Monica Dyson v. Amerigroup Texas Inc. & Amy Williams

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 2003
Docket01-02-01082-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Monica Dyson v. Amerigroup Texas Inc. & Amy Williams (Monica Dyson v. Amerigroup Texas Inc. & Amy Williams) 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
Monica Dyson v. Amerigroup Texas Inc. & Amy Williams, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 13, 2003




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-02-01082-CV





MONICA DYSON, Appellant


V.


AMERIGROUP TEXAS, INC. AND AMY WILLIAMS, Appellees





On Appeal from the 61st District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2001-58744





MEMORANDUM OPINION

           Appellant, Monica Dyson, sued her former employer, Amerigroup Texas, Inc., (Amerigroup) and Amerigroup’s president and chief operating officer of the Houston market, Amy Williams (appellees), for wrongful termination, alleging that she was terminated for refusing to commit a criminal act. The trial court granted appellees’ motion for summary judgment, and Dyson brings this appeal, contending that she falls within the Sabine Pilot exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

           At her deposition, Dyson testified as follows: Dyson began working for Amerigroup as a human resources assistant in February 2001. After her initial 90-day probationary period, her probation was extended for an additional 30 days. Her supervisor, Annik Duncan, told her that time-management was the main issue and the company was going to enroll her in a one- or two-day time-management seminar. However, Dyson did not attend the seminar because she was too busy. Dyson began working overtime during the initial 90-day probationary period. At first she did not record the overtime, but, with Duncan’s encouragement, she started recording it.

           One of Dyson’s duties was to record time-sheet attendance information in an attendance binder. On a few occasions, she took the attendance binder home to enter the information because she was behind in the work. She took the binder home with her in late July 2001 and did not bring it back to work the next day. At the beginning of August, Duncan asked Dyson for the binder. When Dyson told Duncan that Dyson had left the binder at her home, Duncan became upset because she needed it to prepare for an EEOC case. Dyson said she would bring the binder back. However, when Dyson got home, she learned that her children and her boyfriend had inadvertently thrown the binder away. When Dyson returned to work and told Duncan that the Binder had been thrown away, Duncan said, “I ought to write you up.” Later, after Dyson explained what had happened, Duncan said, “I understand completely” and told Dyson to recreate the binder.

           Another of Dyson’s duties was to collect the employees’ time sheets and send them by Federal Express to the company’s home office in Virginia Beach, Virginia. If an employee did not get the weekly time sheet to Dyson on time, that employee was to fax the time sheet directly to the home office. Employee paychecks were prepared in Virginia Beach and sent to Dyson, who divided the checks by department and gave the groups of checks to the department managers for distribution. On the Friday before Duncan discovered the missing attendance binder, Shawn Alston, who worked in payroll at the home office, called Dyson to tell her that the time sheet for an employee named Andre Johnson had not been filled out. Dyson responded that they did not have an employee named Andre Johnson. Alston told Dyson that the time sheet had been signed by Duncan. The previous week, a payroll check for Andre Johnson had been included in the checks sent from Virginia Beach to Houston. When the checks arrived, Duncan had asked Dyson for the Johnson check. Dyson assumed that the check was sent to Houston by mistake and that Duncan was going to correct the error. Dyson went with this information about the time sheet and paychecks to Dr. Owen Ellington, the medical director of the Houston office, and told him that she suspected that Andre Johnson was a “phantom employee.” Ellington encouraged Dyson to investigate the matter.

           During the next week, Duncan asked Dyson about the attendance binder and learned that it had been lost. On Wednesday, the paychecks arrived from the home office, and Dyson asked Ellington what she should do with the check for Andre Johnson. Ellington said, “Just give it to her. They are going to take care of it.” She gave the check to Duncan. Dyson met with Duncan again on Thursday and Friday. On Friday, Duncan talked about Andre Johnson and said, “Don’t you remember him? He’s tall and dark” and “We need to stick together.” Duncan tried to get Dyson to say that Andre Johnson existed.

           On Monday of the following week, Dyson met with Williams, who told her that Williams and Jasmine Aponte, a human resources associate coordinator in the Fort Worth office, would investigate the matter. Williams instructed Dyson to be truthful, to tell everything that she knew, and to give all the information that she had. Aponte interviewed Dyson and, when Dyson told Aponte that Andre Johnson did not work there, Aponte asked, “Are you sure?” Aponte asked if Dyson was sure more than once, and Dyson said, “I was being talked to as if I just lost the file and that he actually worked there.” She also said, “It was like they wanted me to say that . . . Andre Johnson worked there, and I knew he didn’t. I wouldn’t say that he worked there.” However, Duncan was the only person whom Dyson identified as specifically requesting her to say that Andre Johnson existed and worked for Amerigroup.

           The next day, Dyson met with Williams, who told Dyson that she was being suspended until they determined what was going on. Williams presented Dyson with a paper for Dyson’s signature. The paper indicated that the suspension was for “Performance Issues.” Dyson asked, “What performance issues?” and said she had “been getting all kinds of accolades from managers.” Williams said, “Don’t worry about it. It’s just until we figure out what’s going on with Andre Johnson.” The following Monday, Williams met with Dyson and told her that she was being terminated for breach in confidentiality for taking work home. Dyson told Williams that Williams took work home every two weeks and that everyone took work home. Williams walked out of the office, and Aponte conducted an exit interview.

           Dyson sued appellees for wrongful termination, and appellees filed a motion for summary judgment, which was granted by the trial court.

DISCUSSION

           In her sole issue, Dyson contends that her termination comes under the Sabine Pilot

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Monica Dyson v. Amerigroup Texas Inc. & Amy Williams, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monica-dyson-v-amerigroup-texas-inc-amy-williams-texapp-2003.