DISSENT and Opinion Filed June 27, 2022
S In The
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-20-00376-CV
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT DALLAS, Appellant
V.
RICHARD J. ADDANTE, PH.D., Appellee
On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1
Dallas County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. CC-17-03714-A
DISSENTING OPINION FROM DENIAL OF
EN BANC RECONSIDERATION
Opinion by Justice Reichek
This appeal concerns a former UTD employee’s allegations that he was
terminated from his position as a non-tenured senior lecturer in retaliation for
reporting and/or opposing both gender discrimination and sexual harassment. The
trial court denied UTD’s plea to the jurisdiction, but a panel of this Court reversed,
with one justice dissenting, and dismissed the suit brought by Richard J.
Addante, Ph.D. Addante sought en banc review, which a majority of this Court
voted to deny. Because I disagree with that vote as it relates to Addante’s claim of
retaliation for reporting gender discrimination, I dissent. The majority opinion sets
forth the background facts in this case at length, and I will not repeat those facts
other than to note the following.
In August 2015, UTD’s Acting Provost Inga Musselman sent Addante a
reappointment letter for the 2015-2016 academic year that reflected a $50,000
annual salary. In response, on August 3, Addante sent Musselman an email
acknowledging the offer of employment but expressing concern about a
“considerable pay gap” between his salary and that of a fellow senior lecturer who
was female. Addante made clear in his email that he believed this was an instance
of “gender discrimination”:
I wanted to be sure that UT Dallas remained compliant
with Title IX employment law, and did not inadvertently
become non-compliant with federal law prohibiting
gender discrimination in pay for its Senior Lecturers.
...
According to the EEOC, “the Equal Pay Act requires that
men and women in the same workplace be given equal pay
for equal work. The jobs need not be identical, but they
must be substantially equal.” As far as I am aware, the
current pay discrepancy is the type of discrepancy
forbidden by Title IX statutes, and I’d like to help UT
Dallas remain compliant.
...
It is my hope that as we begin this new academic year’s
successes, that we can do so as compliant with federal
Title IX policies of equal pay for equal work, and that the
compensation level may be adjusted accordingly, so that it
is commensurate with experience and on par with other
comparable colleagues.
Musselman, who had only recently assumed her role and had no knowledge
of how Addante’s pay rate was determined, forwarded Addante’s email to UTD
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Interim President Dr. Hobson Wildenthal. Thirty-two days later, on September 4,
Wildenthal responded to Addante’s email as follows:
You recently communicated with Acting Provost
Musselman raising issues about your FY 16
compensation. Since Dr. Musselman had no role in setting
your compensation, which occurred under my
management, I am answering your letter.
In reviewing the evaluations of classroom instruction last
year, I noted the unsatisfactory results for your teaching
performance. I inquired as to the genesis of your
employment and was informed that it was a temporary
expedient, provided more or less on compassionate
grounds in order for you to have a better chance of
obtaining regular employment subsequent to the
completion of your post-doctoral appointment.
I expressed my lack of support for this sort of process for
providing instruction for our students, in particular given
the unsatisfactory results, and was given to understand that
your employment would not be renewed. As is normal for
individuals programmed not to be employed for the
coming year, I did not allocate a salary adjustment for your
name.
The fact that you appear to again be employed for FY 16 I
regard as an administrative oversight or failure. You
should use this fortuitous (for you) accident of an
additional year of UT Dallas employment to good
advantage and succeed in finding regular employment
elsewhere after May 31, 2016.
UTD has taken the position that this communication reflected its decision to
terminate Addante at the end of the 2015-2016 academic year and, as reflected in his
letter, that the decision was made by Wildenthal.
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In response to UTD’s appellate brief, Addante argued that his email to
Musselman constituted protected conduct, and that Wildenthal retaliated against him
in response to this protected conduct.1 UTD argued in reply, and a majority of the
panel agreed, that Addante failed to raise this issue before the trial court. The
majority reasoned:
Regarding Addante’s argument that Addante’s Letter to
Musselman was a protected activity, the record shows that
Addante failed to raise that argument before the trial court.
Addante’s responses to UTD’s plea to the jurisdiction
neither attached, specifically identified, or expressly
presented Addante’s Letter to Musselman as a protected
activity. For the first time on appeal, Addante asserts this
letter was a protected activity. However, as this argument
was not presented to or adjudicated by the trial court, we
cannot consider this new argument. See Tex. R. App. 33.1;
McConnell v. Southside Indep. Sch. Dist., 858 S.W.2d
337, 341 (Tex. 1993).
In her dissent to the majority opinion, Justice Partida-Kipness thoroughly
rebuts this rationale. See Univ. of Tex. at Dallas v. Addante, No. 05-20-00376-CV,
2021 WL 4771464, at *2–3 (Tex. App.—Dallas Sep. 8, 2021) (dissenting opinion).
For the same reasons as set forth in the dissent, I would conclude that Addante
identified the letter as a protected activity in the proceedings below and that he did
not waive this issue for review. Id. In particular, I agree that Addante raised the
issue in his original petition, as well as in his multiple responses to UTD’s plea to
the jurisdiction, which was sufficient to put the trial court on notice. See id. at *3.
1
Addante exhausted his administrative remedies with respect to this allegation by filing a timely EEOC charge within 180 days of
Wildenthal’s letter wherein he described both his email to Musselman and Wildenthal’s response to the email.
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Having determined that this issue was raised by the pleadings, asserted in response
to the plea to the jurisdiction, and considered by the trial court, I would reach the
question of whether Addante raised a genuine issue of material fact on the matters
of protected activity and unlawful retaliation.
The Texas Commission on Human Rights Act is codified at Chapter 21 of the
Texas Labor Code. Among other things, the TCHRA prohibits an employer from
discriminating against an individual in connection with compensation on the basis
of sex. TEX. LAB. CODE § 21.051. The TCHRA also prohibits an employer from
retaliating against an employee who opposes such discrimination. TEX. LAB. CODE
§ 21.055.
To establish a prima facie retaliation case under the TCHRA, a plaintiff must
show (1) he engaged in a protected activity, (2) the employer took an adverse
employment action against him, and (3) a causal connection between the protected
activity and the adverse employment action. San Antonio Water Sys. v. Nicholas,
461 S.W.3d 131, 137 (Tex. 2015). The employee need not establish the protected
activity was the sole cause of the employment action. City of Dallas v. Siaw-Afriyie,
No. 05-19-00244-CV, 2020 WL 5834335, at *6 (Tex. App.—Dallas Oct. 1, 2020,
no pet.) (mem. op). All that is required is evidence from which a factfinder may infer
that retaliation motivated the adverse employment action in whole or in part. Id.
Addante asserts that his email was protected conduct under § 21.055.
Addante’s burden in this regard is not onerous, and he must show only that his email
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alerted UTD of his reasonable belief that unlawful discrimination was at issue.
Alamo Heights Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Clark, 544 S.W.3d 755, 786 (Tex. 2018) (citing
Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Rincones, 520 S.W.3d 572, 586 (Tex. 2017)). EEOC
Enforcement Guidance on Retaliation and Related Issues, No. 915.004, August 25,
2016, provides: “The opposition clause [of Title VII] applies if an individual
explicitly or implicitly communicates his or her belief that the matter complained of
is, or could become, harassment or other discrimination. The communication itself
may be informal and need not include the words ‘harassment,’ ‘discrimination,’ or
any other legal terminology, as long as circumstances show the individual is
conveying opposition or resistance to a perceived potential EEO violation.”
Even though Addante need not use “magic words” like “discrimination,” he
did so and more, warning UTD that it was at risk of becoming “non-compliant with
federal law prohibiting ‘gender-discrimination’ in pay among its senior lecturers,”
citing EEOC guidance interpreting the Equal Pay Act to require “equal pay for equal
work,” describing his perception that “the current pay discrepancy is the type of
discrepancy forbidden by Title IX statutes,” identifying who he believed to be a
relevant female comparator, and expressing his goal of ensuring that UTD begin the
new academic year “compliant with federal Title IX policies of equal pay for equal
work.”
For its part, UTD cited only Alamo Heights for the proposition that the email
was not protected. UTD gave no explanation as to why Alamo Heights is instructive,
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reciting only its observation that “complaining only of ‘harassment,’ ‘hostile
environment,’ ‘discrimination,’ or ‘bullying’ is not enough.” Id. at 786. But UTD
failed to include the next sentence in Alamo Heights: “There must be some
indication of gender motivation, such as sexual propositioning or other behavior
signifying Clark’s belief that her gender motivated the behavior.” Id. at 787.
Addante’s email meets this standard, as it repeatedly draws a causal connection
between his gender and his pay.
Wildenthal’s September 4 letter advising Addante that his employment would
not be renewed at the end of the year was in response to, and only one month after,
the email Addante asserts as protected conduct. This was made clear in the opening
paragraph: “You recently communicated with Acting Provost Musselman raising
issues about your FY16 compensation. Since Dr. Musselman had no role in setting
your compensation, which occurred under my management, I am answering your
letter.” After criticizing Addante’s job performance, Wildenthal concluded with the
following: “The fact that you appear to again be an employee for FY16 I regard as
an administrative oversight or failure. You should use this fortuitous (for you)
accident of an additional year of UT Dallas employment to good advantage and
succeed in finding regular employment elsewhere after May 31, 2016.” Close timing
between an employee’s protected activity and an adverse action may provide the
“causal connection” required to make out a prima facie case of retaliation. Evans v.
City of Houston, 246 F.3d 344, 354 (5th Cir. 2001). A time lapse of up to four
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months has been found sufficient to satisfy the causal connection. Id.; see also Alamo
Heights, 544 S.W.3d at 790 (in plea to jurisdiction, temporal proximity of two or
three weeks would raise fact issue on prima facie causation). Based on the record, I
conclude the parties’ evidence created a fact issue on whether UTD engaged in
retaliation by not renewing his employment at the end of the 2015-2016 academic
year.
UTD argues that even if the evidence created a fact issue on the prima facie
case of retaliation, Addante failed to satisfy his burden to then provide evidence that
UTD’s asserted non-retaliatory reasons for his termination were not credible, and
were instead a pretext for unlawful retaliation.
In support, UTD argues that it made the decision to terminate Addante at the
end of the 2015-2016 academic year not because of his protected conduct, but
because of the “articulated reasons for his non-reappointment” as set forth in
Wildenthal’s letter; specifically, (1) Addante’s poor course and instructor scores in
his student evaluations for the Fall 2014 semester; (2) Wildenthal’s lack of support
for hiring a former UTD post-doctoral student who could not find a tenure track
position at another university; and (3) Wildenthal’s understanding that the dean
would not reappoint Addante for the 2015-2016 academic year. Relying on a
specific excerpt from Addante’s deposition, UTD claims that Addante does not
dispute that these were the articulated reasons for his non-reappointment. However,
the referenced deposition testimony addresses only Addante’s student evaluations.
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Assuming for the sake of argument that Wildenthal’s lack of support for hiring
Addante as a senior lecturer can serve as a legitimate non-retaliatory reason for firing
Addante a jury may choose to disbelieve this purported reason for his termination,
especially since Wildenthal approved Addante’s hire as senior lecturer. Also, there
is no evidence that Wildenthal’s understanding that the dean would not reappoint
Addante for the 2015-2016 academic year was a reason for UTD’s decision not to
renew Addante’s contract for 2016-2017. A jury could reasonably conclude that
Wildenthal’s letter was merely explaining why Addante did not receive a merit raise
that academic year, rather than giving another reason for his termination.
UTD proffered affidavit testimony from Wildenthal in support of its plea to
the jurisdiction. Wildenthal claimed that he reviewed Addante’s Fall 2014 course
evaluations in January 2015 and instructed Dean Bert Moore not to extend Addante
a teaching contract for 2015-2016 based on those evaluations. UTD offers no
evidence to support this conversation other than Wildenthal’s affidavit testimony,
which a jury is free to disbelieve or deem irrelevant since Addante was ultimately
offered another teaching contract for 2015-2016, and, in this lawsuit, Addante
challenges UTD’s decision to not renew his contract for 2016-2017.
Addante also adduced evidence that his course evaluations were not a valid
indicator of job performance, he was a good lecturer, and UTD knew this. In the
alternative, assuming UTD considered his Fall 2014 course evaluations a valid
indicator of job performance, Addante also offered evidence to show his teaching
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performance improved after that. Interim Dean Dr. James Bartlett, who made the
decision to employ Addante as a Senior Lecturer, explained that Addante’s 2014-
2015 teaching load was difficult and perhaps unrealistic, but that Addante met the
challenge. In describing Addante’s teaching load, Bartlett stated that “[t]his was
obviously a quite challenging teaching regimen, far more difficult than anything we
would put an entering tenure track Assistant Professor through. Nonetheless,
[Addante] did very well, not only in teaching the courses themselves, but inspiring
a number of the undergraduate students to do research in an EEG lab we set up for
this purpose.” Bartlett acknowledged that while there were some “bumps along the
way” and some students did not enjoy Addante’s Behavioral Neuroscience class,
this was “not an unusual situation with a new preparation in a challenging course
[and] the important point [was] that [Addante] made some adjustments to his
teaching style and rectified the problem.” In fact, both Bartlett and the director of
the undergraduate neuroscience program sat in on several of Addante’s classes when
he offered it for a second time and thought he did well. This is some evidence that
UTD’s assertion that Addante’s termination was a result of his poor job performance
was a pretext for retaliation. See McInnis v. Alamo Community College Dist., 207
F.3d 276, 283 (5th Cir. 2000) (employer relied on performance problems that were
stale by more than a year and a half without regard to his notably improved
performance since); Bouard v. Ramtron Int’l Corp., No. 12-cv-00494-WYD-MJW,
2013 WL 5445846, at *6 (D. Colo. Sept. 27, 2013) (termination took place months
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after alleged misconduct but only 25 days after protected activity); Jeffries v. FEMA,
No. PX-19-01816, 2020 WL 4262270, at *8 (D. Md. July 24, 2020) (mem. op.) (“At
that time, Jeffries had already been counseled for her misuse of the credit card, and
so a reasonable finder of fact could conclude that issue had been resolved, only to
be resurrected in response to Jeffries’ formal discrimination complaint.”); Daoud v.
Avamere Staffing, LLC, 336 F.Supp.2d 1129, 1137 (D. Or. 2004) (termination
occurred immediately after request for accommodation; although employer claimed
it terminated plaintiff because of customer complaints, those had occurred several
days earlier and employer had taken no action in interim); Donley v. Stryker Sales
Corp., 906 F.3d 635, 639 (7th Cir. 2018) (“If the disputed facts are resolved in
Donley's favor, a reasonable jury could interpret the suspicious timing as evidence
(a) that one or both decision-makers initially found Donley’s actions … to be
tolerable, and (b) that they decided only later, after she had filed her internal
complaint, to use that incident as a pretext to fire her for retaliatory reasons.”); Cruz
v. R2Sonic, LLC, 405 F.Supp.3d 676, 693-4 (W.D. Tex. 2019) (evidence of pretext
where employer waited until after employee became disabled to discipline employee
for purported performance problems that predated disability); Quillen v. Touchstone
Med. Imaging LLC, 15 F.Supp.3d 774, 783 (M.D. Tenn. 2014) (after manager
exposed discriminatory act against employee with disability, manager was
disciplined for something that happened months before).
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Because I conclude Addante pleaded a claim for gender discrimination
retaliation, and further supported that claim with sufficient evidence to raise a
genuine issue of material fact, I dissent from the Court’s decision to deny en banc
consideration.
/Amanda L. Reichek/
AMANDA L. REICHEK
JUSTICE
Joined by: Molberg, Partida-Kipness, Nowell, Carlyle, and Garcia, J.J.
200376F.P05
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