Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Rita Tidwell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 28, 2023
Docket08-22-00130-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Rita Tidwell (Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Rita Tidwell) 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
Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Rita Tidwell, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL § No. 08-22-00130-CV JUSTICE, § Appeal from the Appellant, § 41ST Judicial District Court v. § of El Paso County, Texas RITA TIDWELL, § (TC# 2018dCV3019) Appellee.

OPINION

Appellee Rita Tidwell filed a lawsuit against her former employer, Appellant Texas

Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ), alleging her employment was terminated in retaliation for

filing a workers’ compensation claim after she was injured on the job. TDCJ filed a plea to the

jurisdiction, claiming immunity from suit, which the trial court denied. TDCJ appeals, contending

Tidwell failed to allege sufficient jurisdictional facts to waive its immunity.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 2012, Tidwell started working at the Sanchez State Jail, a minimum security facility, as

a jail commissary assistant manager. In 2016, she became an inventory specialist; her

responsibilities included ordering supplies; stocking and retrieving supplies from the jail’s supply

office and uniform room; and balancing her department’s budget on a monthly basis. A. Tidwell’s accident

On March 1, 2017, Tidwell was unpacking a large shipment of uniforms and stocking them

on shelves in the jail’s uniform room. Tidwell used a four-foot stepladder to place a set of uniforms

on a shelf that was approximately six- to seven-feet high. At a height of 4’11” and with narrow

space, Tidwell routinely placed the ladder sideways in relation to the shelving for better access to

the high shelves. That day, as she was descending the ladder, it began to move, causing her to lose

her footing and fall backwards into the shelving. It is undisputed that Tidwell sustained injuries to

the right side of her body, including her ankle, hand, elbow, and knee in the fall.

The jail’s medical personnel and the unit’s risk manager, Vicente Quidachay, were

summoned to the scene and determined that Tidwell should be taken to a nearby hospital.

According to Tidwell, Quidachay helped her fill out a workers’ compensation form, which

required her to choose how she would use her accrued sick and vacation leave if she lost time from

work and when she would begin receiving any workers’ compensation benefits to which she might

be entitled. 1 As discussed in more detail below, she approved the option that required her to use

all of her accrued sick and vacation leave before she would be entitled to receive workers’

compensation benefits.

Quidachay drove Tidwell to the hospital, where he assisted her with filling out additional

forms, as she was unable to do so given the injuries to her right hand. Quidachay stayed with

Tidwell at the hospital until her husband arrived.

1 Quidachay reported that he assisted Tidwell with filling out the form at the hospital, while waiting for her husband to arrive.

2 B. Tidwell’s placement on modified/light duty

At her doctor’s direction, Tidwell stayed home from work through March 6, 2017, but was

cleared by her primary care physician to return to work on modified/light duty on March 7. Upon

her return, she signed a form entitled, “Offer of Temporary Alternate or Modified Duty

Assignment,” in which she agreed to return to work in the same position with the same pay but

with several medical restrictions, including no use of her right hand and a limit of two hours of

standing and walking each day, as well as the requirement that she wear a sling and a walking boot 2 as recommended by her doctor.

Tidwell’s duties were purportedly limited to typing and answering the phone; the modified

duty restrictions indicated “you shall only be assigned tasks consistent with your physical

abilities.” TDCJ assigned an officer-in-training to assist Tidwell with the job duties she could not

perform, such as retrieving items from the storage room.

Tidwell accepted the modified job offer. As it was underway, the assigned officer-in-

training was called away to do other work on various occasions; when she asked the captain for

help, she was told that they were too “short” in staffing to provide it to her. Tidwell felt pressured

to get her work done, so she ended up working beyond her restrictions. And although TDCJ had

previously allowed designated inmates to assist her with some of her tasks, according to Tidwell,

for safety reasons she was not supposed to be alone with inmates after her injury. At the same time,

Tidwell was exposed to inmates as she went to and from her work area, where she either had to

use the stairs in violation of her restrictions or use a slippery ramp, which posed a safety hazard.

2 Light-duty assignments were handled “on a case-by-case basis” as warranted by the business necessity of TDCJ” within the same unit or department.

3 Tidwell requested a different light-duty position that would better fit her restrictions (in

open positions in the mailroom and the inmate office) and would remove her from the presence of

inmates but was told her pay was too high to place her in one of those positions. Warden Parker

indicated that HR assigns light-duty positions based on the needs of TDCJ. And HR Representative

Rivas explained that when Tidwell was offered the position with modifications, it was her choice

to accept it or not. Tidwell felt compelled to accept the offer understanding that if she did not

accept it, her workers’ compensation payments would be reduced.

C. Tidwell’s exhaustion of her leave options

In accordance with TDCJ policy, which set forth a twelve-week limitation for an employee

to be on modified/light duty, Tidwell’s modified job assignment lasted until May 30, 2017. 3

During that time, Tidwell continued receiving treatment for her injuries and provided TDCJ with

status reports from her treating physician, who continued to impose restrictions on Tidwell thereby

limiting her ability to fully perform her job. 4 When her twelve-week modified job assignment

ended on May 30, 2017, her treating physician had still not released her to return to work without

restrictions. Tidwell asked if she could move to a secretarial position but was told that the pay

differential was too great and she would not get that job, so she did not apply for it. 5 Tidwell did

3 TDCJ policy pertaining to its “workers’ compensation and return to work program” provides that an injured employee may only be placed in a “temporary alternate or modified duty assignment” for a “maximum period of 12 consecutive workweeks per work-related injury or illness,” and that the time-period cannot be extended, even if the employee “[e]xperiences additional absences due to [the] injury or illness.” The policy further provides that if “the employee has not been certified by [her] health care provider to return to full duty,” the employee must be placed in the “appropriate leave status in accordance with TDCJ leave policies,” or if applicable, be separated from her employment. 4 On April 10, 2017, Tidwell’s orthopedic doctor recommended increasing restrictions on her, to which TDCJ agreed, noting it on Tidwell’s Modified Duty Assignment Description. 5 An HR representative explained that TDCJ had a policy that employees could apply to another job but would not be given any more or less consideration than other applicants.

4 not work and was paid her full salary until she exhausted all of her accrued sick leave and vacation

time on July 3, 2017. Tidwell began receiving her workers’ compensation benefits the same month.

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Texas Department of Criminal Justice v. Rita Tidwell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-department-of-criminal-justice-v-rita-tidwell-texapp-2023.