ORAMULU v. Washington Mutual Bank

699 F. Supp. 2d 898, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43429
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedMay 22, 2009
DocketC.A. H-08-00277
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 699 F. Supp. 2d 898 (ORAMULU v. Washington Mutual Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ORAMULU v. Washington Mutual Bank, 699 F. Supp. 2d 898, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43429 (S.D. Tex. 2009).

Opinion

*900 MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

KEITH P. ELLISON, District Judge.

Pending before the Court are Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 16) and Motion to Strike Plaintiffs Inadmissible Summary Judgment Exhibits. (Doc. No. 23.) For the following reasons, Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment must be granted in part and denied in part and Defendant’s Motion to Strike must be granted in part and denied in part.

I. BACKGROUND

Plaintiff Ifeanyi Oramulu is a black man from Nigeria. 1 After he attended college in the mid-1990s in Nigeria, he moved to the United States in 1997; he became a permanent resident of the United States in 2002. (PI. Dep. 18:15-22, 13:16, 14:25-15:3, Sept. 23, 2008.) In July 2002, he was hired by Washington Mutual Bank 2 in Houston, Texas, as a Personal Financial Representative (“PFR”). (PI. Am. Compl. ¶ 11.) He was promoted to Senior PFR and, in 2004, he was transferred to the Company Financial Center at 11220 Fondren Road, Houston, Texas, at the invitation of Erica Wade, the manager at the Fondren branch. (PI. Dep. 43:24-44:12, 51:4-9; Erica Wade Dep. 12:5-21, Feb. 11, 2009.) In his role as Senior PFR, Plaintiff helped customers open new accounts, serviced those accounts, and helped with customer complaints. (PI. Dep. 52:1-10; 56:14-25.) Wade considered Plaintiff a good worker who was very intelligent and had excellent customer service skills. (Wade Dep. 48:21^49:1.) Plaintiff received awards for high sales numbers, and, on the day of his termination, was awarded a television for his exemplary sales record.

A. Investigation/Interrogation of Plaintiff

Debbie K. Smith, a regional manager for Defendant who oversaw several branches in the Houston, Texas area, learned that computers logged on to Plaintiffs User ID had been used repeatedly to process transactions that were found to be fraudulent. (Debbie K. Smith Deck, ¶ 3, Mar. 16, 2009, Doc. No. 16 Ex. D.) Smith testifies via declaration that she does not recall learning that any other employee’s User ID was used repeatedly to process fraudulent transactions. (Id.) Defendant began a fraud investigation. Robert Cherry, a branch manager at the Fondren branch, was eventually terminated and prosecuted for theft in Harris County. (Wade Dep. 28:4-9.) Plaintiff was never arrested or prosecuted, but he was terminated, allegedly for violating a security policy. Plaintiff contends, and no other witnesses controvert, that he was framed by Cherry.

On January 25, 2006, after the workday had begun, Wade asked Plaintiff to follow her to a partially glassed-in room at the Fondren branch where representatives from Washington Mutual Financial often sit. (PI. Dep. 75:6-16; 77:5-16; 135:8-16.) Patrick Jude Griggs, 3 at that time a senior fraud investigator and physical security specialist working for Defendant, was in the room when Plaintiff arrived. (PI. Dep. 135:19-21.) Griggs was performing the interview because Leslie Jordan, a corpo *901 rate security specialist (or senior fraud investigator) in charge of the investigation, was late. (Griggs Dep. 113:14-24.) According to Plaintiff, Griggs informed him that he was going straight from the room to detention and that he had to “be here” that day. (Pl. Dep. 193:1-6.) Griggs allegedly told Plaintiff that he was going to suffer in prison and described how men are raped there. (Pl. Dep. 198:8-17.) Plaintiff contends that the interrogation lasted 8 hours. 4

Plaintiff admits that Griggs never used physical force to detain him and never threatened to use physical force. Instead, Griggs said that the police were coming, accused him of theft, and told Plaintiff he could not leave the branch. (Pl. Dep. 194:3-12; 195:23-11; 197:20-198:16.) Plaintiff was never handcuffed and no one guarded the door. (Pl. Dep. 192:18-21, 201:6-10.) Plaintiff never asked to leave the room or to use the bathroom. (Pl. Dep. 199:8-17.) Several times, during the course of the interrogation with Defendant and the police, Plaintiff was instructed to leave the room, but to remain where the interrogators could see him. (Pl. Dep. 192:4-15.) People walked in and out of the interview room throughout the course of the day. (Pl. Dep. 143:1-2.)

Teresa Moreau, 5 another Defendant employee who was acting as a witness to Griggs’ interrogation of Plaintiff, told Plaintiff that he could not use his phone to cancel an appointment he had with a client that day. (Pl. Dep. 166:4-11.) Griggs would not let Plaintiff go back to his desk. (Pl. Dep. 200:21.) Subsequently, the police arrived, questioned Plaintiff, and then left without arresting him. (Pl. Dep. 195:10-20.) After the police left, Griggs escorted Plaintiff outside and searched his car. (Pl. Dep. 155:25-156:20.) Plaintiff had loaned his car to a friend for the day, and she was with the car at the Fondren branch when the car was searched, which was embarrassing to Plaintiff. (Pl. Dep. 156:11-20.) Griggs did not accuse Plaintiff of theft in front of his friend, but she asked Plaintiff if he had stolen something. (Pl. Dep. 156:11-20; 162:12-19.)

Griggs presents a slightly different account of the investigation/interrogation. He contends that he did not call the police, although someone must have because members of the police did arrive. (Griggs Dep. 71:9-13.) Griggs believes the police were called because of documents found in Plaintiffs desk, including a list of account numbers. (Griggs Dep. 89:22-90:15.) Griggs did not have a weapon during the interview, and the room where Griggs interviewed Plaintiff had no lock. (Griggs Dep. 116:24-117:5.) Griggs insists that he did not threaten Plaintiff and did not prevent him from eating lunch or going to the bathroom, and he contends that he did not accuse Plaintiff of stealing or theft. (Griggs Dep. 118:1-2; 118:6-10; 118:18-21.) Griggs denies detaining Plaintiff in the confínes of the Fondren branch, telling him that he was under custody for theft, or informing Plaintiff that he was not allowed to leave the Fondren branch. (Griggs Dep. 121:4-17.) Griggs contends that the entire period from the beginning of the interview until Plaintiff was escorted out of the building was less than four hours. (Griggs Dep. 113:1-8.)

B. Allegedly defamatory incidents

Plaintiff contends that several defamatory incidents occurred during the interview and afterwards. During the course of the interrogation, Moreau provided Griggs a photo. (Pl. Dep. 187:24-188:2.) While Moreau was still in the interview room, Griggs allegedly used the picture to accuse *902 Plaintiff of stealing money from an ATM owned by Defendant and of covering the ATM’s camera with a handkerchief. (Pl. Dep. 151:19-153:12.) Jordan allegedly escorted Plaintiff around the branch in front of customers, which Plaintiff took as an accusation of theft, but Jordan did not explicitly use those words. (Pl. Dep.

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Bluebook (online)
699 F. Supp. 2d 898, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 43429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oramulu-v-washington-mutual-bank-txsd-2009.