Jiuhong Yuan, M.D. v. the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 2012
Docket01-09-00947-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Jiuhong Yuan, M.D. v. the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (Jiuhong Yuan, M.D. v. the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston) 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
Jiuhong Yuan, M.D. v. the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued January 26, 2012

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00947-CV

———————————

Jiuhong Yuan, M.D., Appellant

V.

The University of Texas Health Science Center                    at Houston, Appellee

On Appeal from the 157th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 2008-53937

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Dr. Jiuhong Yuan appeals the summary judgment of his suit against the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UT Health) in which he alleged retaliation for having filed a report of sexual harassment.  Yuan contends the summary judgment was error because he had established a prima facie case and there exist questions of material fact precluding summary judgment.  We affirm.

Background

Dr. Yuan is a research associate in UT Health’s Department of Surgery, Division of Urology.  In September 2005, the Division of Urology and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology began a collaborative research project based in the lab of the project’s principal investigator, Dr. Yang Xia, an associate professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.  Dr. Yuan collected and analyzed data for the project, reporting to both Dr. Xia and Dr. Run Wang, the Director of the Division of Urology.

According to Dr. Yuan, the collaboration between the Division of Urology and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology proceeded smoothly until his discovery in March 2006 [1] that Drs. Xia and Rodney Kellems, Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, were having an affair.  No longer comfortable reporting to Dr. Xia in her office, Dr. Yuan began communicating via email and through his supervisor, Dr. Wang.  According to Dr. Yuan, both Drs. Xia and Kellems felt that Dr. Yuan was being disrespectful of Dr. Xia and complained to Dr. Wang about his behavior and demanded an apology.  After Dr. Wang advised him to do so for the sake of the project, Dr. Yuan apologized.

Dr. Yuan contends that in May 2006 Dr. Xia used data from their collaborative research to submit a NIH grant application that failed to list either Dr. Wang or Dr. Yuan as co-investigators.  He also alleges that Dr. Xia presented the material at an international meeting without notifying them or crediting them for their contribution.  He further complains that his reputation in the scientific community was damaged when Dr. Kellems contacted the Asian Journal of Andrology and accused him of using the project’s data in an article he sought to publish in the Journal.

The working relationship with Drs. Xia and Kellems was strained further in early September 2006, when Dr. Yuan ran into them at an out-of-town restaurant.  The next working day, in a meeting with Dr. Kellems, the purpose of which, according to Dr. Yuan, was to gauge his reaction to their most recent encounter, Dr. Yuan informed Dr. Kellems that he felt that Dr. Xia owed him an apology for the demeaning way she treated him. 

A little over a week later, Dr. Xia ended the collaboration between the two groups, due both to budget constraints and conflicts between her and Dr. Yuan.  Shortly thereafter, Dr. Xia informed Dr. Wang that she wanted to publish a paper based upon their collaboration.  She offered Dr. Wang the second to the last author position and Dr. Yuan the first author position, contingent upon his cooperation and production of all original research materials in his possession.  Dr. Yuan contends that Dr. Kellems also pressured him to give Dr. Xia all of the project’s original data. Dr. Yuan maintains that he and Dr. Wang decided to complete the project and consult the “medical school legal service” before joining Dr. Xia’s proposed publication opportunity.  Dr. Yuan kept the original research material. 

On May 30, 2007, based upon this history dating from Spring 2006, Dr. Yuan filed a complaint with UT Health alleging sexual harassment and research misconduct on the part of Drs. Xia and Kellems.  In July 2007, while Dr. Yuan’s internal complaint was pending, Dr. Xia prepared and forwarded to Dr. Wang a manuscript for publication on the topic of the collaborative research project (adenosine signaling and priapism) and her offer to both Drs. Wang and Yuan of co-authorship listings.  She also professed in an email her willingness to collaborate on a second manuscript in which Dr. Yuan would be listed as the first author.  Dr. Wang forwarded the message to Dr. Yuan, asking his consideration of her suggestion of publishing two papers.  Although he had yet to read the manuscript, Dr. Yuan believed that he was entitled to be listed as first author and Dr. Wang the co-corresponding author on the current manuscript: “[S]end me the manuscript and I’ll show her where our contribution is and why the contribution deserves first author and co-corresponding author.” 

In an email to Drs. Yuan and Xia, Dr. Wang stated that he did not believe it was appropriate for him to be listed as a co-corresponding author for Dr. Xia’s current manuscript because the manuscript did not involve the in-vivo data that he had been involved in generating and he declined her offer of co-authorship because of Dr. Xia and Dr. Yuan’s dispute with regard to the order of authorship.

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Jiuhong Yuan, M.D. v. the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jiuhong-yuan-md-v-the-university-of-texas-health-s-texapp-2012.