REVERSE and RENDER; and Opinion Filed July 3, 2018.
In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-17-00490-CV
CITY OF DALLAS, Appellant
V.
CHRISTOPHER WORDEN, Appellee
On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District Court
Dallas County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. DC-15-12090
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Francis, Evans, and Boatright
Opinion by Justice Boatright
This is an interlocutory appeal from the trial’s court’s partial denial of the City of Dallas’s
plea to the jurisdiction, which urged that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over
Christopher Worden’s suit under the Texas Whistleblower Act (the Act). The City contends that
the trial court erred in allowing Worden’s suit to go forward because (1) Worden failed to initiate
appropriate grievance procedures for all the adverse personnel actions he alleges, (2) a number of
Worden’s complained-of actions were not materially adverse within the meaning of the Act, and
(3) Worden cannot establish that most of the allegedly adverse actions were caused by his report
of inappropriate conduct by other officers. We conclude that the City has established that the trial
court lacks jurisdiction in this case. We reverse the portion of the trial court’s order that denies the
City’s plea to the jurisdiction, and we dismiss Worden’s claim with prejudice to its refiling.
Background
In 2014, Worden was involved in two incidents that form the basis of this appeal. In April,
Worden and several other officers responded to a suspicious-persons call at a Wal-Mart
Supercenter regarding a group of juveniles in the store’s parking area. Worden detained some of
the juveniles in one area and then joined officers who were dealing with other juveniles in another
area. When he arrived, Officer Nicholas Smith and Sergeant Fred Mears told him to take the
handcuffs off of a juvenile they had detained, and—after being ordered to do so multiple times—
Worden took them off. He was unaware at the time that Smith had been threatening to fight the
juvenile or that Mears had been laughing and encouraging the fight. When he realized Smith
intended to fight the juvenile, Worden put the handcuffs back on the juvenile and placed him in a
squad car.
Worden reported these events (the Juvenile Incident) to his supervisor, Sergeant Jason
Scoggins, and then separately to two other sergeants. Worden believes his report of the Juvenile
Incident caused embarrassment to Chief John Lawton (because Worden, Smith, and Mears were
all in his chain of command), resentment to Lieutenant Aaron Bell (because the incident occurred
on his watch), and anger to Lieutenant William Griffith (because he worked closely with Mears).
A lengthy investigation followed Worden’s report.
Meanwhile, in September, Worden and other officers responded to a report of an active
shooter in a vehicle. Video of the confrontation reportedly showed Worden “body-slamming” the
suspect against the side of his car, throwing him to the ground, and punching him in the groin and
abdomen, despite the suspect’s raising his hands (the Active Shooter Incident). Griffith initiated
and led an investigation into the Active Shooter Incident; Worden was accused of using
inappropriate force against a citizen, failure to wear a wireless body microphone, and speeding to
the scene of the incident. Worden was placed on paid administrative leave during the investigation.
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In March 2015, Chief Michael Genovesi, the Bureau Commander for the Patrol Division,
held a hearing on the Juvenile Incident and suspended Worden for ten days. Genovesi suspended
him for an additional fifteen days after a hearing on the Active Shooter Incident. Worden appealed
both suspensions, and in August of that year Police Chief David Brown (1) rescinded all allegations
against Worden in the Juvenile Incident and (2) rescinded all allegations against Worden in the
Active Shooter Incident except for his failure to wear a body microphone and speeding. Worden
was reimbursed his pay for the entire Juvenile Incident suspension; his suspension in the Active
Shooter Incident was reduced to one day of the time he served.
Worden returned to work after serving the suspensions and was assigned to the
department’s Communication Division. Shortly after his punishment was reduced, Worden
initiated this action under the Act, pleading that the City retaliated against him for his report of the
Juvenile Incident.
The City’s Plea1
The Act provides that a local governmental entity may not take an adverse personnel action
against a public employee who in good faith reports a violation of law by another public employee
to an appropriate law enforcement authority. TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 554.002(a) (West 2012).
The Government Code permits the employee alleging such a violation to sue his employer and
waives the employer’s sovereign immunity for liability under the Act. Id. § 554.0035. However,
the elements of section 554.002(a) determine both jurisdiction and liability. State v. Lueck, 290
S.W.3d 876, 883 (Tex. 2009). Thus, if a plaintiff fails to plead a viable cause of action under the
Act, immunity is not waived, and the trial court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s
claim. Id. at 883–84.
1
The City filed both a plea to the jurisdiction and a supplemental plea; we consider those documents together and refer to them together as
the City’s plea.
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The City’s plea urged at least one reason why each of the acts Worden called retaliatory
were not violations of the Act. It argued that Worden had failed to initiate grievance procedures
for a number of those acts, that many of the acts were not caused by any whistleblowing conduct
by Worden, and that many of the acts alleged were not materially adverse to Worden. The City
offered evidence in support of its plea so, to avoid dismissal, Worden had to raise at least a genuine
issue of material fact to overcome the challenge to the trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction. Tex.
Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133 S.W.3d 217, 221, 228 (Tex. 2004) (plea to jurisdiction
standard generally mirrors that of traditional motion for summary judgment). The trial court
granted the City’s plea as to three allegedly retaliatory acts and denied the plea on the remaining
seven acts.2
The City contends again in this Court that Worden cannot plead a viable claim for
retaliation. We agree that Worden has not pleaded a claim that may proceed under the Act. When
cataloguing the personnel actions that he alleges were taken against him in retaliation for his report,
Worden has identified some conduct that does not rise to the level of materially adverse personnel
actions and other conduct that could not have been the legal cause of his injuries.3
A Materially Adverse Personnel Action
The City argues that a number of the purportedly retaliatory acts Worden complains of
were not materially adverse to him. In a claim brought under the Act, a personnel action is defined
as “an action that affects a public employee’s compensation, promotion, demotion, transfer, work
assignment, or performance evaluation.” TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 554.001 (West 2012). The test
2
The trial court granted the plea as to the Internal Affairs investigations in both incidents, the initial six-month assignment of Worden to the
Communications Division, and the creation of incorrect records about him by the City’s attorney.
The trial court denied the City’s plea as to the disciplinary actions taken against Worden for both incidents, his inability to take the senior
corporal promotional examination, his assignment to the Communications Division for longer than six months, his inability to participate in the
2016 Patrol Bid, the creation of incorrect records about him by someone other than the City’s attorney, and his assignment to the Employee
Development Program.
3
Because Worden’s allegations of retaliation can be dismissed on grounds of material adverseness and causation, we need not address the
City’s argument that Worden failed to initiate grievance procedures properly for all of his complaints.
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of adverseness under the Act is an objective one: the action taken “must be material, and thus
likely to deter a reasonable, similarly situated employee from reporting a violation of the law.”
Montgomery County v. Park, 246 S.W.3d 610, 612 (Tex. 2007). Whether a challenged action is
adverse within the meaning of the Act is generally a question of law. Id. at 615. We conclude that
four of Worden’s allegations of retaliation were not materially adverse personnel actions.
Assignment to Communications Division
When Worden returned to work following his administrative leave and suspension, he was
assigned to the Communications Division of the police force, and he spent approximately twenty
months in that assignment. Worden has consistently acknowledged that his initial six-month
assignment to Communications was not retaliatory.
But Worden contends that the time he spent in Communications after the initial six months
was retaliatory. He alleges that Communications had “a stigma attached to it,” and that it was “for
‘troubled’ or ‘problem’ officers,” but he offers nothing more than his personal opinion to support
that judgment. We have held that a police officer’s subjective preference for assignment is
insufficient to prove a materially adverse personnel action. City of Dallas v. Giles, No. 05-15-
00370-CV 2016 WL 25744, at *4 (Tex. App.—Dallas January 4, 2016, no pet.) (mem. op.) (Dallas
officer’s subjective preference to remain in Communications rather than Patrol insufficient to
make his transfer materially adverse).
The record establishes that Worden’s rank and pay did not change when he was assigned
to Communications. And there is evidence that Worden told both his Communications supervisor
and the Employee Development Program board that he was happy working in Communications;
he apparently did not take either of those opportunities to ask how he could obtain a transfer to
another division. We discern no factual basis for making an exception to the rule in Giles:
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Worden’s subjective preference for transfer is insufficient to prove a materially adverse personnel
action. Id.
Inability to Bid for Patrol Job
In a related allegation, Worden complains that he was not able to bid for a patrol job during
the department’s bid process. The 2016 opportunity to bid for a job in the Patrol Division actually
took place in December 2015, while Worden was assigned to the Communications Division.
Worden’s name was left off of the list of those officers eligible to bid. He provided no evidence
that the omission was intentional. The only explanation offered in the record is from the major
assigned to the Communications Division; she suggested the omission was an oversight—that
perhaps “someone forgot to include him.” Worden rejects the City’s evidence that he told a number
of people, including the major, that he preferred to stay in Communications at that time, but the
fact remains that his only alleged “injury” was remaining in Communications. In the absence of
any evidence of purposeful retaliation involving the bid procedure, we must resolve this complaint
as we did Worden’s extended stay in Communications: his subjective preference for a different
assignment is insufficient to prove a materially adverse personnel action. Giles, 2016 WL 25744,
at *4.
Assignment to Employee Development Program
Worden alleges further that his assignment to the Department’s Employee Development
Program (EDP) was an adverse action taken in retaliation against him for his report concerning
the Juvenile Incident. Worden testified that the EDP has a “negative connotation to it” because it
operates under the Internal Affairs Department. He opines that the program is a remedial one, “for
‘troubled’ or ‘problem’ officers,” pointing out that the triggers for candidacy involve discipline,
criminal behavior, internal affairs investigations, and complaints.
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The record establishes that he was “boarded and identified as a candidate” for the EDP in
June 2015, shortly after he returned to work from his suspension and was assigned to the
Communications Division. He was notified of his identification at a meeting “that looked exactly
like a discipline board,” but he does not remember anything from that meeting other than being
asked questions, which he answered. Worden testified that he was not contacted concerning the
EDP after that meeting, and he never “did anything for” the program. A year later he was told to
report to another meeting, where he was notified that—because he had not had any further
trouble—he did not need to be part of the program. In total, then, Worden attended just two
meetings associated with the EDP: one introductory and one valedictory. Indeed, at the second
meeting Worden was offered the opportunity to take advantage of some of the program’s classes.
He testified that some of the classes sounded interesting, and he conceded that the EDP was “a
great program” for those who need it.
We conclude on this record that being identified for, and attending two meetings of, this
program could not be a materially adverse personnel action within the meaning of the Act. The
record contains no evidence of any injury to Worden in this process, and we cannot conclude that
any other person would have been dissuaded from reporting wrongdoing because of such a petty
slight or minor annoyance. Montgomery County, 246 S.W.3d at 614.
Incorrect Records
Worden also cites retaliation in the creation and circulation of two emails by the
Communication Division’s Project Coordinator in March 2016. In response to a request for a list
of all officers on light duty, the coordinator emailed a list of five names; the list identified Worden
as being on “restricted duty involving IAD investigations.” The next day the coordinator emailed
a second list of officers assigned to the “camera team,” this time noting “[i]nvestigation” next to
Worden’s name. Worden correctly contends that his punishments in both incidents had been
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rescinded months before this, and the record does not indicate he was under any new form of
investigation in March 2016. However, he had originally been assigned to Communications as a
result of investigations. The record does not indicate that these emails, both sent to a single
recipient, became a source of embarrassment or reprisal for Worden in any way. These emails
could not be materially adverse personnel actions within the meaning of the Act. At most, they are
“minor annoyances” that will not support a claim for retaliation. Montgomery County, 246 S.W.3d
at 614.
Causation Under the Whistleblower Act
The City also argues that Worden did not prove his report was the legal cause of a number
of the allegedly retaliatory acts. To evidence the necessary causal link under the Act, an employee
must establish that—absent his protected conduct—the employer’s acts would not have occurred
when they did. Tex. Dep’t of Human Servs. of State of Tex. v. Hinds, 904 S.W.2d 629, 636 (Tex.
1995). A corollary to this general rule requires that the person who took the adverse employment
action against the employee “knew of the employee’s report of illegal conduct.” City of Killeen v.
Gonzales, No. 03-14-00384-CV, 2015 WL 6830599, at *2 (Tex. App.—Austin Nov. 3, 2015, no
pet.) (mem. op.) (emphasis original). The City points to evidence establishing that Genovesi, who
issued Worden’s suspensions and paid leave, did not know that Worden had reported officers’
conduct in the Juvenile Incident. Indeed, Worden acknowledged in his deposition that Genovesi
did not discriminate against him.
But Worden asks us to consider the animus of other officers, not only Genovesi, as we
address causation. He contends that Lawton recommended to Genovesi that Worden be placed on
administrative leave and recommended he be suspended for both incidents. He points to Griffith’s
role in initiating and investigating the incidents. Some courts have adopted this type of “conduit”
theory when one supervisor makes a recommendation concerning the employee to an “innocent
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supervisor,” and the latter then makes his decision without conducting an independent
investigation or exercising independent judgment. City of Fort Worth v. Zimlich, 29 S.W.3d 62,
70 (Tex. 2000). However, we will not apply a conduit theory in this case for two reasons. First,
the Texas Supreme Court has thus far declined to adopt the theory. Id. at 70–71. And second, the
record contains evidence that Genovesi twice performed his own independent inquiry into
Worden’s allegations before issuing his punishment orders. Genovesi testified that in both
instances, he reviewed all witness statements, attachments, and audio/video recordings before the
hearing. And at each hearing, he permitted both Internal Affairs’ representatives and Worden to
present their view of the case, questioned Worden, and gave him a full opportunity to explain his
actions. Thus, even if Genovesi received recommendations unfavorable to Worden from Lawton
or other officers, he was an independent decision maker, exercising independent judgment. The
conduit theory is inapplicable in Worden’s case.
We conclude, therefore, that the disciplinary actions taken against Worden in connection
with the Juvenile Incident (i.e., his suspension) and the Active Shooter Incident (i.e., his paid
administrative leave, the manner in which he was placed on administrative leave, and his
suspension) were not caused by Worden’s report following the Juvenile Incident. Those actions
did not represent retaliatory conduct under the Act.
We conclude further that Worden’s missing the senior corporal examination during this
time period was an indirect result of his being placed on leave by Genovesi, but was not purposeful
retaliation for his report on the Juvenile Incident. Worden attributes his inability to sit for the exam
to being placed on administrative leave. He states he had no way to sign up for or attend the exam
given his loss of computer access to the Department and his confinement to his home. But we have
concluded that his being placed on leave was not retaliatory; this indirect result of being on leave
could not have been legally caused by his report. We acknowledge that Worden’s discipline was
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substantially rescinded by the Chief of Police. However, the fact that his actions in the two
incidents were substantially justified does not mean that his initial punishments—or related
complaints—amounted to acts of retaliation against him.
Conclusion
The City has established that Worden did not plead a claim of retaliation based upon his
reporting of the actions by other officers in the Juvenile Incident. Thus, the City’s immunity has
not been waived. We reverse the trial court’s order insofar as it denied the City’s plea to the
jurisdiction, and we render judgment granting the City’s plea. Because Worden was given the
opportunity to amend his pleading after the City filed its plea, and his amended pleading still does
not allege facts constituting a waiver of immunity, we dismiss Worden’s lawsuit with prejudice.
Harris County v. Sykes, 136 S.W.3d 635, 639 (Tex. 2004).
/Jason Boatright/
JASON BOATRIGHT
JUSTICE
170490F.P05
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Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
CITY OF DALLAS, Appellant On Appeal from the 68th Judicial District
Court, Dallas County, Texas
No. 05-17-00490-CV V. Trial Court Cause No. DC-15-12090.
Opinion delivered by Justice Boatright.
CHRISTOPHER WORDEN, Appellee Justices Francis and Evans participating.
In accordance with this Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is
REVERSED and judgment is RENDERED dismissing appellee Christopher Worden’s lawsuit
with prejudice.
.
It is ORDERED that appellant City of Dallas recover its costs of this appeal from
appellee Christopher Worden.
Judgment entered this 3rd day of July, 2018.
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