from Wadley in which Wadley told Cox that he loved him. 2 Cox became angry and called Charles (“Moose”) Tyler, Wadley’s supervisor, to express Cox’s fear about Wadley’s behavior. According to Tyler, Cox was vague during the call about the nature of his complaint and said that he “didn’t want to get anybody in trouble,” but Tyler was still concerned, and he believed that Cox’s complaints should be investigated.

The next day, Cox felt too much fear to return to work, so upon his own suggestion, he met Tyler and Albert Godoy, Waste Management’s human resources manager for the northern Texas area and its primary sexual harassment investigator, for about forty-five minutes at an IHOP restaurant. During that meeting, Godoy took notes, as Cox told them that Wadley was “real persistent” and that he “wouldn’t leave [Cox] alone.” Cox also showed them the text messages that Wad-ley had sent to Cox’s phone and wrote a complaint about Wadley’s behavior. The parties dispute whether Cox displayed text messages that he had sent to Wadley.

Although Godoy wrote down the text messages that Cox had displayed, Cox did not believe that Tyler and Godoy took his complaints seriously. Godoy asked Cox what remedy Cox wanted regarding Wad-ley’s conduct, and Cox allegedly “refused to offer any suggestions.” Tyler thought that the text messages that Cox had showed him were inappropriate and that they potentially had a romantic tone.

After Tyler and Godoy’s meeting with Cox at the IHOP, they went to talk to Houston Chambliss, a Waste Management district manager (and Tyler’s supervisor), about Cox’s complaints and his desire to have all communication from Wadley stopped. Chambliss was shocked about the messages that Wadley had sent to Cox. Chambliss and Godoy then met with Wad-ley to discuss Cox’s allegations. Cham-bliss says that Wadley claimed that he was trying to be a “big brother” to Cox and also claimed that Cox had previously made sexual gestures to him. Because Cox was • allegedly “vague about his complaints” and because Wadley told Godoy that Wadley’s text messages to Cox were a result of ongoing communication between them, Go-doy formed an initial opinion that the conduct between Wadley and Cox could have been consensual.

On the same day that he met with Wad-ley individually, Chambliss arranged for Cox to participate in a joint meeting with Wadley, although according to Cox, Cox told them that he did not want to see Wadley because he was uncomfortable around him and feared “what [Wadley] might do.” 3 Wadley, Cox, Tyler, Godoy, and Chambliss participated in that thirty-minute meeting. Godoy thought that the joint meeting was the “best way [to] find out the facts.”

During the joint meeting, Chambliss says that Cox only would repeat that he, Cox, was “F’d up” or say something like, “Come on, Tony. Tell the truth.” Wadley allegedly apologized and said that he was trying to be a father figure to Cox and that he thought Cox was gay. 4 Cox believes that the Waste Management officials sided *429 with Wadley during the meeting. Godoy says that the joint meeting made Cox’s allegations “cloudier” and that the individuals at the meeting did not clarify any specific facts.

After the joint meeting, Cox made about twenty calls to various mental health offices. Godoy referred Cox to Waste Management’s employee assistance program, and Waste Management allowed Cox to take paid short-term disability leave starting in January 2006. Cox saw a psychiatrist for his mental health related to Wad-ley’s alleged sexual harassment and took some prescription medicine for his depression, anxiety, and sleeplessness.

In the middle of January, Waste Management suspended Wadley for two weeks without pay because the company believed that Wadley “exercised poor judgment in becoming too close to a subordinate.” Waste Management also gave a written reprimand to Wadley and placed the reprimand in his employment file. The reprimand notified Wadley that his text messages to Cox “created a perception of harassment ..., which is a violation of the Company’s Harassment Policy.” Even after his suspension ended, Wadley only appeared at work for Waste Management between two days to two weeks until he voluntarily resigned his employment on May 18, 2006. Wadley never contacted Cox again after the meeting on January 3, 2006.

Despite suspending Wadley, Waste Management did not conclude that actual sexual harassment had occurred. And Go-doy did not report to Cox the result of Godoy’s investigation or the disciplinary action against Wadley because Cox never returned to work.

Godoy called Cox at some point during Cox’s leave to ask whether Cox wanted to return to work.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 S.W.3d 424, 2009 Tex. App. LEXIS 8385, 2009 WL 3490946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-waste-management-of-texas-inc-texapp-2009.