Willy v. Coastal States Management Co.

939 S.W.2d 193, 1996 WL 606549
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1997
Docket01-94-01261-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 939 S.W.2d 193 (Willy v. Coastal States Management Co.) 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
Willy v. Coastal States Management Co., 939 S.W.2d 193, 1996 WL 606549 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDELL, Justice.

The issue in this case is whether in-house counsel should be allowed to maintain a cause of action for retaliatory discharge under the Sabine Pilot 1 exception to the employment-at-will doctrine. Plaintiff, Donald Willy, sued the defendant, Coastal States Management Company (Coastal), 2 for wrongful termination. Willy alleged that he was fired from his position as an environmental attorney solely because he refused to falsify environmental reports and to participate in the criminal concealment of violations of state and federal environmental laws.

A jury found that Coastal wrongfully terminated Willy, and awarded him $267,283 in actual damages and $232,717 in punitive damages. In its final judgment, the trial court awarded prejudgment interest on the actual damages in the amount of $412,757.99. However, in response to Coastal’s motion to reform the judgment, the trial court signed a final amended judgment that awarded no prejudgment interest.

Both Willy and Coastal perfected appeals. Coastal appeals the judgment in favor of Willy. Willy appeals the trial court’s denial of prejudgment interest.

Background

Coastal hired Willy as an in-house environmental attorney in early 1981. He was fired on October 1, 1984. His supervisor at that *195 time, William Dunker, documented the reason for Willy’s termination as follows:

The primary reason for this termination is the fact that you failed to report certain actions taken by you with respect to the Corpus Christi Refinery environmental matters. - When asked if you had taken such action, you unequivocally denied such action.

Before he was fired, Willy had never received a reprimand, had never been subject to disciplinary action, had received merit raises, and was considered by his peers and superiors to be a well-qualified environmental attorney.

When Willy was hired, Coastal employed two other environmental attorneys in its legal department, Troy Webb and William Dunker. Clinton Fawcett supervised the three environmental attorneys. Each of the attorneys was responsible for providing legal advice to Coastal Coiporation subsidiaries, three of which are relevant to this appeal: Derby Refining in Wichita, Kansas; the Bel-cher Oil Company; and the Coastal refinery in Coipus Christi. Derby and Belcher were considered to be Willy’s clients. Troy Webb was the attorney assigned to the Corpus Christi refinery. The following facts and circumstances relating to these three facilities are at the heart of Willy’s allegation of wrongful termination.

I. Derby Refining

According to Willy’s testimony, in August 1981, Troy Webb approached him regarding a letter Webb had written to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Webb asked Willy to speak to the EPA regional director, a personal friend of Willy, in support of the letter. Willy refused to do so because in the letter, Webb “lied to the EPA about the use of processed gas in the [Derby] refinery.” Willy testified that it took him two years to rectify the harm caused by Webb’s misrepresentations, but that at his insistence, Derby purchased — at great expense — a sulphur recovery plant that alleviated the pi’ocessed-gas problem.

Willy also testified that because of groundwater contamination at the Derby refinery, a trench to intercept organic chemicals had to be built. The company’s original plans called for a trench a quarter-mile long, but Willy believed that was not long enough. Although he was asked to tell the Kansas Department of Water Quality that the shorter trench was sufficient, he refused. Willy stated he persuaded the company to build a longer, more expensive trench.

II. The Belcher Report

In January 1984, the newly-appointed president of Belcher asked for an environmental audit of the Belcher facilities. Willy, Webb, and Keith Pardue, an environmental engineer, conducted the audit. Webb and Pardue visited the facilities; Willy reviewed paperwork at Belcher headquarters. Based on the information gathered in the audit, Willy drafted a 22-page memorandum (the Belcher Report) that he described as “an analysis of the legal and technical compliance situation at Belcher.” Attachments to the Belcher Report included a memorandum from Keith Pardue that described the method used for the on-site inspections, and copies of Pardue’s notes from his visits to the various facilities. The report also incorporated a memo written by Troy Webb concerning the “legal implications of environmental regulations as they apply to the Belcher facilities.”

Sometime in May 1984, before the Belcher Report was finalized, Clinton Fawcett, Willy’s supervisor, returned the draft of the Belcher report to Willy with a number of proposed editorial revisions that included the deletion of several paragraphs and the rewording of certain text; Fawcett had also put question marks by several passages. Fawcett asked Willy to make the changes he had recommended, but Willy refused. It is unclear whether a revised version of the report was ever provided to Belcher’s president, but it is uncontroverted that Willy did not make the changes requested by Fawcett. Willy asserts that by making those changes, he would have been “knowingly falsifying, or knowingly failing to disclose, material facts that would have to be used by the clients [Belcher and its president] in their efforts to comply with the law.”

*196 III. The Corpus Christi Refinery

In 1984, the Corpus Christi refinery had a landfill adjacent to the plant into which it had been depositing various waste products. Coastal had been dumping waste into this area since the 1970s. Coastal had applied for a permit to store hazardous waste at that location, but did not have a permit.

In January 1984, as a result of violations of various environmental laws, Coastal entered into a compliance agreement with the Texas Department of Water Resources (TDWR). 3 The agreement specified certain actions that Coastal was required to take. Coastal had, however, submitted a delisting petition to the EPA. By submitting a delisting petition, Coastal formally asked the EPA to determine that the specific waste at the Corpus Christi facility was not hazardous. Coastal did not meet certain deadlines mandated by the compliance agreement. Troy Webb told Russell Lewis, an inspector with TDWR, that Coastal was not meeting its deadlines because it had sought delisting, and that if the EPA granted the delisting petition, there would be no violation of environmental laws. The EPA did not, however, grant the de-listing petition. Willy testified that “[e]very-one knew that the delisting petition would [not] be granted by the EPA,” and that the delisting petition was a method by which Coastal could delay correcting the various environmental law violations.

The Corpus Christi facility was considered to be Webb’s client. • In June of 1984, however, Willy had a telephone conversation with TDWR inspector Lewis concerning financial assurance documents Coastal was required to file.

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939 S.W.2d 193, 1996 WL 606549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willy-v-coastal-states-management-co-texapp-1997.