Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Itz

21 S.W.3d 456, 2000 WL 349787
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 25, 2000
Docket03-98-00632-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by73 cases

This text of 21 S.W.3d 456 (Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Itz) 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
Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Itz, 21 S.W.3d 456, 2000 WL 349787 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

MARILYN ABOUSSIE, Chief Justice.

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. (“Wal-Mart”) appeals from a money judgment recovered by former employee Lorelle Itz (“Itz”) against Wal-Mart and its jewelry department manager A.C. Bordwell. Bordwell has not appealed. We will affirm the judgment.

Itz asserted against Bordwell and Wal-Mart certain common law causes of action together with statutory causes of action for sexual harassment under the Texas Human Rights Act. 2 Because Wal-Mart chal *462 lenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence, we must detail the lengthy evidence relevant to its contentions. See Pool v. Ford Motor Co., 715 S.W.2d 629, 635 (Tex.1986). We will refer to additional evidence as necessary in addressing Wal-Mart’s seven assignments of error.

THE EVIDENCE

Ed Taber was manager of the south Austin Wal-Mart store; Kim Ghanem was his assistant and authorized to act as manager in Taber’s absence.

A.C. Bordwell was manager of the jewelry department at the Wal-Mart store in south Austin and at one time also managed the photo-lab department there. Each was a “specialty department” within the store, meaning that each had a separate managerial hierarchy in addition to that of the store itself. The evidence was in conflict respecting Bordwell’s authority to hire applicants and discharge employees in his departments. Several employees testified that Bordwell personally hired them after brief interviews; Ed Taber and personnel manager Colleen Griffin testified that Bordwell’s authority extended only to recommending such actions while Taber possessed exclusive power to hire and discharge an employee at the south Austin Wal-Mart store.

Other Wal-Mart managers involved in this litigation include the following. Dolores Rodrigues was identified variously as a “support manager,” “assistant manager,” and “store personnel manager” at the south Austin Wal-Mart store. Donna Crocks was manager of the north Austin Wal-Mart store. Pat Curran was district manager for Wal-Mart stores in Austin. Ray Phipps was district manager having authority over the jewelry departments of the Austin Wal-Mart stores; Donna Crocks replaced him in that capacity around January 1996.

Lorelle Itz worked under Bordwell’s supervision and direction in the jewelry department at the south Austin Wal-Mart store. Amalia Longoria, Lyliana Cantu, and Jennifer Dowd were also employed at the south Austin Wal-Mart store.

Brenda Berg was a Wal-Mart customer who frequently shopped in the jewelry department at the south Austin Wal-Mart store.

Amalia Longoria

Amalia Longoria testified as follows: Bordwell offered her employment, and she started to work for him in the jewelry department on April 27, 1995. Bordwell gave Longoria his home telephone number and invited her to call him; she never did. After Longoria started work, Bordwell frequently called her at home at night, asking her out and inquiring whether she needed money. At work, he hugged her several times in such a way that she could feel his “private parts” against her body. He commented on her body, said she looked “luscious” while licking his lips, offered her money, and brushed against her from behind. After working for Bordwell for three weeks, Longoria complained to Ta-ber and was transferred to the toy department the next day.

Longoria again worked under Bordwell’s supervision in September 1997 when she began working in the photo-lab depart *463 ment. He again told her she looked “luscious” while licking his lips, brushed against her from behind, and otherwise touched her in an inappropriate and offensive manner. In October 1997, as Longo-ria squatted to replace film boxes on a low shelf, Bordwell placed his foot between her legs and pressed against her “private parts,” causing her to cry. Bordwell repeated the act the following day. Longo-ria complained to a Wal-Mart district manager with authority over the photo-lab, who told her to compose a written statement of what had happened. As Longoria was writing, a “co-manager” at the store pressured her to finish quickly and made fun of what she was writing. Longoria gave the statement to the “co-manager” who was in the “top management” at the south Austin store. Longoria later asked the store personnel manager for a copy of the statement, but he told her he did not have it and she would have to obtain a copy from Wal-Mart’s “home office” where the statement had been sent. When Lon-goria called the home office, a female Wal-Mart employee named “Tony” informed Longoria the statement had been discarded or was “boxed up in receiving.” Longo-ria never saw her statement again until she was given a copy at the time of trial.

Lorelle Itz

Itz testified as follows: Bordwell, after a brief interview, hired her in December 1995 to work in the jewelry department. Between December 17 and December 21, Bordwell telephoned Itz at home each evening and asked if she and her boyfriend were going out. Itz told Bordwell he should not call her at home and hung up. On December 21, Itz’s boyfriend told Bordwell not to call again unless it was business-related. Bordwell did not call again.

On December 18, 1995, Bordwell questioned Itz in a back room of the store regarding Wal-Mart’s employee dress code. The two were seated close together facing each other in chairs Bordwell placed in that position. Bordwell told Itz that she had nice legs but needed to wear longer skirts to comply with the dress code. Bordwell “grabbed [her] skirt and took his hand” and “caressed” her from her “knee all the way down to [her] ankle,” commenting that she had “nice legs” and “a nice body.” Itz was “shocked” at his conduct and “scooted” her chair back. Bordwell left the room when someone else entered. Itz did not report the incident because Bordwell was her “boss” and she “didn’t know what to do.” Bordwell had not previously commented on her body or legs, “but he was always hovering around” her and following her.

A few days later, about December 21, 1995, Bordwell told Itz she should break up with her boyfriend and if she required an apartment, Bordwell would “set her up.” Itz declined. When Taber was out of town, Itz talked to fellow employee Mary Edwards about Bordwell’s conduct and how it made Itz feel uncomfortable at work. Edwards said “that something needed to be done.” Itz told Edwards she felt her job might be in jeopardy but was not sure. On Edwards’s advice, Itz spoke with assistant store manager Dolores Rod-rigues. Rodrigues took Itz to an office and instructed Itz to compose a written statement explaining the situation. Rodri-gues directed Itz not to come to work the next day, saying she would “cover [Itz’s] shift” for that day. Kim Ghanem, another assistant store manager who was present, told Itz to compose a written statement but that if she wanted to continue to work at Wal-Mart, she would have to do so in the jewelry department. Itz wrote a statement, gave it to Rodrigues, and did not come to work the next working day.

Around Christmas, Bordwell gave Itz twenty dollars in cash, saying it was a Christmas bonus and that he had given others similar bonuses. Itz kept the money because she thought it was in fact a bonus.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.3d 456, 2000 WL 349787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wal-mart-stores-inc-v-itz-texapp-2000.