IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 96-10870
___________
ROBYN SANDERS; CYNTHIA MULLANIX,
Plaintiffs-Appellants-Appellees,
v.
CASA VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH, ET AL.,
Defendants,
CASA VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH,
Defendant-Appellee,
SHELBY BAUCUM,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________
Appeals from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Texas
________________
February 11, 1998
Before POLITZ, Chief Judge, BENAVIDES, and PARKER, Circuit Judges.
BENAVIDES, Circuit Judge:
The plaintiffs, Robyn Sanders and Lisa Mullanix, brought suit
against their employer, Casa View Baptist Church (CVBC), and one of
its ministers, Shelby Baucum, for alleged violations of Title VII
and Texas law arising out of Baucum’s conduct as their marriage
counselor and supervisor at CVBC. The district court granted
summary judgment in favor of CVBC. The claims against Baucum—that
he committed malpractice and breached his fiduciary duties as a
marriage counselor by, among other things, encouraging and
consummating a sexual relationship with each plaintiff—proceeded to
trial. The jury found for the plaintiffs and awarded punitive
damages on each claim.
On appeal, Baucum asserts that the plaintiffs’ claims and the
district court’s jury instructions were barred by the First
Amendment, and that the plaintiffs’ punitive damages awards were
excessive. Also before us are the plaintiffs’ contentions that
CVBC was not entitled to summary judgment and that the district
court abused its discretion by excluding an untimely affidavit from
the summary judgment record. We affirm.
I.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo “under the same
standards as that applied by the district court. Summary judgment
is required when the evidence, viewed in the light most favorable
to the nonmoving party, presents no genuine issue of material fact
and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Ellert v. University of Texas, 52 F.3d 543, 545 (5th Cir. 1995).
Consequently, we set forth the pertinent facts in the light most
favorable to the plaintiffs.1
In 1988, CVBC hired Baucum to be its Minister of Education and
Administration (MEA). As MEA, Baucum’s duties did not include
counseling, and he knew that he was not a member of the CVBC staff
1
We apply a similar standard of review when considering a
district court’s denial of a motion for judgment as a matter of
law. Bellows v. Amoco Oil Co., 118 F.3d 268, 273 (5th Cir. 1997).
Because Baucum does not challenge the sufficiency of the
plaintiffs’ evidence, we describe the facts regarding his behavior
as a counselor as they were found by the jury.
2
responsible for providing spiritual counseling to CVBC members. He
also knew that CVBC had a written policy of referring church
members in need of non-pastoral counseling to a licensed
professional counselor.
In December 1990, Mullanix, a member of CVBC, began seeing
Baucum for marital counseling. In February 1991, CVBC hired
Sanders as an administrative secretary, with Baucum as her
immediate supervisor. Shortly thereafter, Sanders, like Mullanix,
began seeing Baucum for marital counseling.
Mullanix and Sanders each began this counseling at Baucum’s
invitation after he represented that he was qualified by education
and experience to provide marriage counseling. They believed that
Baucum was authorized by CVBC to provide marital counseling, in
part because he told each of them that he counseled other women at
CVBC. The jury found that Baucum entered into fiduciary
relationships with the plaintiffs because he acquired influence and
gained their trust and confidence during the course of these
separate counseling relationships.
Although Baucum testified that he sometimes discussed
scripture in his counseling sessions with Mullanix and Sanders, the
jury found that the counseling he provided was “essentially
secular” in nature. At trial, the plaintiffs presented evidence
that Baucum breached his duties as a marriage counselor, not only
by expressing love and affection for each of them and encouraging
them both to express these feelings for him, but also by engaging
in sexual intercourse with each of them on a number of occasions.
3
They also presented evidence that Baucum breached his fiduciary
duties, not only by having sexual intercourse with them, but also
by disclosing their confidences, including intimate details of
their marriages and sexual histories.
In March 1991, CVBC hired Mullanix as a receptionist, and like
Sanders, she was supervised by Baucum. The plaintiffs’ sexual
relationships with Baucum continued while he was their supervisor,
and each plaintiff claims that on at least one occasion, she slept
with him because of her belief that his behavior implied that she
would be discharged if she did not. Further, after his counseling
relationship with each plaintiff ended in September 1991, Baucum
began both to criticize their work performance and discourage their
hopes of promotions. He also engaged in behavior and conversation
of a sexual nature that was unwelcome at that time.
On September 22, 1991, the plaintiffs informed one another of
their relationships and problems with Baucum. Together they
disclosed the existence of these relationships and Baucum’s
behavior to a member of CVBC’s Personnel Committee (PC) on
September 23, 1991. Baucum was forced to resign his position as
MEA on September 25, 1991. On November 22, 1991, CVBC fired
Mullanix and Sanders because they committed adultery in violation
of church policies.
II.
After discovery, the district court granted CVBC’s motion for
summary judgment on the plaintiffs’ Title VII and state law claims,
thereby disposing of the entire case against CVBC. With respect to
4
their discriminatory discharge, hostile work environment, and quid
pro quo claims, the district court held that the plaintiffs did not
produce evidence indicating that CVBC’s justification for their
dismissals was pretextual or that CVBC knew or should have known of
Baucum’s alleged sexual harassment. Concerning their claims under
Texas law, the district court held that there was no basis in the
record for holding CVBC legally responsible for Baucum’s misconduct
under the doctrine of respondeat superior or for concluding that
CVBC knew or should have known that Baucum presented a risk of harm
to the plaintiffs. The district court then refused to allow the
plaintiffs to supplement the summary judgment record with an
untimely affidavit.
The district court granted partial summary judgment in favor
of Baucum, but allowed the plaintiffs’ claims that he committed
malpractice as a marriage counselor and breached his fiduciary
duties to go to trial. At the close of the evidence, the district
court denied Baucum’s motion for judgment as a matter of law and
overruled his objection to the jury instructions. The jury found
for the plaintiffs on each count and awarded them each $42,500 in
punitive damages for Baucum’s malpractice and $42,500 in punitive
damages for his breach of his fiduciary duties. After the verdict,
Baucum renewed his motion for judgment as a matter of law, again
arguing that these claims were barred by the Free Exercise Clause
of the First Amendment. This motion was denied, as was his claim
that the punitive damages were excessive because they twice
punished him for the same conduct.
5
III.
A.
On appeal, Baucum argues that because the First Amendment
precludes judicial review of certain ecclesiastical disputes, his
secular misconduct as the plaintiffs’ counselor was not actionable
because it occurred within two inherently ecclesiastical, rather
than “purely secular,” counseling relationships.2 Specifically, he
contends: 1) that he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law
on the plaintiffs’ claims that he committed malpractice as a
marriage counselor and breached his fiduciary duties because his
trial testimony—that he occasionally discussed scripture in his
counseling sessions with the plaintiffs—demonstrated that the
counseling he provided was not purely secular; 2) that in the
alternative, the case should be remanded because he was entitled to
a jury instruction that required the jury to find that the
counseling he provided was purely secular in nature and thus a
matter of judicial rather than ecclesiastical concern; or 3) that
he was otherwise entitled to judgment as a matter of law because
the evidence demonstrated that the plaintiffs’ claims were in
essence noncognizable claims for “clergy malpractice.”3 We
2
Baucum also argues that the plaintiffs were twice awarded
punitive damages for his sexual misconduct and that their punitive
damages awards should accordingly be reduced by half. We reject
this argument because it ignores the differences between the
malpractice and fiduciary duty claims before the jury and because
it mischaracterizes Baucum’s misconduct as solely sexual in nature.
The jury, therefore, did not necessarily twice award punitive
damages for the same misconduct.
3
Baucum does not challenge the availability of these
causes of action, nor the propriety of the jury instructions, under
6
disagree.
The First Amendment does not categorically insulate religious
relationships from judicial scrutiny, for to do so would
necessarily extend constitutional protection to the secular
components of these relationships. Although Baucum’s contention
that the Free Exercise Clause prohibits the judiciary from
reviewing the conduct of those involved in relationships that are
not purely secular in nature might, if adopted, foster the
development of some important spiritual relationships by
eliminating the possibility of civil or criminal liability for
participating members of the clergy, the constitutional guarantee
of religious freedom cannot be construed to protect secular beliefs
and behavior, even when they comprise part of an otherwise
religious relationship between a minister and a member of his or
her congregation. To hold otherwise would impermissibly place a
religious leader in a preferred position in our society. Cf.
County of Allegheny v. ACLU, 492 U.S. 573, 593-94 (1989)
(interpreting the First Amendment to preclude the state from
favoring religion over nonreligion). The district court,
therefore, did not err by denying Baucum’s motion for judgment as
a matter of law nor by rejecting his proposed jury instructions,
which would have required the jury to find that his counseling
relationships with the plaintiffs were purely secular in order for
it to find that his secular misconduct within these relationships
was actionable. In fact, by instructing the jury to consider
Texas law.
7
whether Baucum’s counseling, rather than his alleged misconduct,
was “essentially secular” in nature, the district court provided
Baucum with more than adequate protection under the Free Exercise
Clause.
Contrary to Baucum’s suggestion, this conclusion is entirely
consistent with the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Dausch, 52 F.3d
1425 (7th Cir. 1994). Like the plaintiffs in this case, the
plaintiff in Dausch alleged that her minister “held himself out” to
“be a duly qualified person engaged in providing psychological
counseling” and committed “professional negligence” by engaging in
“sexual relations” with her during counseling sessions. Id. at
1427-28. Foreshadowing Baucum’s argument on appeal, the district
court in Dausch dismissed this malpractice claim because it found
that the plaintiff “`failed to adequately allege that Rykse’s
counseling was purely secular.’” Id. at 1431 (Ripple, J.,
concurring) (quoting the district court’s order) (emphasis added).
The Seventh Circuit, in a per curiam opinion, reversed and
reinstated the plaintiff’s malpractice claim. This disposition,
therefore, supports our view that the First Amendment’s respect for
religious relationships does not require a minister’s counseling
relationship with a parishioner to be purely secular in order for
a court to review the propriety of the conduct occurring within
that relationship.4
4
In fact, one member of the panel in Dausch expressly
reached this conclusion. Judge Ripple, in his concurring opinion,
noted that a plaintiff claiming “that the provider held himself out
to be providing the services of a psychological counselor” would
survive a motion to dismiss predicated upon the Free Exercise
8
Instead, the Free Exercise Clause protects religious
relationships, including the counseling relationship between a
minister and his or her parishioner, primarily by preventing the
judicial resolution of ecclesiastical disputes turning on matters
of “religious doctrine or practice.” Presbyterian Church in the
U.S. v. Mary Elizabeth Blue Hull Memorial Presbyterian Church, 393
U.S. 440, 449-50 (1969); see also Thomas v. Review Bd. of Ind.
Employment Security Div., 450 U.S. 707, 715-16 (1981) (“Courts are
not arbiters of scriptural interpretation.”). The sanctity of
these relationships is further protected by other religious
freedoms, including the limited right to engage in conduct that is
rooted in religious belief. Employment Div. v. Smith, 494 U.S.
872, 877-78, 881 (1990); Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 215
(1972). Under the evidence produced at trial, however, neither of
these constitutional protections prevents Baucum from being held
liable for his misconduct as a marriage counselor and a fiduciary
who occasionally discussed scripture within the context of two
otherwise secular counseling relationships with members of his
congregation.
Because the judiciary must abstain from ecclesiastical
disputes involving questions of doctrine or practice, state courts
Clause. Dausch, 52 F.3d at 1433. Although Judge Coffey also wrote
separately to express his view that “some combination of spiritual
and secular counseling remains shielded by the First Amendment,”
id. at 1429 (Coffey, J., concurring), this position cannot be
interpreted to mean that a minister’s counseling activities must be
purely secular in order for any of his or her conduct to be
actionable, for this view would conflict with the panel’s decision
to reverse the district court.
9
have “rejected uniformly” claims for “clergy malpractice.” Dausch,
52 F.3d at 1432 (Ripple, J., concurring) (citing, for example,
Destefano v. Gabrian, 763 P.2d 275 (Colo. 1988) (en banc)); see,
e.g., F.G. v. MacDonell, 696 A.2d 697, 703 (N.J. 1997). This is
because
such a claim requires definition of the relevant standard
of care. Defining that standard could embroil courts in
establishing the training, skill, and standards
applicable for members of the clergy in a diversity of
religions with widely varying beliefs. Furthermore,
defining such a standard would require courts to identify
the beliefs and practices of the relevant religion and
then to determine whether the clergyman had acted in
accordance with them.
MacDonell, 696 A.2d at 703. Thus, as these courts have correctly
concluded, to recognize a claim for clergy malpractice would
require courts to identify and apply the teachings of a particular
faith, thereby making the judiciary responsible for determining
what conduct and beliefs are part of a particular religion.
The First Amendment difficulties posed by a claim for clergy
malpractice are not, however, present in this case because the
duties underlying the plaintiffs’ claims for malpractice by a
marriage counselor and breach of fiduciary duties are not derived
from religious doctrine. That is, because the jury found that
Baucum held himself out as possessing the education and experience
of a professional marriage counselor, his counseling activities
with the plaintiffs were judged, not by a standard of care defined
by religious teachings, but by a professional standard of care
developed through expert testimony describing what a reasonably
prudent counselor would have done under the same or similar
10
circumstances. See Dausch, 52 F.3d at 1429, 1431, 1433 (allowing
a parishioner to claim that her minister had a “`duty to possess
and apply the skill and knowledge of a reasonably well qualified
person providing psychological counseling’” because the minister
“held himself out to be providing the services of a psychological
counselor”).5 Similarly, because the jury found that he entered
into a fiduciary relationship with the plaintiffs, Baucum’s conduct
was to be consistent with “something stricter than the morals of
the marketplace.” Meinhard v. Salmon, 164 N.E. 545, 546 (N.Y.
1928). But that “something” was “the finer loyalties exacted by
courts of equity,” Johnson v. Peckham, 120 S.W.2d 786, 788 (Tex.
1938), rather than the teachings of his faith.6 Thus, Baucum was
not entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the grounds that
these claims were barred by the constitutional principle that the
5
The district court instructed the jury that Baucum could
not be held liable for malpractice unless “he made representations
that he possessed the skill, knowledge or competence of a secular
marital or mental health counselor.”
6
Our holding is consistent with Dausch, which affirmed on
both state law and First Amendment grounds the dismissal of a
parishioner’s breach of fiduciary duty claim against her minister.
52 F.3d at 1438 (Ripple, J., concurring). Judge Ripple explained
that Dausch’s fiduciary duty claim was dismissed, in part, because
she alleged, in “contrast to the other counts of [her] complaint,”
that “the breach of fiduciary duty occurred in the context of a
pastor-parishioner relationship.” Id. That is, Dausch asserted
that her pastor was her fiduciary, not because of his conduct as
her counselor, but simply because of her status “as a member of the
congregation . . . seeking counseling” and his status as her
“pastor and counselor.” Id. In contrast, the jury in this case
was instructed that the primary relationship between a minister and
a parishioner is not a fiduciary one, and that Baucum could not be
held liable for breaching his fiduciary duties unless he “acquired
and abused” influence and “betrayed” confidences learned in a
“relationship of trust.”
11
judiciary must abstain from ecclesiastical disputes concerning
questions of religious doctrine and practice.
Consequently, to invoke the protection of the First Amendment
for conduct taking place within his counseling relationships with
the plaintiffs, Baucum must assert that the specific conduct
allegedly constituting a breach of his professional and fiduciary
duties was rooted in religious belief. See Smith, 494 U.S. at 881;
Yoder, 406 U.S. at 215; see also Destefano, 763 P.2d at 283-84 (“In
the spiritual counseling context, the free exercise clause is
relevant only if the defendant can show that the conduct that
allegedly caused plaintiff’s distress was in fact part of the
belief and practices of the religious group.”); MacDonell, 696 A.2d
at 558 (holding that in order to be protected, the “conduct at
issue must have been part of the beliefs and practices of the
defendant’s religion”). Baucum’s First Amendment arguments before
the district court, however, reflected the obvious truth that the
activities complained of by the plaintiffs were not part of his
religious beliefs and practices and he is not so brazen as to now
contend otherwise. We therefore hold that he was not entitled to
judgment as a matter of law on the ground that the plaintiffs’
claims were barred by the First Amendment.7
B.
Turning now to the plaintiffs’ claims against CVBC, they
7
Like the Colorado and New Jersey Supreme Courts, we do
not decide whether the First Amendment would protect a minister
asserting that his civil misconduct was rooted in religious belief.
See, e.g., Destefano, 763 P.2d at 284 (noting that this raises a
“difficult First Amendment issue”); MacDonell, 696 A.2d at 560-61.
12
contend on appeal that they have met their burdens of production on
summary judgment under Title VII because they adduced evidence
showing that their discharges were discriminatory, that they were
victims of quid pro quo sexual harassment for which they claim CVBC
is automatically liable, and that they were each subjected to a
hostile work environment of which CVBC should have been aware. The
plaintiffs further assert that their evidence creates a genuine
issue of material fact regarding CVBC’s liability for Baucum’s
breach of his professional duties under general agency principles
and the theory of ratification. They also argue that they have
produced evidence justifying a finding that CVBC knew or should
have known of the risks posed by Baucum’s counseling and harassing
activities. Finally, they claim that the district court abused its
discretion by refusing to supplement the summary judgment record
with an untimely affidavit. Having carefully reviewed the record
in this case, we address and reject each of these contentions in
turn.
The plaintiffs argue that their evidence creates a fact issue
regarding whether their discharges were discriminatory. They did
not, however, produce any evidence suggesting that they were fired
because of their gender. In fact, the record shows that Baucum,
who also committed adultery,8 was forced to resign, and that CVBC’s
position against adultery was neutral with respect to sex,
longstanding, and understood by both plaintiffs at the time they
8
Baucum was married when he engaged in sexual intercourse
with the plaintiffs.
13
engaged in sexual conduct with Baucum.
To survive summary judgment on their hostile work environment
claims, the plaintiffs needed to produce evidence showing, among
other things, “that [CVBC] knew or should have known of the
harassment in question and failed to take prompt remedial action.”
Jones v. Flagship Int’l, 793 F.2d 714, 719-20 (5th Cir. 1986)
(quoting Henson v. City of Dundee, 682 F.2d 897, 903-05 (11th Cir.
1982)). Because there is no dispute that CVBC took prompt remedial
action upon learning of Baucum’s misconduct on September 23, 1991,
the plaintiffs were required to produce evidence that CVBC should
have known of Baucum’s behavior as a supervisor before it was
disclosed in order to survive summary judgment on this claim.
The record, however, does not reveal a basis for finding that
CVBC should have known that Baucum created a hostile work
environment for Sanders and Mullanix. This is because the evidence
relied on by the plaintiffs indicates, at most, that CVBC knew that
Baucum had offended a few women by complimenting them on their
appearances and hugging them. Evidence of this conduct, however,
does not preclude summary judgment. See. e.g., Pfau v. Reed, 125
F.3d 927, 939 n.10 (5th Cir. 1997) (“[I]n the cases that have held
employers liable on the basis that the pervasiveness of sexual
harassment implies constructive knowledge, the pervasive conduct is
the conduct of which the plaintiff complains.”).
To withstand summary judgment on their quid pro quo claims,
the plaintiffs were required to produce evidence showing, among
other things, that “the harassment complained of affected tangible
14
aspects of” their “compensation, terms, conditions, or privileges
of employment.” Jones, 793 F.2d at 722. In addition, they were
required to develop evidence demonstrating that their “acceptance
or rejection of the harassment” was “an express or implied
condition to the receipt of a job benefit or the cause of a
tangible job detriment.” Id. The plaintiffs’ own testimony—that
they were subjected to mild criticism of their work and told that
they would not be promoted to positions they knew did not
exist—indicates that their jobs were not tangibly and detrimentally
affected by their decisions to end their sexual relationships with
Baucum. See Farley v. American Cast Iron Pipe Co., 115 F.3d 1548,
1552-53 (11th Cir. 1997); cf. Mattern v. Eastman Kodak Co., 104
F.3d 702, 708 (5th Cir.) (noting, in the context of a retaliation
claim, that “the verbal threat of being fired” and a “reprimand”
are not “adverse employment actions” because they “lack . . .
consequence”), cert. denied, 118 S. Ct. 336 (1997); Bryson v.
Chicago St. Univ., 96 F.3d 912, 916 (7th Cir. 1996) (noting that a
tangible job detriment is a substantially adverse employment
action, such as being transferred, relieved of responsibilities,
denied the use of an office and telephone, or stripped of an
official title). Further, there is no objective evidence in the
record supporting the plaintiffs’ claims that they engaged in sex
with Baucum under an implied threat of discharge if they did not.
See Nichols v. Loral Vought Sys. Corp., 81 F.3d 38, 42 (5th Cir.
1996) (noting that “subjective speculation” will not establish a
fact question in a discrimination case).
15
In order for the plaintiffs to have proceeded to trial on
their claim that CVBC is liable under the doctrine of respondeat
superior for Baucum’s tortious conduct as one of the church’s
employees, they needed to produce evidence that Baucum’s misconduct
“f[e]ll within the scope of [his] general authority . . . and [was]
in furtherance of [CVBC’s] business and for the accomplishment of
the object for which [Baucum] was hired.” Dieter v. Bakers Serv.
Tools, 739 S.W.2d 405, 407 (Tex. Ct. App. 1987) (emphasis added).
The plaintiffs’ evidence, however, failed to create a genuine issue
of material fact regarding Baucum’s actual or apparent authority to
engage in counseling. In fact, the record indicates that Baucum
did not have this authority because his job description and
responsibilities as MEA indicate that he was not hired to provide
counseling, that he knew that counseling was not part of his job
description, that the MEA was not responsible for providing
spiritual counseling, and that CVBC had a policy of referring non-
pastoral counseling to a licensed professional counselor.9
The plaintiffs also contend that CVBC was liable for Baucum’s
misconduct as a counselor under the doctrine of ratification.
Prunty v. Arkansas Freightways, Inc., 16 F.3d 649, 652-53 (5th Cir.
9
The plaintiffs also argue that CVBC is liable for
Baucum’s misconduct as a counselor under Section 219 of the
Restatement (Second) of Agency, which provides for employer
liability when the powers it entrusts to an employee aid that
employee in breaching professional and fiduciary duties. As noted
above, there is no basis in the record for finding that CVBC
entrusted Baucum with marital counseling powers. Further, this
provision of the Restatement has not been adopted in Texas and thus
will not be recognized by this Court. See, e.g., Folks v. Kirby
Forest Indus., Inc., 10 F.3d 1173, 1182 (5th Cir. 1994).
16
1994). This doctrine imposes liability on an employer when that
employer adopts, confirms, or fails to repudiate the unlawful acts
of an employee of which the employer is aware. Id. There is,
however, no evidence in the record indicating that CVBC was
actually aware of Baucum’s counseling activities.10
Aside from principles of agency, the plaintiffs also sought to
hold CVBC liable on the theory that an employer that negligently
“retains in his employ an individual who is incompetent or unfit
for the job may be liable to a third party whose injury was
proximately caused by the employer’s negligence.” Akins v. Estes,
888 S.W.2d 35, 42 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994), affirmed in part and
reversed in part sub nom. Golden Spread Council, Inc. v. Akins, 926
S.W.2d 287 (Tex. 1996) (reversing on grounds unrelated to the
existence of his theory of negligence). To withstand CVBC’s motion
for summary judgment on this negligence claim, the plaintiffs
needed to show that CVBC knew or should have known that Baucum’s
conduct as a supervisor or counselor presented an unreasonable risk
of harm to others. As noted in conjunction with the plaintiffs’
hostile work environment claims, however, the record does not
indicate that CVBC should have known of Baucum’s sexual harassment
of Sanders and Mullanix. Further, even if the plaintiffs’ evidence
suggested that CVBC should have known that Baucum was counseling
the plaintiffs, there is simply no evidence that CVBC should have
10
Further, even if a principal can ratify the acts of an
agent of which it should have been aware, there is no basis for
finding that CVBC had constructive notice of Baucum’s counseling
activities. See infra.
17
known that Baucum was likely to engage in sexual misconduct or
disclose confidences as a marriage counselor.
The plaintiffs’ final claim on appeal is that the district
court abused its discretion by denying their motion to supplement
the summary judgment record after summary judgment had been granted
in favor of CVBC. This argument is without merit because the
evidence was cumulative and did not support the plaintiffs’ theory
of constructive notice. Therefore, the district did not abuse its
discretion in denying this untimely motion. See, e.g., Bernhardt
v. Richardson-Merrell, Inc., 892 F.2d 440 (5th Cir. 1990).
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM.
18