Estrada v. Port City Properties, Inc.

2007 OK CIV APP 23, 158 P.3d 495, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 6, 2007 WL 1087391
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 23, 2007
Docket102,834
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2007 OK CIV APP 23 (Estrada v. Port City Properties, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estrada v. Port City Properties, Inc., 2007 OK CIV APP 23, 158 P.3d 495, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 6, 2007 WL 1087391 (Okla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

LARRY JOPLIN, Presiding Judge.

T1 Plaintiff/Appellant Phillip Estrada (Plaintiff) seeks review of the trial court's order granting the demurrer to the evidence/motion for directed verdict of Defendant/Appellee Port City Properties, Inc., d/b/a Hodges Warehouse (Defendant), on Plaintiffs claim for wrongful, retaliatory termination of his employment. In this appeal, Plaintiff asserts he presented evidence establishing a prima facie case for recovery. Having reviewed the record, we agree. The order of the trial court is accordingly reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.

12 Plaintiff commenced the instant action in November 2008, seeking recovery of damages as a result of Defendant's alleged wrongful termination of his employment in retaliation for his hiring of an attorney and pursuit of a workers' compensation claim. Defendant denied retaliatory motive.

¶ 3 At trial over two days in October 2005, Plaintiff testified that he suffered a job-related injury to his left ankle in January 2003, that he received payments from Defendant's workers' compensation insurance carrier for temporary total disability (TTD) during his absence from work, and that he returned to work for Defendant in March 2003 upon release by his treating physician. Plaintiff continued to experience pain in his left ankle, and Defendant's workers' compensation insurance carrier referred him to a different physician for examination. The new physician found Plaintiff again TTD, and Plaintiff subsequently submitted to surgery for repair of a ruptured ligament.

T4 During this second period of TTD, Plaintiff consulted an attorney, and in April 2008, Plaintiff, by and through his attorney, filed a Form 3, Employee's First Notice of Injury and Claim for Compensation, in the *498 Workers' Compensation Court. The attorney subsequently secured additional workers' compensation benefits for acerued and aceru-ing TTD at a higher weekly rate than previously paid.

15 Following rehabilitation, Plaintiff returned to work on September 29, 2008. Shortly after reporting to work, Plaintiff was called to the office and told "they didn't need me [any] more," and "we just don't have [anyJthing for you," although "there was never [any talk] of anything like firing me or laying me off" previously. And, Plaintiff denied that he was ever offered work in any other department upon his release from treatment in September. Plaintiff opined that, because he neither perceived nor suffered any adverse consequences of his first absence upon his return to work in March 2006, Defendant must have terminated his employment because he had retained counsel and pursued additional workers' compensation benefits during his second absence.

T6 However, Plaintiff admitted that, upon notifying Defendant's warehouse manager of his injury, the manager recommended that he promptly obtain medical attention, and that Defendant filed its Form 2, Employer's First Notice of Injury, in the Workers' Compensation Court shortly after his injury to commence payment of workers' compensation benefits to him. Plaintiff also admitted that, to his knowledge, Defendant had never threatened or fired an employee because of an on-the-job injury, or pursuit of workers' compensation benefits, or for hiring an attorney to pursue such a claim.

47 The Defendant's warehouse manager testified that it was necessary to obtain a replacement to perform Plaintiff's job during his injury-related absence, and that, when Plaintiff returned to work in September, there were no openings in the department where Plaintiff had previously worked. The warehouse manager further alleged that he offered Plaintiff work in another department, which Plaintiff refused.

T8 But, the warehouse manager also testified that he thought Plaintiff had abandoned his employment when he left in March. And, the warehouse manager further attributed Plaintiff's termination to the loss of one major client and a decline in business, requiring a general reduction in the warehouse workforce, although he admitted the loss of the major client did not directly impact the department where Plaintiff had worked.

1 9 Upon presentation of Plaintiff's case in chief, Defendant interposed a demurrer to the evidence and motion for directed verdict. Upon consideration of the parties' trial briefs and arguments, the trial court granted judgment for Defendant, holding:

The Court finds that the Plaintiff failed to present sufficient evidence to raise a legal inference that retaliation was involved in the discharge.... The Court finds that the timing of the termination does not raise an inference that the termination was significantly motivated by the Plaintiff's filing of a Worker's Compensation Claim or by his hiring of an attorney. The uncontroverted testimony from the Plaintiff was that no one threatened his job for filing a Worker's Compensation Claim or for hiring an attorney. The Plaintiff testified that no one at Hodges, to his knowledge, has ever been fired or threatened for filing a Worker's Compensation Claim or hiring an attorney in order to assist with a Worker's Compensation Claim. The Plaintiff has presented no evidence of any pattern of the Defendant ever firing any employee for filing a Worker's Compensation Claim within the last ten (10) years. The Plaintiff has presented no evidence that any supervisor at Hodges criticized the Plaintiff for seeking Worker's Compensation benefits or for hiring an attorney to assist him with his claim.
The Court notes that [Defendant] did not fight the Worker's Compensation Claim when it was initially filed and assisted [Plaintiff] in getting treatment and gave [Plaintiff] his old job back when he returned to work in March.
Based on these reasons, the Court finds that the Plaintiff has failed to establish his prima facie case and that the Motion for a Directed Verdict should be and hereby is granted. Judgment should be and hereby is entered in favor of the Defendant, Port *499 City Properties, Inc., d/b/a Hodges Warehouse.

(Emphasis original.)

Standard of Review

The same legal standard governs a ruling on a demurrer to the evidence, motion for directed verdict and motion for summary judgment. Harder v. F.C. Clinton, Inc., 1997 OK 137, ¶ 6, 948 P.2d 298, 301-302; Middlebrook v. Imler, Tenny & Kugler, M.D.'s, Inc., 1985 OK 66, ¶ 44, 713 P.2d 572, 586. 1 A demurrer to the evidence, motion for directed verdiet or motion for summary judgment should not be granted unless there is an entire absence of proof on a material issue, and all should be denied "when there are questions of material fact or reasonable persons could differ as to the choice of inferences to be drawn from the facts in evidence." Harder, 1997 OK 137, ¶ 6, 948 P.2d at 301-302; Middlebrook, 1985 OK 66, ¶ 44, 713 P.2d at 586. To determine whether the evidence is sufficient to withstand a demurrer to the evidence, motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 OK CIV APP 23, 158 P.3d 495, 2007 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 6, 2007 WL 1087391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estrada-v-port-city-properties-inc-oklacivapp-2007.