Exxon Mobil Corporation, Whm Custom Services, Inc., and Disa, Inc. v. Gilberto Rincones

520 S.W.3d 572, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1054, 2017 WL 2324710, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 479, 130 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 265
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 2017
Docket15-0240
StatusPublished
Cited by217 cases

This text of 520 S.W.3d 572 (Exxon Mobil Corporation, Whm Custom Services, Inc., and Disa, Inc. v. Gilberto Rincones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exxon Mobil Corporation, Whm Custom Services, Inc., and Disa, Inc. v. Gilberto Rincones, 520 S.W.3d 572, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1054, 2017 WL 2324710, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 479, 130 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 265 (Tex. 2017).

Opinion

Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a complex employment-discrimination case implicating the Texas Commission on Human Rights Act and multiple common-law tort doctrines. It arises from a report that Gilberto Rincones, a refinery technician, failed an employment-related drug test. Rincones sued his employer, WHM Custom Services, Inc.; the owner of the refinery, Exxon Mobil; and the drug-testing administrator, DISA, Inc. The trial court granted summary judgment for Exxon, WHM, and DISA on all but one claim, which it dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. In a wide-ranging opinion on rehearing, the court of appeals reversed the trial court’s take-nothing judgment and reinstated nine of Rincones’s claims. We reverse in part, vacate in part, and render judgment reinstating the trial court’s final take-nothing judgment against Rincones, holding, among other things, that Texas law recognizes no claim for compelled self-defamation.

I. Background

Gilberto Rincones was employed as a catalyst technician by WHM Custom Services. WHM assigned him to work at Exxon’s Baytown refinery. Exxon retains WHM as an independent contractor to build and repair the refinery’s catalyst systems. Because of the potentially hazardous nature of the work at the Baytown refinery, Exxon requires its contractors, including WHM, to have written drug policies. Those policies must meet the requirements of the Houston Area Substance Abuse Program, a project of the Houston Business Roundtable. When WHM hired Rincones, he signed forms acknowledging its substance-abuse policy and procedures and consenting to drug and alcohol testing.

The Substance Abuse Program requires random drug testing by third-party administrators, who are responsible for providing collection, testing, and reporting services conducted by government-certified laboratories and licensed medical professionals. The program maintains a list of third-party administrators that satisfy its *578 requirements. Under the Substance Abuse Program, third-party administrators classify contractors’ employees as either “active” or “inactive.” Any employee who violates the program’s requirements, such as testing positive for a forbidden substance, is classified as inactive. Exxon mandates that no person with an inactive status may work at the Baytown Refinery until completion of a rehabilitation process outlined by the program.

WHM designated DISA, which is on the program’s approved list, as its third-party administrator. In early April 2008, DISA randomly selected Rincones to take a drug test, to which he submitted on April 10. On April 14, DISA notified Rincones that his sample tested positive for marijuana use. In accordance with the Substance Abuse Program, DISA designated Rincones as inactive, requiring him to complete certain rehabilitation requirements before returning to work.

Rincones consistently maintains he did not use illegal drugs. He argued the sample tested was not actually his; he complained to WHM of supposedly “questionable testing procedures he witnessed when he gave the sample”; and he requested that he be allowed to retest with a new sample. A WHM human-resources manager told Rincones he had to work with DISA rather than WHM to regain active status. DISA offered to retest the part of the sample retained by the lab. But Rin-cones never fulfilled the requirements of the Substance Abuse Program for returning to active DISA status.

Instead, on April 15, Rincones submitted a urine sample to a private doctor. This test was negative, though the screening threshold used in this non-random test was substantially higher than the level required by the Substance Abuse Program. Rincones informed WHM of the negative test results and offered'them as proof that the DISA drug-test results were incorrect. WHM and DISA did not change their position based on these privately obtained results, as the testing was not sanctioned by the program.

Rincones never attempted to complete a rehabilitation program. And though WHM never formally terminated Rincones, his inactive status precluded WHM from assigning him any work. Rincones filed for unemployment-compensation benefits with the Texas Workforce Commission in August 2008. A month later the commission determined that Rincones had been discharged because of the results of the drug test but was eligible for unemployment benefits. He later obtained employment with another company.

Rincones filed a discrimination charge with the Texas Workforce Commission— Civil Rights Division in October 2008, complaining “that other non[-]Hispanic employees were treated differently” under the Substance Abuse Program. In April 2009, Rincones filed this lawsuit against WHM and Dallas Mentor, an alleged “misidentified” party in place of DISA. Rin-cones then amended his original petition in July 2009 to add Exxon as a defendant and amended it a fourth time in August 2010 to add DISA. He asserted various claims against each of the three defendants, the relevant details of which we discuss below.

Exxon and WHM moved to dismiss Rin-cones’s pattern-or-practice discrimination claim for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. They argued that Rincones did not exhaust his administrative remedies by failing to include the facts supporting the claim in his Texas Workforce Commission administrative charge. The trial court dismissed the claim. Exxon and WHM also moved for traditional and no-evidence summary judgment on the remainder of Rincones’s claims against them. DISA moved for traditional summary judgment. *579 The trial court granted summary judgment against Rincones on the remaining claims against Exxon, WHM, and DISA and entered a take-nothing judgment. Rin-cones nonsuited all of his other claims, making judgment against him final.

Rincones timely appealed, raising sixteen issues in the court of appeals. 457 S.W.3d 221, 255 (Tex. App.—Corpus Christi 2015). Withdrawing its first opinion and issuing a new one on rehearing, the court of appeals overruled some of Rincones’s issues, but also reversed the trial court’s judgment on multiple grounds and remanded. Id. at 231, 254. With respect to Exxon, the court of appeals reinstated three of Rincones’s claims: negligence, tor-tious interference with an employment contract, and pattern-or-practice discrimination. Id. at 249, 251-53. It reinstated four claims against WHM: individual discrimination, retaliation, pattem-or-practice discrimination, and compelled self-defamation. Id. at 223-49. It reinstated two claims against DISA: tortious interference with a contract and negligence. Id. at 253-56.

We address each of these nine claims against the three petitioners in turn.

II. Claims against WHM

WHM, Rincones’s employer, argues the court of appeals erred by reversing the trial court’s take-nothing judgment as to Rincones’s claims for compelled self-defamation, discrimination, retaliation, and pattern-or-practice discrimination. Rincones argues that fact issues precluded summary judgment and the court of appeals correctly revived his claims. We review the trial court’s summary judgment de novo. Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett, 164 S.W.3d 656, 661 (Tex. 2005).

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Bluebook (online)
520 S.W.3d 572, 60 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 1054, 2017 WL 2324710, 2017 Tex. LEXIS 479, 130 Fair Empl. Prac. Cas. (BNA) 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exxon-mobil-corporation-whm-custom-services-inc-and-disa-inc-v-tex-2017.