Esperanza Martinez v. ACA Team, LLC, Universal Display & Fixtures Company, Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus, Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth)
DecidedJanuary 15, 2026
Docket02-25-00365-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Esperanza Martinez v. ACA Team, LLC, Universal Display & Fixtures Company, Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus, Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton (Esperanza Martinez v. ACA Team, LLC, Universal Display & Fixtures Company, Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus, Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 2nd District (Fort Worth) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Esperanza Martinez v. ACA Team, LLC, Universal Display & Fixtures Company, Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus, Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-25-00365-CV ___________________________

ESPERANZA MARTINEZ, Appellant

V.

ACA TEAM, LLC; UNIVERSAL DISPLAY & FIXTURES COMPANY; LUIS BARBERO; JOE BATTAGLIA; FRANCISCO DE JESUS; JESSICA GUERRA; SHAWN KERNS; AND ADOLPHUS NORTON, Appellees

On Appeal from the 67th District Court Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 067-362271-25

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Womack and Wallach, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Esperanza Martinez challenges the trial court’s dismissal of her claims.

See Tex. R. Civ. P. 91a.1. According to Martinez, Appellee Adolphus Norton—

Appellee Universal Display & Fixtures Company’s employee—made a sexually

suggestive comment to her in 2021, and when she reported the incident two years later,

Universal failed to address it, thereby subjecting her to a hostile work environment and

leading her to question whether Norton’s other conduct carried implied sexual

undertones as well. So, after Martinez’s staffing agency—Appellee ACA Team, LLC—

told her that Universal had ended her assignment, she filed suit based on Norton’s

neutral-but-implicitly-loaded 2023 conduct. See generally Tex. Lab. Code Ann.

§§ 21.001–.556. The trial court found that her claims against ACA, Universal, and

Universal’s employees—Appellees Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus,

Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton (the Universal Employees)—

lacked a legal or factual basis, and it dismissed them under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure

91a. See Tex. R. Civ. P. 91a.1.

Martinez argues that these dismissals were erroneous. In seven appellate issues,

she asserts that her pleadings satisfied Rule 91a’s minimal standard for survival. But

even though Rule 91a’s standard is minimal, Martinez’s claims did not meet it; she could

not hold ACA liable for Universal’s employees’ actions, and regardless, those actions—

Norton’s neutral 2023 conduct—did not state a cognizable claim for sexual harassment.

We will affirm.

2 I. Background

In Martinez’s live petition—which we take as true in the Rule 91a context, see

City of Dallas v. Sanchez, 494 S.W.3d 722, 724 (Tex. 2016)—she pleaded that

• Universal employed each of the Universal Employees sued.

• ACA and Universal were “an integrated enterprise” that “jointly exerted authority over [Martinez’s] employment” at all relevant times,1 with Universal controlling her day-to-day “schedule . . . and when the assignment ended.”2

• In 2021, a nonparty Universal employee told her that Norton had a sexual interest in her, and Norton confirmed as much and stated that “if she accepted his proposition of being with him sexually, he would see her work in a more positive way and she could gain monetary benefits.” Martinez refused.

• Norton “was not her immediate boss” and “she did not have to interact with him often,” so Martinez did not report his behavior.3

• After she rejected Norton, he “stopped talking to [her] and stopped inviting her to work with [him].”

1 According to Martinez, her initial “employment with Universal” had been through a nonparty staffing agency, and in 2018, she was “told [she] had to switch from [that staffing agency] to ACA if [she] wanted to continue working for Universal,” so she transferred to ACA. 2 Martinez elaborated on this characterization; she pleaded that “ACA paid [her] salary, withheld taxes, and set the terms and conditions of [her] employment assignment,” while Universal “set the terms and conditions of [her] employment, including controlling [her] schedule, rate of pay, . . . and when the assignment ended.” She explained that she had asked ACA about a salary increase at one point, and she was told “that ‘since Universal was considered [her] employer, she would have to discuss any issues directly with Universal.’” 3 Martinez pleaded that, later, the nonparty “asked if he had a chance with [her],” but as with Norton, she rejected him and did not report the behavior. On appeal, she acknowledges that “she alleges no further conduct on the part of [the nonparty], which is why [he] was not named as a [d]efendant.”

3 • Approximately two years later, in late September or early October 2023, Martinez learned that Norton was becoming her direct manager. This prompted her to report the 2021 incident to Guerra, who worked in Universal’s Human Resources department.

• Guerra “told [Martinez] she [had] talked to [Norton and the nonparty], both of wh[om] denied making the inappropriate sexual advances.”

• Prior to Norton becoming Martinez’s supervisor, Martinez had been permitted to work on an alternative schedule. But after Norton became her supervisor,4 he “attempted to change [her] schedule” to align with Universal’s standard policy. Martinez raised the matter with Norton and Guerra, she explained the “personal reasons” necessitating her alternative schedule, and she noted that her previous supervisor had approved it.

• Norton and Guerra ultimately “agreed to allow her to keep her schedule until further notice,” but Norton told her that “she ‘should be grateful’ and that she ‘owed him’ for making the exception for her schedule.”

• “Norton began standing behind [Martinez] and observing her work” such that Martinez “fe[lt] unsafe.”

• At the end of October 2023, Martinez sent a letter to four of Universal’s leaders—Barbero, Battaglia, De Jesus, and Kerns—“to inform them of the sexual harassment she [had] faced in 2021 and the ongoing sexual harassment [she] was being subjected to.”5

• Just a few days after her letter, Martinez “was informed by her contact at ACA that she was terminated because Universal said she was ‘no longer needed.’”

4 Martinez’s pleadings do not identify the date on which Norton became her direct supervisor. However, based on the dates of surrounding events, it appears he assumed the position sometime in early October 2023. 5 Universal claimed that, on November 1—the day after Martinez sent her letter to Universal’s leaders—Martinez told a coworker that she was leaving Universal, and on November 2 and 3, Martinez had failed to “show up to work or call in with a reason for being absent,” so her “termination took effect on November 3, 2023.” Martinez meanwhile, alleged that November 2 and 3 were “inventory dates” and “only a few chosen people worked those days.”

4 ACA “told her [it] would send her the name of who she could contact for another assignment but [it] never sent it.”6 Based on these facts, Martinez asserted claims under the Texas Commission on

Human Rights Act (TCHRA) against ACA, Universal, and the Universal Employees.

Her overlapping claims alleged (1) sexual harassment that created a hostile work

environment and amounted to a quid-pro-quo; (2) sex-based discrimination and

discharge; (3) retaliation; and (4) the Universal Employees’ failure to take corrective

action. See Tex. Lab. Code Ann. §§ 21.051, .055, .142. She pleaded that

• both ACA and Universal had violated the TCHRA because o they were vicariously liable for Norton’s subjection of her to a sexually hostile work environment and they failed to take “reasonable care to prevent” it; o they conditioned her continued employment on submission to Norton’s sexual advances; o they treated her differently than similarly situated male employees; o they discharged her based on her sex; o they retaliated against her by discharging her; and

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Esperanza Martinez v. ACA Team, LLC, Universal Display & Fixtures Company, Luis Barbero, Joe Battaglia, Francisco De Jesus, Jessica Guerra, Shawn Kerns, and Adolphus Norton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esperanza-martinez-v-aca-team-llc-universal-display-fixtures-company-txctapp2-2026.