Vaughn v. Texas Employment Commission

792 S.W.2d 139, 1990 WL 57366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1990
Docket01-89-00836-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 792 S.W.2d 139 (Vaughn v. Texas Employment Commission) 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
Vaughn v. Texas Employment Commission, 792 S.W.2d 139, 1990 WL 57366 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

DUGGAN, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order dismissing appellant’s causes of action against ap-pellees with prejudice and awarding attorney’s fees to the defendants as sanctions for discovery abuse.

The plaintiff-appellant does not challenge the trial court’s findings that she committed perjury and fabricated evidence in her deposition and discovery responses, and that she committed perjury during the hearing on appellees’ motion for sanctions. Without disputing the trial court’s finding of her misconduct, appellant complains that under the worst-case scenario, the “harsh and punitive” remedies imposed were excessive and constituted an abuse of the court’s discretion. She particularly complains of the trial court’s action on its own motion, after hearing the testimony at the sanctions hearing, in reconsolidating and dismissing her previously severed cause of action against one of the appellees; she asserts this appellee was not affected by any perjury and fabrication of evidence.

Appellant, Zelda E. Vaughn, was employed by appellee, Gulf Publishing Company, under the supervision of appellees, Kathy Coffman and Clayton Umbach, until November 1985. She thereafter applied for unemployment benefits, which appellee, Texas Employment Commission (“TEC”), denied. In September 1986, Vaughn filed suit against Gulf Publishing, Coffman, Um-bach, and TEC, alleging wrongful termination, defamation, and wrongful denial of unemployment benefits. Because her claim against TEC for wrongful denial of unemployment benefits involved a different standard of proof from that governing her claims against Gulf Publishing, Coffman, and Umbach, the trial court granted appel-lees’ motion to sever these claims less than a month before the trial setting.

Vaughn’s case against Gulf Publishing, Coffman, and Umbach had proceeded through pretrial discovery on theories of wrongful termination and defamation. In October 1987, appellees sent discovery requests to Vaughn, specifically requesting information supporting her cause of action for defamation. As part of her sworn response, Vaughn produced a list of more than 160 business entities to which she purportedly had applied for and been denied employment. She also produced several handwritten documents she claimed were transcriptions of telephone conversations between prospective employers and Coffman, her former supervisor at Gulf Publishing.

During Vaughn’s deposition, taken June 10, 1988, she swore that she prepared the *141 transcripts from tape-recorded conversations between prospective employers and Coffman. She further swore that she was not present when the conversations took place and that she had merely asked each of these prospective employers to call Coff-man to obtain a reference, and to record their conversations in order to help Vaughn determine why she was having difficulty getting a job. She testified that each transcript contained false statements made by Coffman which (1) prevented her employment by the persons making the recordings, and (2) were illustrative of the slanderous comments Coffman made to the other 160 or so prospective employers who had denied her employment.

One of the transcripts referenced in Vaughn’s deposition reflects a conversation between a Jean Cox and Coffman on August 27, 1987. The transcript indicates that Cox worked at an insurance agency where Vaughn applied for employment, and that Cox called Coffman to check references on Vaughn. During Vaughn’s deposition, she swore that Cox was a supervisor at the insurance agency; that Cox had authority to make recommendations concerning employment of job applicants; that she explained to Cox she was having trouble getting a job, and asked Cox to record her conversation with Coffman; that Cox agreed to make the recording and in fact did so; and that she, Vaughn, was not present when the recording was made.

In July 1988, Vaughn spent two days at the court reporter’s office reviewing her deposition and made over 35 corrections to the transcript, including grammatical changes and narrative explanations of her testimony. However, none of Vaughn’s corrections attempted to clarify, delete, or alter any of the references to the purported August 27, 1987, telephone conversation between Coffman and Cox.

On May 11, 1989, appellees attorneys learned of the fabricated evidence and confronted Vaughn’s attorney with this information. On May 12, 1989, Vaughn filed an amended petition which de-emphasized her defamation claim. On May 15, 1989, appel-lees moved to dismiss the case pursuant to Texas Rules of Civil Procedure 13, 215(2)(b), and 215(3). 1 A hearing was set for May 17, 1989, and reset until May 22, 1989, the day the case was called for trial. On May 17, 1989, the original motion hearing date, Vaughn filed a written response entitled “Plaintiff’s Retractions and Corrections of Deposition Testimony.” By this pleading, she attempted to retract her statements regarding the telephone conversation between “Cox” and Coffman by altering or deleting 27 portions of her deposition dealing with the transcript.

During the hearing on May 22, 1989, appellees called Vaughn as a witness. She testified that part of the basis of her claim against appellees was that she could not get a job because of bad things Coffman had said about her. When she was confronted with the transcript of the purported telephone conversation between Cox and Coffman, Vaughn conceded that (1) she had never approached Cox to ask her to call Coffman, and (2) the transcript actually reflected a conversation between Coffman and Vaughn personally. She admitted that her initial production of the transcript was made in response to appellees’ specific interrogatory asking her to identify every false and malicious statement or bad recommendation made by appellees. However, she refused to acknowledge that she had lied about the transcript during her deposition and repeatedly insisted that she had used Cox’s name “inadvertently.”

After Vaughn’s testimony, appellees called Arvy Jean Cox as a witness. Cox testified that she knew Vaughn casually through church, but had never discussed *142 with Vaughn her application for a job at the insurance agency. Cox stated that Vaughn never asked her to phone Coffman at Gulf Publishing, and emphatically denied making the phone call referenced in the fabricated transcript.

Cox went on to recount that Vaughn telephoned her on May 11, 1989, and told her that she, Vaughn, had done something wrong and had used Cox’s name without permission, and that she was having to “work undercover.” She warned Cox that she might get a call from some attorneys, and instructed her to “tell them something but tell them nothing.” During a later telephone call, Cox told Vaughn that she would not lie for her.

Based upon the evidence presented at the hearing, the trial court on its own motion reconsolidated Vaughn’s suit against TEC with her suit against Gulf Publishing and the individual defendants, and granted ap-pellees’ motion to dismiss. The trial court specifically found that Vaughn lied both in her discovery and deposition responses, in violation of Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 215, and also during the evidentiary hearing when she testified that her misrepresentations were “inadvertent.” Vaughn filed motions to recuse the judge and for new trial, both of which were overruled; this appeal follows.

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Bluebook (online)
792 S.W.2d 139, 1990 WL 57366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-texas-employment-commission-texapp-1990.