St. John v. NCI Building Systems, Inc.

537 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57740
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2008
DocketCivil Action H-06-2281
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 537 F. Supp. 2d 848 (St. John v. NCI Building Systems, Inc.) 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
St. John v. NCI Building Systems, Inc., 537 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57740 (S.D. Tex. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION & ORDER

MELINDA HARMON, District Judge.

Pending before the court in this disability discrimination and retaliation case are motions for summary judgment filed by Defendants Sirius Solutions, L.L.L.P. (“Sirius”) and NCI Building Systems, Inc. (“NCI”). (Docs. 25 & 29, respectively). Plaintiff Charles St. John (“St.John”) has filed a response to each motion. (Doc. 33 in response to Doc. 25; Doc. 34 in response to Doc. 29). Both Defendants have replied. (Docs. 35 & 36). Additionally, St. John has filed a surreply to Sirius’s reply. (Doc. 37). In consideration of these filings, the record evidence, and all applicable legal standards, as well as for the reasons explained below, the court shall GRANT Defendants’ motions.

I. BACKGROUND & RELEVANT FACTS

St. John was employed by Sirius, a business and technology consulting firm, and worked as a tax consultant on a Sirius project engagement with NCI, a manufacturer of metal building components. On this engagement, St. John was principally in charge of bringing NCI into compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in the income, franchise, sales, and use tax areas. {See St. John Dep. at 11, Doc. 25 Ex. I). 1 Leara Higginbotham (“Higginbotham”), also employed at Sirius, was the lead consultant and supervisor on the NCI engagement. {See id. at 12, 36-37; Higginbotham Dep. at 50-51, Doe. 25 Ex. 5).

This was not the first time that either St. John or Higginbotham had worked with NCI or each other. In 2004, the tax manager at NCI became terminally ill, which prompted NCI to contract with Jefferson Wells International, Inc. (“Jefferson Wells”) for assistance with its tax operations. (Lawrence Dep. at 16, Doc. 25 Ex. 7). At that time, both St. John and Higginbotham were employed as consultants by Jefferson Wells. Jefferson Wells initially assigned Higginbotham to NCI, and Higginbotham asked St. John to join her. {Id. at 17; Higginbotham Dep. at 32-33, Doc. 25 Ex. 5). Higginbotham and St. John had also worked together for several other employers and had been good friends for about ten years. (St. John Dep. at 103, Doc. 25 Ex. 1; Higginbotham Dep. at 29-30, 100-01, 221-22, Doc. 25 Ex. 5).

In January 2005, St. John and Higginbotham resigned from Jefferson Wells. {See St. John Resignation, Doc. 29 Ex. F; Higginbotham Dep. at 36-37, Doc. 25 Ex. 5). Although both left Jefferson Wells under the impression that they would become employees of NCI, a hiring freeze instituted by NCI’s newly-hired Chief Financial Officer, Francis Powell (“Powell”), precluded employment for St. John and Higginbotham at NCI. Nevertheless, Bill Lawrence (“Lawrence”), NCI’s Corporate Controller, wanted both *853 to continue with the NCI engagement, and so, the parties discussed various employment alternatives. (See Lawrence Dep. at 19-20, Doc. 33 Ex. 1). Higginbotham arrived at an adequate solution when she approached Kristi Chickering (“Chicker-ing”), a managing partner at Sirius, about Sirius hiring her and St. John to work on the NCI engagement. (St. John Dep. at 19-22, Doc. 25 Ex. 1; Higginbotham Dep. at 41-43, Doc. 25 Ex. 5). Chickering agreed to the arrangement, and Sirius offered Higginbotham and St. John positions as tax consultants effective in late February 2005. (Chickering Deck ¶ 5, Doc. 25 Ex. 2). Thereafter, Sirius and NCI formalized the arrangement in an Engagement Agreement whereby Sirius, through Higginbotham, St. John, and other consultants, would provide tax services to NCI on site. (See Engagement Agreement, dated Feb. 22, 2005, Doc. 25 Ex. 4). It was on Higginbotham’s recommendation that Sirius hired St. John. (Chickering Dep. at 30-31, Doc. 29 Ex. I).

St. John worked on the NCI engagement on behalf of Sirius from February 2005 to May 2005. During that time, NCI asserts that it was consistently disappointed with St. John’s work performance. The placement agreement between Sirius and NCI required St. John to work a minimum of 32 hours per week on the engagement. In March 2005, St. John billed an inordinate amount of time to “General and Administrative” (“G & A”) duties, for which NCI did not like to pay without more specificity. (See Higginbotham Dep. at 82-88, 126-27, 235-40, Doc. 25 Ex. 5; May 9, 2005 Higginbotham Email to St. John, Doc. 25 Ex. 13). Additionally, St. John failed to complete certain high priority assignments, such as a “state nexus study” through which he was to determine NCI’s tax liability in certain states. (See Lawrence Dep. at 35, 38-41, Doc. 25 Ex. 7). Other incomplete assignments included researching and reporting the sales and use tax status of an NCI-affiliated entity (id. at 72, 75-76), providing information to the state auditor about an unclaimed property issue (id. at 35-36, 43^15), establishing accruals for the franchise tax calculations of certain NCI affiliates (St. John Dep. at 50-51, Doc. 25 Ex. 1), and automating NCI’s tax calendar by March 24, 2005 (See Higginbotham Dep. at 73, Doc. 25 Ex. 5; see also Weekly Status Report at SS 1704, Doc. 29 Ex. M). Finally, St. John caused concern when, on April 12, he lost his temper with Higginbotham, shouted at her loudly enough so that NCI employees working in the vicinity could hear him, and stormed out of the office. (Higginbotham Dep. at 151-52, 247-48, Doc. 25 Ex. 5). St. John acknowledged that he “completely lost his cool” during the incident. (See April 27, 2005 St. John Email to Chicker-ing, Doc. 25 Ex. 20).

A part of the tension between St. John and Higginbotham stemmed from Higginbotham’s alleged disclosure of St. John’s confidential health and personal information to NCI personnel. 2 St. John had been diagnosed in 2002 as positive for Human Immunodeficiency Virus (“HIV”), the virus that causes Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (“AIDS”). (St. John Dep. at 65, Doc. 25 Ex. 1). St. John also claims to be a recovering alcoholic and member of Alcoholics Anonymous (“AA”). (Id. at 85-87). He identifies himself as a homosexual. (Id. at 67-68). Since his divorce in 1985, St. John has had no plans to remarry or have additional children. (Id. at 7-8). Higginbotham was aware of St. John’s HIV-positive status and his status *854 as a recovering alcoholic. (Higginbotham Dep. at 101, 104, Doc. 25 Ex. 5) She was also aware of his sexual orientation. (Id. at 100). On April 1, 2005, Higginbotham disclosed to Lawrence during a lunch conversation that St. John was homosexual. (Id. at 96-101). On that same day, Higginbotham told St. John that she had discussed his sexual orientation with Lawrence and that Lawrence did not have a problem with St. John’s sexual orientation. (Id. at 96; St. John Dep. at 178, Doc. 25 Ex. 1). Higginbotham viewed Lawrence’s response as positive, but St. John felt differently. Thus, the next evening, St. John sent Higginbotham a personal email in which he informed Higginbotham that he was upset with her disclosure of his sexual orientation to Lawrence. (April 2, 2005 Email String between St. John and Higginbotham (“April 2 Email”), Doc. 25 Ex. 14). St.

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Bluebook (online)
537 F. Supp. 2d 848, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 57740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-john-v-nci-building-systems-inc-txsd-2008.