Wolfgang Hirczy De Mino ("De Mino") v. Veronica Alvarez Chu, P/K/A Veronica Alvarez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2005
Docket01-03-01127-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Wolfgang Hirczy De Mino ("De Mino") v. Veronica Alvarez Chu, P/K/A Veronica Alvarez (Wolfgang Hirczy De Mino ("De Mino") v. Veronica Alvarez Chu, P/K/A Veronica Alvarez) 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
Wolfgang Hirczy De Mino ("De Mino") v. Veronica Alvarez Chu, P/K/A Veronica Alvarez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 31, 2005



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-03-01127-CV





WOLFGANG HIRCZY DE MIÑO, Appellant


V.


VERONICA ALVAREZ CHU, Appellee





On Appeal from the 157th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 2001-64436





MEMORANDUM OPINION

          Appellant, Wolfgang Hirczy De Miño, challenges a summary judgment rendered in favor of appellee, Veronica Alvarez Chu. Appearing pro se, De Miño presents four issues, in which he contends that the trial court erred in the following respects: by rendering summary judgment in favor of Alvarez Chu, by denying De Miño injunctive relief requested by summary judgment, by not carrying out the November 13, 2002 judgment and mandate issued by the Fourteenth Court of Appeals, and by denying De Miño’s motion for sanctions. We affirm.

Background

            De Miño was a nontenured lecturer in political science at the University of Houston Central Campus during the fall 2000 semester, when Alvarez Chu was a freshman student in his class. De Miño and Alvarez Chu, both single parents, had a brief, intimate relationship that began during the semester, lasted approximately six weeks, and ended before Christmas. According to Alvarez Chu, she chose to end the relationship because she observed De Miño’s explosive temper and felt pressured by his demands that they marry, buy a house, have more children together, and live their lives according to his plans. But De Miño refused to accept that their relationship had ended and began acting in a manner that Alvarez Chu found increasingly intrusive and disturbing. As De Miño continued to ignore her rejections, Alvarez Chu became concerned that he might retaliate by failing her in his class.

          Alvarez Chu’s pleadings describe escalating incidents of post-breakup contact by De Miño, which she described as “stalking,” “harassment,” and intrusive pressure to reestablish their relationship. For example, she claimed that De Miño approached the Galleria shop where she worked and observed her through the store windows. He telephoned her and followed her on campus, and eventually approached her at work with a Christmas gift for her daughter. When Alvarez Chu refused the gift, De Miño went to her former husband’s residence to present the gift, after determining both the former husband’s address and that the daughter would be at the residence under the terms of the possession order pertaining to Alvarez Chu and her former husband. Alvarez Chu contends that her former husband refused the gift, refused to accept it again when De Miño mailed it, and ultimately filed a police report when De Miño continued to try to present the gift.

          Alvarez Chu eventually reported De Miño’s conduct to the university’s Office of Affirmative Action (OAA). She met with a university representative, who then met with De Miño on January 18, 2001. Alvarez Chu did not file a formal complaint at that point, stating that she wished only to be left alone. The intake form and notes by the OAA officer indicate that De Miño had previously issued at least two subpoenas duces tecum to Alvarez Chu to request documents for his own custody dispute.

          The OAA officer’s intake form and ensuing notations also show that De Miño met with the officer and his supervisor, the Executive Director of Affirmative Action, on January 24, 2001. During that meeting, De Miño acknowledged his relationship with Alvarez Chu and agreed not to contact her, although he disputed that he stalked and harassed her. Later that same day, De Miño’s department chair notified him that, based on conduct that the chair considered “an inappropriate relationship with a female undergraduate,” De Miño was required, as a condition of his continued university employment and in addition to general prohibitions against relationships with students, “not to initiate any further contact” with Alvarez Chu. De Miño acknowledged these conditions, which included a warning that violation of the terms of the notice would result in termination of his employment. Alvarez Chu’s pleadings allege that De Miño nevertheless continued to stalk and harass her.

          It is undisputed that De Miño appeared and was noted as “also present” on May 15, 2001 in the 312th Family District Court at a hearing relating to the terms of a possession order governing the daughter of Alvarez Chu and her former husband. Although De Miño was neither a party to the proceeding nor a witness, the trial court allowed him to approach the bench, whereupon De Miño announced that all present were “designated witnesses” for his own custody dispute, which, he claimed, was set for trial in the next month. When De Miño stated that he needed an updated address and telephone number for Alvarez Chu, the court instructed him to communicate with her attorney to obtain that information. De Miño then proceeded to request an “order of protection,” but did not succeed.

          In a letter dated that same day, May 15, 2001, De Miño informed the university’s Executive Director of Affirmative Action that he had obtained permission from the 312th Family District Court to contact Alvarez Chu. In the letter, De Miño offered his opinion that the court’s permission to contact Alvarez Chu superseded the university’s prohibition against contacting her, to which De Miño had agreed in his department chair’s January 24, 2001 notice, or, alternatively, that the conditions to which he had agreed violated his civil rights. Citing his lack of tenure and his resulting lack of job security, De Miño asked that the director not contact De Miño’s department chair.

          When Alvarez Chu’s counsel later resisted De Miño’s requests for information, a series of letters ensued between Alvarez Chu’s counsel and De Miño. These letters included a May 19, 2001 notice to De Miño requesting that he “cease and desist” what the letter described as lurking near Alvarez Chu.

          De Miño’s nontenured nine-month appointment as a lecturer ended with the spring 2001 semester. On July 23, 2001, the dean of the university’s college of liberal arts and sciences notified De Miño that he was being offered a reappointment for the 2001-2002 school year. De Miño was ultimately instructed not to report for classes for the fall semester, however, after the university provost learned that De Miño admitted his relationship with Alvarez Chu when he responded initially to the OAA’s investigation of her allegations.

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Bluebook (online)
Wolfgang Hirczy De Mino ("De Mino") v. Veronica Alvarez Chu, P/K/A Veronica Alvarez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolfgang-hirczy-de-mino-de-mino-v-veronica-alvarez-texapp-2005.