Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz v. Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 27, 2004
Docket03-02-00798-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz v. Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson (Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz v. Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson) 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.

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Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz v. Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-02-00798-CV

Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz, Appellants

v.

Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson, Appellees

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 98TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. GN201207, HONORABLE SCOTT H. JENKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellants Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz (the “Ruizes”) sued appellees Austin

Independent School District, Andy Welch, Darrell Baker, and Lee Thompson (collectively

“appellees”), alleging defamation and whistleblower causes of action. Appellees moved for

summary judgment based on their defenses of (1) limitations, (2) governmental and statutory

immunity, and (3) failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The trial court granted appellees’

motion for summary judgment without specifying the basis for doing so, and the Ruizes appeal. We

will affirm the trial court’s summary judgment. BACKGROUND1

Patricia and Chantell Ruiz are mother and daughter, respectively. Both were

employed by Austin Independent School District (“AISD”) at the Johnston High School campus.

Patricia worked as a hall monitor, and Chantell was a special education aide and freshman girls

basketball coach; Chantell was supervised by head basketball coach Lee Thompson.

During the 2000 fall semester, Darrell Baker, principal of Johnston High School,

received information that caused him to believe that Patricia was involved in an organized effort to

remove Thompson from his position as head basketball coach at the high school. As a result, Baker

directed Patricia not to interfere with the basketball program. On November 17, 2000, Chantell,

accompanied by her mother, made a complaint to Principal Baker that Coach Thompson violated

University Interscholastic League policy by using an ineligible player. Chantell later learned that

despite Baker’s assurances, he did not report the violation to the University Interscholastic League.

On January 2, 2001, at a high school basketball game, Chantell witnessed several

female Johnston High School basketball players looking at playing cards with pictures of naked men

on the cards. Chantell confiscated the cards and returned them to an adult relative of one of the

players. Two weeks later, after learning about the incident from parents, AISD Area Superintendent

Rosalinda Hernandez informed Principal Baker about the basketball players and the naked picture

playing cards. Baker investigated the incident by contacting the parents who had reported the

1 These facts are taken from the parties’ briefs and summary-judgment evidence. Our factual summary includes some evidence that favors the judgment. But see Rhone-Poulenc, Inc. v. Steel, 997 S.W.2d 217, 223 (Tex. 1999) (“When reviewing a summary judgment, we take as true all evidence favorable to the nonmovant.”). We include this evidence only to provide a context for the proceedings in the trial court; our factual summary should not be construed as a conclusive finding of any fact.

2 incident and then by interviewing the students. Baker then met with Coach Thompson and Chantell,

and Chantell stated that the girls had been using inappropriate playing cards at a basketball game,

that she had taken up the playing cards, and had given them to the parent of one of the girls. Baker

also discussed the lack of support Chantell had demonstrated toward Thompson throughout the

season, and Chantell and Thompson were instructed to get along for the remainder of the season.

Baker claims he told Chantell to support Thompson one hundred percent for the remainder of the

season.

On January 31, Richard Welch, the communications director for AISD, was contacted

by a television reporter for K-EYE News, seeking information about a coach at Johnston High

School who was under investigation for “pornographic” playing cards. Welch informed the reporter

that he did not know any facts related to her questions but would investigate and return her call.

Welch then called Baker, who informed him that he was investigating a complaint involving the

freshman girls basketball players but had not yet taken any administrative action.

On February 2, Thompson was preparing the gym for the school’s annual parents’

appreciation game and noticed that he had not seen Chantell or the freshman girls basketball team.

He found Chantell in the parking lot with some of her players; Chantell was discussing game strategy

with the players on their way into the gym for the game. Thompson approached the group, telling

the students to go into the gym to help decorate for the game. A confrontation between Thompson

and Chantell ensued, in which both were yelling. Thompson later told Baker about the

confrontation, and Baker spoke to both Thompson and Chantell, as well as an assistant principal who

witnessed the incident. Baker then suspended Chantell from her coaching duties.

3 According to Thompson, later that evening, when Chantell’s parents came to pick her

up at school, Chantell informed her parents of Baker’s decision to suspend her from her coaching

duties, and another confrontation ensued inside the gym between the Ruiz family (Chantell, Patricia,

and Patricia’s husband) and Thompson. Thompson claimed to have felt threatened by the Ruizes’

raised voices, language, and conduct, and was concerned for his safety.2

Also on February 2, during its 10:00 p.m. newscast, K-EYE aired a story in which

the reporter stated that at least two parents told the school board that sexually explicit playing cards

were being passed through the hands of players and an unnamed coach. During the same report, the

reporter asked Welch about the unnamed coach’s response to the allegations, and he responded,

“[S]he just did not deny it, that basically that it was, it was of an adult situation.” Finally, Welch

informed the reporter that the coach had been suspended pending further investigation. On February

3, 2001, the Austin American-Statesman ran a story about Chantell being relieved of her coaching

duties after allowing her team to look at sexually explicit playing cards.

On February 5, Thompson relayed to Baker his version of the incident that occurred

on the evening of February 2 in the gym. A parent who witnessed the incident corroborated

Thompson’s story. Baker decided to suspend both Chantell and her mother with pay. Baker further

recommended to AISD that Chantell and Patricia be terminated for “failure to follow . . . directives

that they cooperate and support Coach Thompson” and for conduct that was “inappropriate,

unprofessional, was not conducive to the learning environment at Johnston High School, and further

constituted disorderly and disruptive conduct on school premises.”

2 Chantell disputes Thompson’s account of the events of that evening.

4 On February 7, the Austin American-Statesman ran a second story, reporting that

Chantell was placed on administrative leave while school officials investigated allegations that she

allowed members of the girls basketball team to look at playing cards depicting naked men. The

article also reported that Chantell denied the allegations, saying she had confiscated the cards from

a student.

On February 13, K-EYE news ran its second report in which a student basketball

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Patricia Ruiz and Chantell Ruiz v. Austin Independent School District, Andy Welch, Principal Darrell Baker, and Coach Lee Thompson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patricia-ruiz-and-chantell-ruiz-v-austin-independe-texapp-2004.