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1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 Opinion Number: _____________
3 Filing Date: August 29, 2023
4 No. A-1-CA-39774
5 MANUEL LERMA,
6 Plaintiff-Appellant,
7 v.
8 STATE OF NEW MEXICO and NEW
9 MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF
10 CORRECTIONS,
11 Defendants-Appellees.
12 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF VALENCIA COUNTY
13 James Lawrence Sanchez, District Court Judge
14 The Gilpin Law Firm, LLC
15 Donald G. Gilpin
16 Kenneth C. Detro
17 Christopher P. Machin
18 Albuquerque, NM
19 for Appellant
20 Stiff, Garcia & Associates, LLC
21 John S. Stiff
22 Julia Y. Parsons
23 Albuquerque, NM
24 for Appellees
1 OPINION
2 IVES, Judge.
3 {1} Plaintiff Manuel Lerma appeals a district court order granting summary
4 judgment in favor of Defendants State of New Mexico and New Mexico Department
5 of Corrections (DOC) on Mr. Lerma’s claim of retaliation under New Mexico’s
6 Whistleblower Protection Act (NMWPA). 1 See NMSA 1978, §§ 10-16C-1 to -6
7 (2010). Mr. Lerma’s claims of error require us to assess the merits of DOC’s four
8 summary judgment theories: (1) that Mr. Lerma’s communications to DOC are not
9 protected by the NMWPA; (2) that DOC did not take any “adverse employment
10 action,” § 10-16C-2(D), against Mr. Lerma, as required by Section 10-16C-3; (3)
11 that a retaliatory motive did not cause DOC to take the actions complained of by Mr.
12 Lerma, see § 10-16C-3; and (4) that DOC established an affirmative defense because
13 it took the actions complained of by Mr. Lerma for a “legitimate business purpose
14 unrelated to conduct prohibited pursuant to the [NMWPA]” and “retaliatory action
15 was not a motivating factor.” Section 10-16C-4(B). Because we conclude that
16 summary judgment was unwarranted under all four of DOC’s theories, we reverse
17 and remand for further proceedings.
1
In this opinion, we refer to the statutory scheme at issue here as the NMWPA
to distinguish the whistleblower statutes enacted by our Legislature from the federal
Whistleblower Protection Act (WPA). See 5 U.S.C. 2302(b)(8)-(9).
1 {2} This appeal presents significant legal questions, including questions of first
2 impression, about the type of conduct protected by the NMWPA. As to the questions
3 of first impression, we conclude that communications made through ordinary
4 workplace channels or as part of an employee’s normal work duties are not excluded
5 from protection, and that an employee’s motive and intent have no bearing on
6 whether a communication is protected. We also conclude that whether a
7 communication is protected by the NMWPA does not hinge on whether the
8 communication pertains to a matter of public concern or on whether the
9 communication benefits the public. To reach this conclusion, we review and
10 ultimately reject some of the reasoning in Wills v. Board of Regents of the University
11 of New Mexico, 2015-NMCA-105, 357 P.3d 453.
12 BACKGROUND
13 {3} Because summary judgment was entered for DOC, we recite the facts in the
14 light most favorable to Mr. Lerma. See Ulibarri v. N.M. Corr. Acad., 2006-NMSC-
15 009, ¶ 2, 139 N.M. 193, 131 P.3d 43. In 2018, Mr. Lerma, a corrections officer
16 employed by the DOC, transferred from Southern New Mexico Correctional Facility
17 to Central New Mexico Correctional Facility. Upon assuming his new post at
18 Central, Mr. Lerma was tasked with operation of the prison’s outer sally ports—the
19 two sets of security gates where vehicles enter and exit. Mr. Lerma believed that, for
20 safety purposes, the “standard procedure” was to keep at least one of the two sally
2
1 port gates closed at all times. But some of Mr. Lerma’s coworkers in the transport
2 department thought he was being “too strict” with the sally port gates. He testified
3 that these coworkers wanted him to “leave both of them open so they could come
4 and go as they pleased.” Mr. Lerma testified that he told his supervisor about this
5 disagreement, but that “nothing was ever done.”
6 {4} Mr. Lerma and his coworkers also had ongoing interpersonal difficulties that
7 eventually led to violence. Mr. Lerma believed these difficulties were because his
8 coworkers “had an issue with [him] for being from Southern,” and Central was a
9 “tight-knit community” in which outsiders often experienced harassment. One day
10 after work, Mr. Lerma was leaving the facility when two of his coworkers—a
11 lieutenant and a fellow officer—told Mr. Lerma that “if [he] wanted to handle the
12 problem that [they] had, for [Mr. Lerma] to follow them.” Once the three were on
13 the road in their respective cars, the officer and the lieutenant “kept blocking [Mr.
14 Lerma] in” and following him as he tried to get away from them. Eventually, the
15 three vehicles came to a stop in an empty lot. Mr. Lerma got out and told the
16 lieutenant—his direct supervisor—that the lieutenant “was making it into a bigger
17 deal than what it should be,” and that, as a supervisor, “he should know better.”
18 While Mr. Lerma was speaking to the lieutenant, the officer came up behind Mr.
19 Lerma. When Mr. Lerma turned around, the officer “was standing there with his fists
20 clenched,” and a fight ensued. The lieutenant stood nearby filming the fight on his
3
1 state-issued cell phone. The officer and the lieutenant eventually departed, leaving
2 Mr. Lerma on the ground.
3 {5} The next work day, Mr. Lerma reported the fight to a different supervisor—
4 the director of the Security Threat Investigative Unit at Central—and the prison
5 leadership began to investigate. In the course of the investigation, Mr. Lerma told
6 various people, including a pair of deputy wardens, what happened. After meeting
7 with the deputy wardens—and one day after he reported the fight—DOC reassigned
8 Mr. Lerma from his post at the sally port to the prison’s mailroom. Mr. Lerma was
9 given no reason for the move and felt he was “being punished.” Mr. Lerma testified
10 that following his reassignment, his compensation decreased because he was “very,
11 very, limited” in the amount of overtime he could work in the mailroom, and that his
12 supervisors were aware that the reason he transferred to Central was to work more
13 overtime. In addition to transferring Mr. Lerma, DOC limited where Mr. Lerma was
14 allowed to go in the facility. The deputy warden who made the initial decision to
15 move Mr. Lerma to the mailroom testified that he “wanted [Mr. Lerma] . . . closer
16 by me so I could keep an eye out for him” following his “report[] to us that he was
17 in a physical altercation.”
18 {6} Mr. Lerma filed a complaint for damages under the NMWPA, alleging that he
19 had communicated to DOC his “good faith belief that unethical and illegal conduct
20 was occurring,” and that as a result DOC “retaliated . . . by not allowing [Mr. Lerma]
4
1 to receive overtime or other benefits.” Mr. Lerma’s theory of the case involved two
2 discrete communications that he argued were protected under the NMWPA: his
3 reporting of the disagreement regarding the operation of the sally port and his
4 reporting of the after-work fight involving the officer and the lieutenant.
5 {7} DOC moved for summary judgment on four alternative theories: (1) Mr.
6 Lerma’s communications are not protected; (2) DOC did not take any adverse
7 employment action against Mr. Lerma; (3) DOC did not act with a retaliatory
8 motive; and (4) DOC had a legitimate business purpose for acting as it did after
9 receiving Mr. Lerma’s communications. The district court granted the motion
10 without explaining which of these theories it accepted, stating only that “there is no
11 genuine issue as to any material fact and that [DOC is] entitled to a [j]udgment as a
12 matter of law.” Mr. Lerma appeals.
13 DISCUSSION
14 {8} New Mexico courts “view summary judgment with disfavor, preferring a trial
15 on the merits.” Romero v. Philip Morris Inc., 2010-NMSC-035, ¶ 8, 148 N.M. 713,
16 242 P.3d 280. “Summary judgment is appropriate where there are no genuine issues
17 of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v.
18 United Parcel Serv., Inc., 1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 126 N.M. 396, 970 P.2d 582; see
19 also Rule 1-056(C) NMRA. We review summary judgment de novo, Ulibarri, 2006-
20 NMSC-009, ¶ 7, “resolv[ing] all reasonable inferences in favor of the party opposing
5
1 summary judgment,” and “view[ing] the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, answers
2 to interrogatories, and admissions in the light most favorable to a trial on the merits.”
3 Madrid v. Brinker Rest. Corp., 2016-NMSC-003, ¶ 16, 363 P.3d 1197 (internal
4 quotation marks and citation omitted).
5 {9} Where, as here, “alternative grounds for summary judgment have been
6 presented to the [district] court,” the court must “specify the grounds upon which the
7 order is based.” Rule 1-056(C). Because the order in this case does not conform to
8 Rule 1-056(C), we are unable to discern which of DOC’s alternative theories were
9 accepted by the district court, and we must consider all four of them. We conclude
10 that all lack merit, and we therefore reverse.
11 I. Protected Conduct
12 {10} In the district court, DOC argued that the NMWPA did not protect the
13 communications at issue for three reasons: (1) they were “made as part of his normal
14 duties made through normal channels as [a DOC] employee”; (2) Mr. Lerma could
15 not “show his reporting was done with the intent of serving the public interest”; and
16 (3) the communications did not pertain to a matter of public concern and that the
17 communications primarily benefited Mr. Lerma rather than the public.2 As we will
18 explain, we do not believe that any of these arguments has merit.
Although DOC disclaimed reliance on the first and second arguments during
2
oral argument in this Court, we must address those arguments because the district
court may have relied on one or both of them.
6
1 {11} Although any analysis of what the Legislature intended to protect must be
2 driven primarily by the plain language of the NMWPA, see Martinez v. Cornejo,
3 2009-NMCA-011, ¶ 11, 146 N.M. 223, 208 P.3d 443, DOC does not argue that the
4 statutory text supports any of the arguments it presented in its summary judgment
5 motion, and we find no support in that text or in the pertinent uniform jury
6 instruction. As it relates to protected communications, the NMWPA prohibits
7 retaliation against a public employee who “communicates to the public employer or
8 a third party information about an action or a failure to act that the public employee
9 believes in good faith constitutes an unlawful or improper act.” Section 10-16C-
10 3(A). The NMWPA defines “unlawful or improper act” as “a practice, procedure,
11 action or failure to act on the part of a public employer that: (1) violates a federal
12 law, a federal regulation, a state law, a state administrative rule or a law of any
13 political subdivision of the state; (2) constitutes malfeasance in public office; or
14 (3) constitutes gross mismanagement, a waste of funds, an abuse of authority or a
15 substantial and specific danger to the public.” Section 10-16C-2(E). Significantly,
16 this statutory language—and nothing more of relevance—is used to describe conduct
17 protected by the NMWPA in a uniform jury instruction, UJI 13-2322 NMRA, that
18 was adopted by our Supreme Court and that is therefore a presumptively correct
19 statement of the law. State v. Wilson, 1994-NMSC-009, ¶ 5, 116 N.M. 793, 867 P.2d
20 1175. We have found nothing in the text of the NMWPA or in UJI 13-2322 that
7
1 requires that a communication be made outside normal workplace channels or
2 outside an employee’s ordinary job duties; that the employee communicate with any
3 particular intent or motive; or that the communication pertain to a matter of public
4 concern or benefit the public.
5 {12} Lacking support for these requirements in the NMWPA’s text, DOC has relied
6 largely on federal precedent interpreting federal whistleblower laws and New
7 Mexico precedent regarding the common law tort of retaliatory discharge in
8 violation of public policy. As we will explain, we do not believe these precedents,
9 or the single NMWPA case on which DOC relies, accurately describe the law
10 regarding protected conduct under the NMWPA. We therefore reject all three
11 requirements.
12 {13} We reject the first proposed requirement because, in addition to finding no
13 foothold in the text of the NMWPA, this requirement is based on discredited federal
14 precedent interpreting the WPA. In Willis v. Department of Agriculture, 141 F.3d
15 1139, 1144 (Fed. Cir. 1998), the Federal Circuit suggested that communications
16 made in the course of “merely performing . . . required duties” are not protected by
17 the WPA, and in Kahn v. Department of Justice, 618 F.3d 1306, 1313 (Fed. Cir.
18 2010), the Federal Circuit concluded that “an employee must communicate the
19 information either outside the scope of his normal duties or outside of normal
20 channels to qualify as a protected disclosure.” New Mexico’s courts do not
8
1 necessarily follow federal whistleblower precedent. See Velasquez v. Regents of N.
2 N.M. Coll., 2021-NMCA-007, ¶ 31, 484 P.3d 970 (“[W]e have never concluded that
3 the protections of the [NM]WPA are identical to those of the federal statute in every
4 respect or that we will interpret the [NM]WPA in lockstep with federal precedent.”).
5 And we will not follow federal precedent here, primarily because it strays from the
6 text of the NMWPA, which broadly protects “communicat[ions] to the public
7 employer or a third party” and which does not exclude communications made
8 through normal channels or as part of the employee’s ordinary duties. Section 10-
9 16C-3(A). Had our Legislature intended to exclude this subset of communications,
10 it would have said so in the text. Even as a matter of federal law, Congress has made
11 clear that it never intended to exclude communications made through normal
12 channels or as part of ordinary duties, and Congress has amended the federal statute
13 to abrogate Willis on this point. See 5 U.S.C. § 2302(f)(1)(A) (clarifying that “[a]
14 disclosure shall not be excluded” from the protections of the WPA because, among
15 other reasons, “the disclosure was made to a supervisor”); 5 U.S.C. § 2302(f)(2)
16 (clarifying that a disclosure “made during the normal course of duties of an
17 employee” whose principal job is to report wrongdoing is generally covered under
18 the WPA); S. Rep. No. 112-155, at 5 (2012) (observing that the Willis court “stated
19 that a disclosure made as part of an employee’s normal job duties is not protected,”
20 explaining that this statement is “contrary to congressional intent for the WPA,” and
9
1 faulting the Federal Circuit for failing to “apply[] the very broad protection required
2 by the plain language of the WPA”); accord Daniels v. Merit Sys. Prot. Bd., 832
3 F.3d 1049, 1051-52 (9th Cir. 2016) (noting that in 2012 “Congress identified and
4 abrogated specific judicial decisions by the Federal Circuit that had concluded that
5 disclosures made in certain contexts (for example, during the course of an
6 employee’s regular duties, or where the information disclosed was already known)
7 would not be eligible for WPA protection”). We are aware of no persuasive basis for
8 excluding communications made through normal channels or as part of an
9 employee’s ordinary duties, and we reject such an exclusion as inconsistent with the
10 intent of our Legislature as expressed in the NMWPA’s text.
11 {14} For similar reasons we reject the second proposed requirement—that the
12 NMWPA protects only communications made by an employee with “the intent of
13 serving the public interest.” We are not persuaded that we should follow federal
14 precedent and engraft an intent or motive requirement onto the description of
15 protected conduct in the NMWPA’s text. The Federal Circuit’s opinion in Willis
16 appears to suggest that the federal whistleblower statute imposes an intent or motive
17 requirement. The Willis court reasoned that “[t]he WPA is designed to protect
18 employees who risk their own personal job security for the benefit of the public,”
19 and that the plaintiff’s disclosure was not protected in part because of the plaintiff’s
20 “intent.” 141 F.3d at 1143. But the NMWPA says nothing about the intent or motive
10
1 of the employee. To conclude that such a requirement exists, we would have to add
2 text to the NMWPA; we will not do so because the statute makes sense as written.
3 See State v. Torres, 2006-NMCA-106, ¶ 8, 140 N.M. 230, 141 P.3d 1284. Even if
4 we were to ignore this clear contradiction between the NMWPA’s text and the
5 notions about intent and motive in Willis, we would not rely on Willis to create a
6 motive or intent requirement because Congress has clarified that such a requirement
7 is inconsistent with congressional intent. See 5 U.S.C. § 2302(f)(1)(C) (clarifying
8 that “[a] disclosure shall not be excluded” from the protections of the federal WPA
9 because of, among other reasons, “the employee’s or applicant’s motive for making
10 the disclosure”); S. Rep. No. 112-155, at 5 (2012) (“The bill also clarifies that an
11 employee does not lose protection simply because of the employee’s motive for
12 making the disclosure.”). For these reasons, we conclude that an employee’s intent
13 or motive has no bearing on whether conduct is protected by the NMWPA.
14 {15} Turning to the third requirement proposed by DOC, we conclude that whether
15 a communication is protected under the NMWPA does not hinge on whether the
16 communication pertains to a matter of public concern or on whether the
17 communication furthers a public interest rather than a private one. DOC
18 acknowledges that no such requirement is found in the text of the NMWPA, but
19 DOC argues that the requirement is supported by two precedents: Garrity v.
11
1 Overland Sheepskin Co. of Taos, 1996-NMSC-032, 121 N.M. 710, 917 P.2d 1382,
2 and Wills, 2015-NMCA-105. We discuss each precedent in turn.
3 {16} Garrity is unhelpful to DOC because Garrity did not discuss what
4 communications are protected by the NMWPA but instead what communications
5 are protected by the common law in the context of one type of retaliatory discharge
6 claim, and these two bodies of law protect different conduct. In the NMWPA, which
7 serves to “promote[] transparent government and the rule of law,” Flores v. Herrera,
8 2016-NMSC-033, ¶ 9, 384 P.3d 1070, our Legislature chose to protect
9 communications by public employees about “unlawful or improper act[s],” § 10-
10 16C-3(A), of “public employer[s].” Section 10-16C-2(E). By contrast, in Garrity,
11 our Supreme Court explained the circumstances under which the common law
12 protects private employees from retaliation for making a disclosure about the
13 conduct to a private employer. 1996-NMSC-032, ¶ 24.
14 {17} The plaintiffs in Garrity argued that they did not need to prove that their
15 internal disclosures had “actual public benefit.” Id. ¶ 21. Our Supreme Court
16 disagreed. Recognizing that the common law claim for retaliatory discharge “is a
17 narrow exception to the rule of employment at will” and that our courts have
18 “refused to expand its application,” the Court concluded that the plaintiffs’ “open-
19 ended rule would broaden the public-policy exception to the at-will doctrine beyond
20 its limited purpose.” Id. To calibrate this exception so that it would serve its intended
12
1 purpose, the Court concluded that a private employee whose disclosures are made
2 to a private employer must show that “the employee’s actions furthered some
3 singularly public purpose,” and that an employee could not prevail if their actions
4 “served primarily to benefit the private interest of the employer or employee.” Id.
5 ¶ 24; see also UJI 13-2304 NMRA use notes (requiring the jury to be instructed
6 about the public versus private interest distinction in cases in which the plaintiff
7 reported wrongdoing to a private party rather than public authorities).
8 {18} This limitation was not codified in the NMWPA, contrary to DOC’s
9 contention at oral argument. Neither the language used by our Supreme Court in
10 Garrity nor any similar language appears anywhere in the NMWPA (or in the
11 presumptively correct uniform jury instructions for NMWPA cases). We therefore
12 conclude that the limitation set forth in Garrity does not apply to claims brought
13 under the NMWPA.
14 {19} We now turn to Wills, in which this Court stated that the NMWPA only
15 protects communications that “benefit[] the public by exposing unlawful and
16 improper actions by government employees,” and that “communications regarding
17 personal personnel grievances that primarily benefit the individual employee” are
18 not protected. 2015-NMCA-105, ¶ 20. As we will explain, Wills imposed that
19 limitation based on unsound reasoning.
13
1 {20} In Wills, the plaintiff alleged that his former employer withheld his
2 “contractually agreed-upon pay,” and that by communicating that allegation, the
3 plaintiff was disclosing an “abuse[ of] authority” under the NMWPA. 2015-NMCA-
4 105, ¶¶ 3-5, 16; see §§ 10-16C-2(E)(3), -3(A). The district court dismissed the
5 plaintiff’s claim because his allegations did not show that his conduct was protected
6 by the NMWPA. Wills, 2015-NMCA-105, ¶ 13. On appeal, the question for this
7 Court was one of statutory interpretation: whether a single breach of a contractual
8 term related to the compensation of a single employee was an “abuse of authority”
9 under Section 10-16C-2(E)(3). This Court held that it was not but reached that
10 holding based on reasoning that is both methodologically and substantively flawed.
11 {21} It is methodologically flawed because its approach to statutory interpretation
12 is contrary to our Supreme Court’s precedent, which requires courts to “look[] first
13 to the words the Legislature chose and the plain meaning of the language.” State v.
14 Moya, 2007-NMSC-027, ¶ 6, 141 N.M. 817, 161 P.3d 862; see also NMSA 1978,
15 § 12-2A-19 (1997) (“The text of a statute . . . is the primary, essential source of its
16 meaning.”). But the Wills court did not start with—or ever discuss—the plain
17 meaning of the key statutory phrase, “abuse of authority,” or of any other text in the
18 NMWPA. Skipping this essential and sometimes dispositive step, the Wills court
19 looked for an answer in precedents regarding the federal whistleblower statute.
14
1 {22} This brings us to the substantive flaw: the Wills court’s misinterpretation of
2 the federal whistleblower precedents. The Wills court relied on statements in those
3 precedents that pertained to the policy underlying the federal statute, but the Wills
4 court mistakenly treated those statements as expressions of a legal requirement that
5 a communication is only protected if it benefits the public. 3 See Wills, 2015-NMCA-
6 105, ¶¶ 19-21. No such requirement is found in the cited federal precedents.
7 {23} Whatever the merits of the plaintiff’s claim in Wills, the Wills court’s
8 reasoning cannot be reconciled with the plain text of the NMWPA or with New
9 Mexico’s established rules of statutory interpretation, and the reasoning is not
10 supported by the federal precedent on which the Wills court relied. We therefore
11 reject the public benefit limitation adopted by Wills.
12 {24} Our conclusion is buttressed by the uniform jury instructions for NMWPA
13 cases that were adopted by our Supreme Court after Wills was decided. Like the text
14 of the NMWPA itself, neither the uniform instruction on protected activity—UJI 13-
3
Policy considerations should only come into play if the plain meaning of the
statutory text is unclear, see, e.g., Truong v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2010-NMSC-009, ¶ 37,
147 N.M. 583, 227 P.3d 73, or if strict application of the plain meaning rule would
produce results that are “absurd, unreasonable, or contrary to the spirit of the
statute.” State v. Smith, 2004-NMSC-032, ¶ 10, 136 N.M. 372, 98 P.3d 1022. Even
if the Wills court had determined that it was necessary to use public policy as an
interpretive tool, it is not clear to us that the federal precedents relied on in Wills
accurately describe the policy that our Legislature sought to advance when it enacted
the NMWPA. See Flores, 2016-NMSC-033, ¶ 9 (stating that the NMWPA
“promotes transparent government and the rule of law”).
15
1 2322—nor any of the other uniform jury instructions regarding the NMWPA
2 requires a plaintiff to prove that the communication benefited the public.
3 Importantly, these instructions were adopted by our Supreme Court over seven years
4 after Wills was decided. See UJI 13-2321 to -27 NMRA (adopted Dec. 31, 2022).
5 Had our Supreme Court believed that a plaintiff seeking redress under the NMWPA
6 is required to prove that the plaintiff’s communication benefited the public, surely
7 the Court would have said so somewhere in the UJIs.
8 {25} For these reasons, we conclude that a plaintiff in a NMWPA case is not
9 required to prove that the plaintiff’s communication pertains to a matter of public
10 concern or that the communication benefits the public. No such requirements appear
11 in the text of the NMWPA, and we decline to superimpose additional requirements
12 on those selected by our Legislature.
13 {26} Applying all of our legal conclusions about the scope of protected conduct
14 under the NMWPA, we see no sound basis for any of the arguments that DOC
15 presented to the district court. None of those arguments allow us to affirm the grant
16 of summary judgment.
17 II. Adverse Employment Action
18 {27} DOC’s next alternative basis for summary judgment is that the evidence did
19 not raise a genuine issue of material fact as to whether DOC took any “retaliatory
20 action,” § 10-16C-3—specifically, any “adverse employment action,” § 10-16C-
16
1 2(D)—against him. DOC argues that Mr. Lerma’s move to the mailroom “does not
2 constitute an adverse employment action under the NMWPA, because the
3 reassignment was not a significant change in [Mr. Lerma]’s employment status.”
4 According to DOC, Mr. Lerma “was not demoted, his hourly pay rate was not
5 changed, and the hours and days of the week he worked did not change.” Mr. Lerma
6 does not dispute these facts, but argues that a genuine issue of material fact exists
7 because his move “resulted in a significant change to his job duties” and he was
8 “adversely impacted financially” because his opportunities for working overtime
9 were limited in the mailroom.
10 {28} We agree with Mr. Lerma because, in our view, the evidence presented at the
11 summary judgment stage, viewed in the light most favorable to Mr. Lerma, gives
12 rise to a genuine issue of material fact as to whether DOC took adverse employment
13 action against him. The NMWPA prohibits “any retaliatory action [taken] against a
14 public employee” because the employee engaged in protected activity under the
15 statute. Section 10-16C-3. Our Legislature has defined “retaliatory action” broadly
16 as “any discriminatory or adverse employment action against a public employee in
17 the terms and conditions of public employment.” Section 10-16C-2(D) (emphasis
18 added). Under this definition, actions short of termination may suffice. See Dart v.
19 Westall, 2018-NMCA-061, ¶ 23, 428 P.3d 292 (concluding that the evidence
20 sufficed to support a jury finding of “retaliatory action” under the NMWPA where
17
1 the defendant reassigned the plaintiff to a new division, “created a hostile work
2 environment, made humiliating comments about him to his colleagues, issued him a
3 substandard work vehicle, and required him to surrender his key to the forensic lab
4 and cease investigating his caseload of crimes against children”). Under this legal
5 standard, a reasonable jury could find that DOC took adverse employment action.
6 See Zamora v. St. Vincent Hosp., 2014-NMSC-035, ¶ 25, 335 P.3d 1243 (concluding
7 that questions of material fact precluded summary judgment for the defendant
8 because a reasonable jury could rule in favor of the plaintiff). DOC reassigned Mr.
9 Lerma from the sally port to the mailroom, which changed his duties, see Dart, 2018-
10 NMCA-061, ¶ 23 (relying in part on reassignment and change of duties); DOC
11 restricted Mr. Lerma’s movement in the prison, see id. (relying in part on restriction
12 on the plaintiff’s ability to access the forensic lab); and the reassignment reduced the
13 amount of overtime income Mr. Lerma earned. 4 Because we believe that this
14 evidence gives rise to a genuine issue of material fact regarding retaliatory action,
15 we hold that summary judgment was not warranted as to that element of Mr. Lerma’s
16 NMWPA claim. If the district court entered summary judgment on that element, it
17 erred.
Although the evidence of financial harm to Mr. Lerma supports our
4
conclusion, we note that a plaintiff need not prove financial harm to establish
retaliatory action under the NMWPA. See Dart, 2018-NMCA-061, ¶ 23 (concluding
that substantial evidence supported the jury’s finding of adverse employment action
where there was no evidence of financial harm).
18
1 III. Causation
2 {29} DOC contends that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to whether a
3 retaliatory motive caused DOC to reassign Mr. Lerma and restrict his movement in
4 the prison. DOC makes two discrete but closely related arguments. First, it argues
5 that summary judgment is warranted as to the causation element of Mr. Lerma’s
6 claim because he failed to present adequate evidence that DOC had a retaliatory
7 motive for reassigning him and restricting his movement. See § 10-16C-3 (“A public
8 employer shall not take any retaliatory action against a public employee because the
9 public employee [engages in protected NMWPA conduct.]” (emphasis added)); see
10 also UJI 13-2321 (identifying causation as an element of a claim under the
11 NMWPA). Second, DOC argues that summary judgment is warranted on DOC’s
12 affirmative defense that DOC had a “legitimate business purpose,” § 10-16C-4(B),
13 for the actions that Mr. Lerma contends were motivated by retaliation. We consider
14 each of DOC’s arguments in turn, concluding that both lack merit because, viewing
15 the evidence in the light most favorable to Mr. Lerma, a reasonable jury could
16 conclude that retaliation was a motivating factor.
17 A. Causation as an Element
18 {30} Under the NMWPA, it is a plaintiff’s burden to establish a causal connection
19 between protected activity and the retaliatory action at issue. See § 10-16C-3; UJI
20 13-2321. Although the NMWPA does not elaborate on the causation element, our
19
1 Supreme Court has adopted a uniform jury instruction explaining that “engagement
2 in protected activity is a cause of an employer’s retaliatory action if the employee’s
3 protected activity was a factor that motivated, at least in part, the employer’s action
4 against the employee.” UJI 13-2324. Importantly, the instruction defines
5 “motivating factor” as “a factor that plays a role in an employer’s decision to act,”
6 and explains that “[an] employee’s protected activity need not be the only reason,
7 nor the last reason, nor latest reason, for the employer’s action.” Id.
8 {31} We believe that the evidence in the record, viewed in the light most favorable
9 to Mr. Lerma, would allow a reasonable jury to find that DOC’s reassignment of Mr.
10 Lerma and the restriction it placed on his movement were motivated, at least in part,
11 by retaliation for the communications that he alleges are protected by the NMWPA.
12 See Zamora, 2014-NMSC-035, ¶ 25 (concluding that questions of material fact
13 precluded summary judgment because a reasonable jury could have ruled in favor
14 of the nonmovant). Mr. Lerma was reassigned to the mailroom the day after he
15 reported the fight—timing that could support a reasonable inference that the
16 retaliation was at least one factor that motivated DOC. See Velasquez, 2021-NMCA-
17 007, ¶ 41 (“Temporal proximity between protected conduct and adverse employment
18 action is one factor that may support an inference of retaliatory motive.”). Further
19 support for such an inference is Mr. Lerma’s testimony that when DOC reassigned
20 him, he felt he was “being punished for something that [he] had no control of.” See
20
1 Dart, 2018-NMCA-061, ¶ 24 (finding sufficient evidence to support a jury finding
2 of NMWPA causation on the basis of temporal proximity and the plaintiff “voicing
3 his belief” that his NMWPA communication “was a motivating factor” in the
4 retaliation). An inference of retaliation could also be bolstered by the testimony of
5 the deputy warden of the prison who made the initial decision to reassign Mr. Lerma.
6 He explained that he “wanted [Mr. Lerma] . . . closer by me so I could keep an eye
7 out for him” after he “reported to us that he was in a physical altercation.” Although
8 this testimony is open to interpretation, we believe that one reasonable interpretation
9 is that DOC’s reaction was motivated—at least in part—by retaliation. Ultimately,
10 whether retaliation was a motivating factor is a question of fact, and because we
11 believe that a jury could reasonably infer that retaliation was a factor, we conclude
12 that this material fact is disputed. Cf. Bovee v. State Highway & Transp. Dep’t, 2003-
13 NMCA-025, ¶ 16, 133 N.M. 519, 65 P.3d 254 (noting that in Title VII cases,
14 “discriminatory intent is a factual question and that neither trial courts nor reviewing
15 courts should treat discrimination differently from other ultimate questions of fact”
16 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). If the district court entered
17 summary judgment on the causation element, we hold that it erred.
21
1 B. Affirmative Defense Regarding Causation
2 {32} The final remaining basis on which summary judgment might have been
3 granted is DOC’s argument that it had a legitimate business purpose for reassigning
4 Mr. Lerma and restricting his freedom of movement and that Mr. Lerma failed to set
5 forth evidence that DOC’s legitimate business purpose was pretext designed to
6 conceal retaliation. Here DOC invokes Section 10-16C-4(B), which provides, in
7 pertinent part, that an employer has “an affirmative defense” to a NMWPA action if
8 “the action taken by” the employer against the employee “was due to” a “legitimate
9 business purpose unrelated to conduct prohibited pursuant to the [NMWPA] and that
10 retaliatory action was not a motivating factor.” As the statutory language makes
11 clear, DOC can only prevail on its affirmative defense at the summary judgment
12 stage if there is no genuine dispute about whether retaliation was a motivating factor.
13 But, as we have explained, there is a genuine dispute as to that question. We
14 therefore hold that if the district court granted summary judgment based on DOC’s
15 affirmative defense, the district court erred.
16 CONCLUSION
17 {33} Because we conclude that there is no sound basis for the entry of summary
18 judgment in favor of DOC, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
19 {34} IT IS SO ORDERED.
20 _________________________
21 ZACHARY A. IVES, Judge
22
1 WE CONCUR:
2 __________________________________
3 GERALD E. BACA, Judge
4 __________________________________
5 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge,
6 retired, sitting by designation
23