Texas Tech University System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents v. Pureza "Didit" Martinez

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 2024
Docket22-0843
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Tech University System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents v. Pureza "Didit" Martinez (Texas Tech University System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents v. Pureza "Didit" Martinez) 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 System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents v. Pureza "Didit" Martinez, (Tex. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 22-0843 ══════════

Texas Tech University System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents, Petitioners,

v.

Pureza “Didit” Martinez, Respondent

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Seventh District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued November 30, 2023

JUSTICE HUDDLE delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Chief Justice Hecht, Justice Lehrmann, Justice Devine, Justice Blacklock, and Justice Bland joined.

JUSTICE YOUNG filed a dissenting opinion, in which Justice Boyd and Justice Busby joined.

After over eleven years of service, Pureza “Didit” Martinez was fired by the president of the Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center. Martinez, who was seventy-two years old at the time, sued the Health Sciences Center, alleging age discrimination. The question in this case is whether Martinez’s pleadings allege facts that could support an age-discrimination claim against two other defendants: the Texas Tech University System and the TTU System’s Board of Regents. They jointly filed a plea to the jurisdiction, arguing that they retained sovereign immunity because Martinez failed to plead allegations that could make them liable to her for age discrimination under the Labor Code. In essence, they denied being Martinez’s employer. The trial court denied the plea, and the court of appeals affirmed. We conclude that Martinez’s petition does not allege facts demonstrating that the TTU System or the Board employed Martinez directly or that either one controlled access to and interfered with her employment. Martinez’s petition thus fails to allege facts that affirmatively demonstrate that she has a valid age-discrimination claim against the TTU System or the Board, as opposed to the Health Sciences Center. For this reason, Martinez failed to allege a waiver of sovereign immunity, and the plea to the jurisdiction of the TTU System and the Board should have been granted. Nevertheless, because the petition does not foreclose a valid claim against those defendants, we remand to the trial court to give Martinez an opportunity to replead. I. Background Martinez started working as senior assistant to the president at the Health Sciences Center in January 2008. She was promoted the next year to be the president’s chief of staff. She retained that position when the Health Sciences Center hired a new president, Dr. Tedd Mitchell, in 2010.

2 Martinez was let go nine years later, at age seventy-two. About one month earlier, Dr. Mitchell emailed Martinez and fifteen other senior employees at the Health Sciences Center regarding the need to address succession planning as part of the university’s overall strategic planning process. The email opens by mentioning Dr. Mitchell’s recent discussion regarding succession planning with the Board. It goes on to describe the results of an internal analysis of employees in leadership positions, and it concludes with a request that each recipient of the email develop for Dr. Mitchell’s review a succession plan for his or her individual role. We reproduce the email in its entirety because it is the centerpiece of Martinez’s claims: Good morning everyone – Given the current whirlwind surrounding the timeline of the Legislative Session, I’ve not spent a lot of time on strategic planning for either [the Health Sciences Center] or the [TTU] System. However, with the session coming to a close by the end of this month, it will be time to shift gears and plan for the future. One of the areas that I have discussed with members of the [Board] is related to succession planning at both the [TTU System] as well as [the Health Sciences Center]. It is something they are quite interested in and is timely because of the current economy. Low unemployment means that recruiting becomes harder, which means we must all be quite intentional in our planning. I asked Steve Sosland to do an analysis of our current leadership, and the results illustrate why this is necessary. For members of our [President’s Executive Council], the average age is 60, 62% are eligible for retirement, and of those not yet eligible for retirement, 50% will be in the next 2-5 years. This is not meant to insult anyone’s age or length of employment, but rather to point out that our most important governing group is vulnerable to a precipitous change at any given time.

3 Accordingly, I am going to ask everyone to develop a written document for their own succession planning, which I would like to review as part of [the Health Sciences Center]’s strategic planning process. Thanks to everyone for helping to square this away. Tedd About one month after Martinez received this email, the Health Sciences Center’s budget office informed her that Dr. Mitchell had approved salary increases for her and several other members of the President’s Executive Council (the same group that received the email). The next morning, however, Martinez alleges she was approached by Dr. Mitchell and told without explanation that she could no longer serve as his chief of staff. Several hours later, Dr. Mitchell emailed Martinez and stated that he had lost confidence in her ability to maintain confidentiality, making their “ongoing work together impossible.” He cited an incident the night before in which a senior vice president told Dr. Mitchell that his faculty and staff had learned “from the president’s office” that he was going to be fired. Martinez “vehemently den[ied]” the accusation that she had leaked this information. Following her termination, Martinez filed a complaint with the Texas Workforce Commission, and she later sued the Health Sciences Center, Texas Tech University, the TTU System, and the TTU System’s Board of Regents under Section 21.051 of the Labor Code. Her petition alleges that she was unlawfully terminated due to her age1 and seeks damages, including front and back pay, lost wages and employee

1 We express no opinion on the ultimate merits of Martinez’s age-discrimination claim.

4 benefits, loss of earning capacity, damage to her reputation, punitive damages, and attorney’s fees. The University, the TTU System, and the Board (but not the Health Sciences Center) filed a plea to the jurisdiction.2 They argued that immunity had not been waived as to them because Martinez did not exhaust her administrative remedies as to any defendant other than the Health Sciences Center. Martinez responded and argued that she properly exhausted her administrative remedies because her administrative charge was sufficiently broad to encompass all four defendants. The day before the hearing on the plea to the jurisdiction, the defendants alleged, as an affirmative defense, that the University, the TTU System, and the Board (but not the Health Sciences Center) retained immunity because “they were not [Martinez]’s employer.” Then, on the morning of the hearing, the defendants filed a reply brief arguing that, in addition to Martinez’s failure to exhaust her administrative remedies, her claims against the University, the TTU System, and the Board should be dismissed because “they are not properly brought against [Martinez]’s employer under Texas Labor Code § 21.051.” At the hearing, the defendants conceded that jurisdiction was proper for Martinez’s “actual employer,” the Health Sciences Center. But they asserted that Martinez failed to allege that any of the other

2 The defendants originally did not answer, and Martinez obtained a

partial default judgment against all defendants on liability. The trial court later set aside the default judgment, and that order has not been challenged in this appeal.

5 defendants was her employer, so immunity was not waived as to those defendants.

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Texas Tech University System and Texas Tech University System Board of Regents v. Pureza "Didit" Martinez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-tech-university-system-and-texas-tech-university-system-board-of-tex-2024.