Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso v. Loretta K. Flores

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2020
Docket19-0790
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso v. Loretta K. Flores (Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso v. Loretta K. Flores) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso v. Loretta K. Flores, (Tex. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS ══════════ No. 19-0790 ══════════

TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY HEALTH SCIENCES CENTER-EL PASO, PETITIONER,

v.

LORETTA K. FLORES, RESPONDENT

══════════════════════════════════════════ ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS ══════════════════════════════════════════

Argued October 7, 2020

JUSTICE BOYD delivered the opinion of the Court.

Texas law prohibits employers from taking adverse employment actions against employees

because they are older, but it doesn’t prohibit them from taking such actions against employees

who are older. In this case, the plaintiff failed to submit legally sufficient evidence to establish a

prima facie case that her governmental employer demoted her because she was older. Because the

Legislature has not waived governmental immunity in the absence of such evidence, we reverse

the court of appeals’ judgment and dismiss the plaintiff’s age-discrimination claim for lack of

jurisdiction.

I. Background

Loretta Flores has worked for Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso since

1993. Initially hired as a temporary medical secretary, Flores worked her way up within the organization, to assistant to the chair of the family-medicine department, coordinator for the chair

of the pediatrics department, executive administrative associate for the regional dean, and finally,

the “director” in charge of operations in the regional dean’s office. She consistently received

positive evaluations and reviews from her supervisors, including the regional dean, Dr. Jose

Manuel de la Rosa.

During the first twenty years that Flores worked at Texas Tech-El Paso, the school operated

as a regional campus of the Texas Tech University School of Medicine. In 2013, however, it

became a separate university within the Texas Tech University System. Unlike regional campuses,

which are led by a regional dean, universities are led by a president. An interim president initially

led Texas Tech-El Paso from the time it became a university in 2013 until July 2014. During this

period, Flores worked as the director in what had become the president’s office, assisting both the

interim president and Dr. de la Rosa. In recognition of the work she was performing as director

during the transition, Flores received a forty percent salary increase from around $60,000 to around

$85,000 per year.

In July 2014, the System’s board of regents named Dr. Richard Lange as the university’s

first president and dean of the university’s medical school. Once President Lange arrived, Flores

continued to work as the director in the president’s office, assisting both President Lange and Dr.

de la Rosa. President Lange spent his first several months evaluating the office staff’s various roles

and performance and deciding how he wanted to restructure the administrative operations. In

November 2014, President Lange appointed Dr. de la Rosa as the university’s provost and vice

president of academic affairs.

2 By February 2015, President Lange decided to eliminate the director position as part of the

restructuring of his office. He concluded he did not need a director because he planned to be more

“hands-on” and not delegate as much as Dr. de la Rosa had. Instead, he decided he needed an

“Assistant to the President,” a “more administrative” position, to handle “scheduling, clerical and

other administrative functions.” The assistant-to-the-president position had not previously existed

within the dean’s or president’s office.

President Lange asked Dr. de la Rosa to provide input on whom he might appoint as the

new assistant to the president. Dr. de la Rosa provided his evaluations of the strengths and

weaknesses of the employees working in the president’s office. Regarding Flores, he told President

Lange he did not think Flores and President Lange would “make a good fit.” President Lange

agreed that Flores did not have the right “skill set” for the position. He “lacked confidence” in her

“ability to lead the office staff,” believed she had “deficiencies in the quality of her work,” and she

“had not taken direction well” since he had come on board. He had never expressed these concerns

to Flores, however, or documented them in writing in the roughly three months since he had

become president.

On March 1, 2015, President Lange appointed Vanessa Solis as the new assistant to the

president. Flores had hired Solis in 2010 as an executive associate in the dean’s office. Solis

performed well in that role, and Flores often delegated supervisory duties to Solis when Flores was

traveling or out for extended periods. After President Lange arrived in 2014, Solis began reporting

to both Flores and President Lange. Over the ensuing months, President Lange directed Solis to

assume some of Flores’s duties, including handling communications with the board of regents,

preparing their meeting agendas, and managing President Lange’s calendar. When President Lange

3 hired Solis as assistant to the president, he did so without publicly posting the position or

interviewing any other candidates. Solis was in her mid-thirties at the time, more than twenty years

younger than Flores. Her salary in this new position increased to just over $58,000.

By May 2015, Flores knew from her conversations with President Lange that she would

likely lose her position as director in the president’s office. Having worked at Texas Tech-El Paso

for more than twenty years, she was “not new to transition.” She expected that President Lange

would make changes to his staff, and she acknowledged that he “could do whatever he wanted to

as a new leader.”

Dr. de la Rosa had wanted Solis to work for him in the provost’s office. When President

Lange selected Solis as his new assistant, he suggested Dr. de la Rosa take Flores because Dr. de

la Rosa had hired Flores and they had worked well together for many years. When President Lange

informed Flores that she would be moving to the provost’s office, he told her he did not want her

to retire or leave the university and instead wanted her to continue assisting Dr. de la Rosa.

Because Flores would no longer be working as director in the president’s office, Dr. de la

Rosa had to determine what her position would be in the provost’s office. He discussed this with

Flores, and together they created a list of what her new job duties would be. Based on this list, the

university’s executive director of human resources, Rebecca Salcido, determined that Flores’s new

role aligned most closely with an executive associate position, a position Flores had first attained

nearly twenty years earlier. The approved salary range for this position was $37,000 to $64,000.

Salcido recommended to President Lange that Flores be reclassified as an executive

associate with an annual salary of $60,000, essentially the amount Flores was making before she

received the forty-percent raise under the interim president the previous year. President Lange

4 agreed with and approved the reclassification, but he authorized the maximum salary of $64,000

for the position. When Flores began this new position on August 1, 2015, she was 59 years old.

Although other administrative staff were reclassified due to the restructuring, Flores was the only

one who received a pay cut.

Flores sued for age discrimination. Texas Tech-El Paso filed a plea to the jurisdiction.

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Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center-El Paso v. Loretta K. Flores, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-tech-university-health-sciences-center-el-paso-v-loretta-k-flores-tex-2020.