Louis v. Mobil Chemical Co.

254 S.W.3d 602, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 3175, 2007 WL 5145359
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 2008
Docket09-06-568 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 254 S.W.3d 602 (Louis v. Mobil Chemical Co.) 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
Louis v. Mobil Chemical Co., 254 S.W.3d 602, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 3175, 2007 WL 5145359 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

CHARLES KREGER, Justice.

After his employment with Mobil Chemical Company ceased, Thomas Louis sued his former employer and two supervisors, James Bowser and Randall Roy, for intentional infliction of emotional distress, defamation, and retaliation. The trial court granted summary judgment for all defendants. The four issues raised by Thomas on appeal contend material fact issues exist as to each of the claims and that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment. We find no error and affirm the judgment.

Louis alleged that he falsified equipment safety reports at the direction of supervisors Bowser and Roy. Louis’s petition alleged that in May 2004 Louis was accused of intentionally falsifying documents and was verbally abused, and that as a result he suffered a mental collapse. Louis alleged he was terminated on July 29, 2004, for violating the company’s ethics policy. Louis also alleged that Bowser and Roy frequently used obscene and profane language when speaking to him. Louis alleged that Bowser, Roy, and Mobil (through Bowser and Roy as “vice-principals”) acted intentionally and recklessly, that their conduct was extreme and outrageous, and that the conduct proximately caused Louis severe emotional distress. Louis alleged that defamatory and false statements of fact were published by the appellees “both verbally through its vice-principals and in writing” and that the statements were made with actual malice and/or with negligence. In the alternative, Louis “claim[ed] the protection of Texas Labor Code, Art. 451.001.” 1

The appellees filed a combined traditional and no-evidence motion for summary judgment. Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c), (i). Regarding Louis’s claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress, the appel-lees argue that the supervisors’ use of vulgar language and instructions to Louis regarding preventive maintenance records, and the company’s investigation and termination of Louis, are not extreme and outrageous as a matter of law and they contend that Louis had no evidence the appellees’ conduct was extreme and outrageous. Regarding Louis’s defamation claim, the appellees moved for summary judgment on the grounds that any statement concerning Louis’s falsification of records or violation of the company’s ethics policy was true or substantially true. Appellees also sought summary judgment on the grounds that Louis had no evidence that any of the three defendants made a defamatory statement, that any such statement was false, and that any such statement was made negligently or with actual malice. Regarding Louis’s retaliation claims, the appellees moved for *606 summary judgment on the grounds that seven months after the visit to the plant nurse Louis was discharged for the legitimate non-discriminatory reason that he violated the company’s ethics policy by falsifying preventive maintenance records. They also moved for summary judgment on the grounds that Louis had no evidence of a causal connection between a workers’ compensation proceeding and his discharge.

In his summary judgment response, Louis concedes that the issue of whether the defendants’ actions were sufficiently outrageous to constitute intentional infliction of emotional distress is a matter of law to be resolved by the trial court. In his response and on appeal, Louis argues all of the conduct must be evaluated as a whole to determine whether it was extreme and outrageous. “[W]hen repeated or ongoing severe harassment is shown, the conduct should be evaluated as a whole in determining whether it is extreme and outrageous.” GTE Sw., Inc. v. Bruce, 998 S.W.2d 605, 616 (Tex.1999). Bruce concerned a pattern of conduct by a single supervisor. Id. at 608. Here, we have two individual defendants and one corporate defendant; we cannot simply hold Bowser’s conduct to be extreme and outrageous based upon acts committed not by Bowser but by Roy. Therefore, we will examine each individual defendant’s conduct in the context of the entire case to determine whether that defendant’s conduct is so extreme and outrageous as to give rise to tort liability.

In his response to the trial court, Louis argued the following conduct was extreme and outrageous:

• Louis “filed fraudulent documents with the company in order to avoid threatened fictitious claims by his supervisors which would end his career.”
• “Over a long period of time, the supervisors repeatedly insinuated that they were willing to misrepresent the truth” to obtain Louis’s termination in a way that could not be challenged in court.
• “The threats were intertwined with derogatory language intended to humiliate” Louis.
• The threats of termination “were essentially blackmail” that compelled Louis “to falsify documentation or lose his job.”

Louis was employed as an instrument technician at Mobil from 1998 until July 29, 2004. In his deposition, Louis related the following incidents in which he was subjected to vulgar language:

• An unidentified person cursed at Louis for working on the wrong meter.
• The same day, Roy used profanity and an ethnic slur during a conversation about calibrating a meter. Louis then spoke to Bowser and told Bowser he felt that they were not properly calibrating the meter. As a result, Bow-ser wrote out a work order to replace all the meters.
• Roy used a curse word when Louis asked Roy to assist him in replacing a meter. Louis went to Bowser, who called in a company representative to install it.
• On another occasion, a thermal oxidizer blew up. Roy used profanity when Louis told Roy they had to shut down the thermal oxidizer before he worked on the meter. Someone else did the job.
• After an incident for which Louis was written up, Bowser used profanity in relating the effect of his supervisors’ displeasure with Bowser over the incident.
*607 • Roy used a curse word when Louis provided incomplete paperwork because Roy wanted all of Louis’s paperwork to reflect 100 percent completion. According to Louis, Roy knew Louis had not actually completed the work but he did not want Louis to fill out a deferral form because ... Roy wanted to be able to show that Louis had been doing the work by himself. Louis had replaced three people.

In addition to the events described in his deposition, Louis provided a summary judgment affidavit in which he states that his supervisors regularly used profanity. In his deposition, Louis admitted to using profanity himself on the job, but asserted that he did not use such language in a way that belittled others and he could not personally recall using profane language. In his affidavit, Louis averred that on more than fifty occasions Roy or Bowser used a racial slur when speaking to him. He also states that on at least twenty occasions Bowser and Roy “openly threatened to fabricate false accusations to ‘blackball’ me such that I would never be able to get a decent job in the future.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
254 S.W.3d 602, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 3175, 2007 WL 5145359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-v-mobil-chemical-co-texapp-2008.