Mission Petroleum Carriers, Inc. v. Solomon

106 S.W.3d 705, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 649, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1740, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 61, 2002 WL 32094508
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 2003
Docket01-0292
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 106 S.W.3d 705 (Mission Petroleum Carriers, Inc. v. Solomon) 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
Mission Petroleum Carriers, Inc. v. Solomon, 106 S.W.3d 705, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 649, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1740, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 61, 2002 WL 32094508 (Tex. 2003).

Opinions

Justice JEFFERSON

delivered the opinion of the Court with respect to Parts I, II, III-C, IV & V,

joined by Chief Justice PHILLIPS, Justice HECHT, Justice ENOCH, Justice OWEN, Justice O’NEILL, and Justice WAINWRIGHT, and an opinion with respect to Parts III— A, III-B & III-D, joined by Justice HECHT, Justice OWEN, and Justice WAINWRIGHT.

Mission Petroleum Carriers, Inc. terminated Roy Solomon, an at-will employee, for failing a random drug test. Solomon sued Mission, contending that it breached a common-law duty by not exercising ordinary care in the manner it collected his urine specimen for testing. Mission claims that this lawsuit is essentially a suit for negligent discharge, which is incompatible with the doctrine of employment-at-will. We granted review because the case presents important questions about whether to impose liability on employers in light of the comprehensive regulation of drug testing outlined in the United States Department of Transportation regulations.

Answering a question we left open in SmithKline Beecham Corp. v. Doe, 903 S.W.2d 347, 351 (Tex.1995), the court of appeals held that an employer owes a duty to an at-will employee to conduct a drug test with reasonable care. 37 S.W.3d 482, 488. The court of appeals was not writing on a clean slate. A comprehensive set of federal rules and regulations governs collecting and processing urine for drug testing — a scheme that is designed both to require the employer to observe collection protocols and to place tools at the employee’s disposal for invalidating false-positive test results. Because the regulations adopted by Congress adequately balance these interests, we decline to impose a common-law duty on employers who conduct in-house urine specimen collection pursuant to Department of Transportation (DOT) regulations. Accordingly, we reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment that Solomon take nothing.

I

Background1

Mission required its 520 truck drivers to submit to random drug testing pursuant [707]*707to DOT regulations. See 49 C.F.R. §§ 40.1-.39, 882.805 (1996).2 As authorized by these regulations, Mission used its own employees to collect the drivers’ urine samples for testing by outside laboratories. On April 3, 1997, Roy Solomon, an at-will truck driver at Mission’s Beaumont terminal, was randomly selected to provide a urine sample for drug testing. When Solomon arrived for the test, his immediate supervisor, terminal manager Ed Hillebrandt, gave Solomon an unsealed collection container that had been sitting exposed on a desk in the terminal dispatcher’s office. Solomon went unaccompanied into an adjacent restroom to provide the specimen. Solomon returned to the dispatcher’s office and set the collection container on the table. He then went back to the restroom to wash his hands, leaving the container behind.

When he returned from the restroom approximately one minute later, Hille-brandt divided the sample into two separate containers. Solomon then sealed each container, initialed the tamper-proof seals, and placed the containers in a plastic bag. Solomon signed an informed consent form confirming the “identity and integrity of [the] sample throughout the collection and testing process.” Mission sent one of the containers to Bayshore Clinical Laboratories in Brown Deer, Wisconsin for analysis; the other was set aside in the event further testing was required. The Bay-shore Laboratory analyzed the specimen and discovered THC metabolite, a chemical produced by the human body after marijuana use.

A Medical Review Officer (MRO),3 charged with ensuring the accuracy of the test results, informed Solomon that he had tested positive for THC metabolite. 49 C.F.R. § 40.33. Solomon told the MRO that the positive result could not possibly be accurate because he had never used marijuana. Solomon denied taking medication or any other product that might have caused the THC metabolite to appear in his sample. He did not, however, suggest that the results might have been compromised by Mission’s faulty collection procedures. Following his discussion with the MRO, Solomon called Mission and requested a retest. Mission sent the second sample to a different laboratory for analysis. On April 9, 1997, when the second test also confirmed the presence of THC metabolite, Mission terminated Solomon’s employment.

The next day, Solomon applied for truck-driving positions at Coastal Transport and MCX Trucking. The DOT regulations require a prospective employer to review the applicant’s test results from previous employers for the preceding two years from the date of the application. 49 C.F.R. § 382.405(f), .413(a)(1), (d) (1996). Consequently, as part of each employment application, Coastal Transport and MCX Trucking asked Solomon to sign a consent form authorizing Mission to release those drug test results. Mission reported Solomon’s test results to Coastal and MCX after Solomon consented to the disclosure. See id. § 382.405(f); see also 62 Fed.Reg. 16380 (1997) (employers may only release test results with the informed written consent of the employee). Neither Coastal [708]*708Transport nor MCX Trucking hired Solomon.

Eighty-four days after the urine test, Solomon passed an independent laboratory’s hair-follicle test, which was designed to detect marijuana consumption. Although there is evidence that hair, follicle testing is a scientifically recognized procedure, the test purports only to reveal the persistent use of marijuana over time, not isolated uses. Solomon concedes that the hair-follicle test would establish at most that he was not a regular user of marijuana, but could not confirm or refute that he smoked marijuana around the time Mission collected his urine sample.

Solomon sued Mission, first alleging only defamation but later adding claims for business disparagement and negligence. The trial court granted Mission’s motion for summary judgment on the defamation and disparagement claims, and Solomon has not challenged that judgment on appeal. The negligence claim proceeded to trial. Solomon testified that he had never smoked marijuana. He also presented evidence that Mission violated each of the following collection protocols, which are designed to ensure the validity of the drug test result:

(1) DOT regulations prohibit an employee =s immediate supervisor from collecting the employee=s urine sample unless it is impractical for any other individual to perform the collection. 49 C.F.R. § 40.23(d)(8). Here, however, Solomon’s immediate supervisor collected the specimen, and Solomon presented evidence that non-supervising employees could easily have performed that task.
(2) Both the employee and the collector must be present when the collection container is removed from a sealed collection kit. Id. § 40.23(b)(1). In this case, however, the container had been removed from the collection kit before Solomon arrived to provide his specimen.

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106 S.W.3d 705, 46 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 649, 19 I.E.R. Cas. (BNA) 1740, 2003 Tex. LEXIS 61, 2002 WL 32094508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mission-petroleum-carriers-inc-v-solomon-tex-2003.