DEPT. OF ASSISTIVE & REHAB. SERV. v. Howard

182 S.W.3d 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 2005
Docket03-05-00031-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 182 S.W.3d 393 (DEPT. OF ASSISTIVE & REHAB. SERV. v. Howard) 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
DEPT. OF ASSISTIVE & REHAB. SERV. v. Howard, 182 S.W.3d 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

182 S.W.3d 393 (2005)

TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF ASSISTIVE AND REHABILITATIVE SERVICES, successor in interest to the former Texas Rehabilitation Commission, Appellant
v.
Richard HOWARD, Appellee.

No. 03-05-00031-CV.

Court of Appeals of Texas, Austin.

December 8, 2005.

*396 Robert F. Johnson III, Asst. Atty. Gen., Austin, for appellant.

Walter L. Taylor, Law Offices of Walter L. Taylor, Austin, for appellee.

Before Justices B.A. SMITH, PATTERSON and WALDROP.

OPINION

JAN P. PATTERSON, Justice.

The State of Texas elevates public employees who report legal wrongdoing to a protected status as a matter of fundamental policy. The State views whistleblowing by a public employee as a courageous act of loyalty to a larger community, and we allow whistleblowing public employees to be made whole through lawsuits against the State. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§ 554.002-.003 (West 2004). Richard Howard, a unit manager with 24 years of service at the Texas Department of Assistive and Rehabilitative Services, reported several of his employer's practices that he believed violated the law to the State Auditor's Office ("SAO"). Howard alleges in his petition that when he requested clarification of Department practices from his own human resources director, as per the instructions of the SAO representative, his superiors learned of his report to the SAO and retaliated. Howard was counseled and rated below standard on his yearly performance appraisal, effectively denying him promotions and merit pay increases. Howard sued the department under the Whistleblower Act, and a jury awarded him damages, costs and attorney's fees. In six issues, the Department challenges whether the evidence is legally and factually sufficient to sustain the jury's verdict. Because we find that the evidence is legally and factually sufficient, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Howard, who possesses a Ph.D. in anthropology from the University of Texas, is a unit manager in the disability determination services division of the Department. From the time Howard was employed by the predecessor of the Department in 1977 to the time of this dispute in 2001, he had established an exemplary work record, rising to his current position from the position of entry-level disability examiner. The testimony at trial indicates that, despite supervising a changing staff of 16 disability examiners, his unit consistently ranked among the Department's best in annual performance appraisals.

The record contains the caseload performance statistics that were used by the Department to evaluate individual units for cost-effectiveness and the timely processing of cases for the years 1997 to 2001. Based on the Department's performance standards, the rankings of Howard's unit were strong. Howard's unit ranked second, first, first, first and first, respectively, among the five units in his directorate, and sixth, second, third, fourth and third, respectively, *397 among the 25 units in his division. Howard's unit performed capably despite accepting "underperforming" examiners from other units, which he then retrained and developed into better performing employees. During fiscal year 1999, Director Connie Miller, Howard's supervisor, assigned Howard an examiner that had not met all of his job standards for the previous ten years. On Howard's performance appraisal dated September 1999, Miller noted, "[this disability examiner] meets or exceeds all of his job performance standards for FY-99. The above exemplifies Mr. Howard's ability to manage people."

He received similar accolades from his subordinates. He was nominated by unit employees for employee of the year for a sixth time in 1997. The record also includes a letter from three examiners in his unit, sent to Miller, which praised Howard for being "supportive" and an "exemplary supervisor." It stated, "[Howard's] skills as a mentor and problem solver continue to inspire us to try and excel above and beyond the general expectations of the agency." An associate commissioner who received a copy of the letter wrote to Howard, "[n]otes such as these ... are elusive these days. I value what you did to earn this support and respect." Howard testified that in his 24 years at the Department, including 11 as a unit manager, he had never been rated below standard on any performance evaluation. Until 2001.

In late 2000, Howard became concerned with what he considered to be the arbitrary actions and policy decisions by upper management that he believed were hurting worker morale. When two of his subordinates were refused promotions based on unwritten career ladder requirements, he considered it "the straw that broke the camel's back." Howard compiled a list of the practices that concerned him, placing each into one of two different categories of infractions: he called the first the non-uniform application of policy and the second the falsification of state documents. In November or December 2000, he called the SAO and reported the practices.

The SAO representative did not take immediate action on the call. Instead, he referred Howard to the Department's human resources director for a written clarification of Department policy. Howard then requested the information from the director of human resources, Josephine Sanchez, as per the instructions of the SAO representative. In the organizational structure of the Department, however, Sanchez reported directly to Deputy Commissioner David Ward. Sanchez testified that even though Ward had hired her to specifically address the Department's problems with inconsistent practice and policy, Ward was irate when she told him of Howard's report on approximately January 3, 2001. Ward, according to Sanchez, called Howard a "loose cannon," and a "whistleblower," and "stated that Richard was not going to be promotable." According to Sanchez, Ward demanded that she not give any more information to Howard, including the policy interpretations requested by the SAO, and that if she did, Ward would view it as a personal attack on him by Sanchez.

On January 3, 2001, Ward's direct subordinate, Associate Commissioner Kay Chee, instructed Howard's supervisor, Miller, to discipline Howard for transferring reconsideration files between disability examiners. Miller, who testified that Howard was "one of my best supervisors," hesitated. According to Miller, there was no written policy that prohibited Howard's actions, this type of transfer was routine in the Department, and Howard was the only *398 manager that he was instructed to discipline.

Despite disciplining Howard in January, Miller recommended Howard for a merit increase on May 29, writing, "Howard has met and/or exceeded performance standards of all essential marginal job functions of his functional job description over the last twelve months." On October 12, Howard's merit increase was denied by Commissioner Chee, who instead directed Miller to discipline Howard again, this time because one of Howard's disability examiners misplaced a file, which delayed its processing for a substantial period of time. Miller disagreed with this order, too, as unreasonable and unfair. Miller testified that if it had been left to his discretion, as it usually was, he would not have rated Howard "below standard" because Howard lacked actual control over the individual files.

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