Brenda Brewer, Deanna Meador, Penny Adams and Sabra Curry v. Lowe's Home Centers Inc. ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                         ACCEPTED
    12-14-00155-CV
    TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS
    TYLER, TEXAS
    7/9/2015 11:15:24 AM
    CATHY LUSK
    CLERK
    NO. 12-14-00155-CV
    FILED IN
    IN THE TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TWELFTH   DISTRICT
    12th COURT  OF APPEALS
    TYLER, TEXAS              TYLER, TEXAS
    7/9/2015 11:15:24 AM
    * * * * *                        CATHY S. LUSK
    Clerk
    BRENDA BREWER, DEANNA MEADOR, PENNY ADAMS, and SABRA
    CURRY
    APPELLANTS
    V.
    LOWE’S HOME CENTERS, INC.,
    APPELLEE
    * * * * *
    On Appeal from the 3rd Judicial District Court
    Anderson County, Texas
    District Court Cause No. 3-41083
    * * * * *
    APPELLANTS’ REPLY BRIEF
    Respectfully submitted,
    Matthew R. Pearson                   Brendan K. McBride
    State Bar No. 0078817                State Bar No. 24008900
    mpearson@gplawfirm.com               Brendan.mcbride@att.net
    GRAVELY & PEARSON, LLP               THE MCBRIDE LAW FIRM of counsel
    425 Soledad, Suite 600                to GRAVELY & PEARSON. LLP
    San Antonio, Texas 78205             425 Soledad, Suite 620
    (210) 472-1111 Telephone             San Antonio, Texas 78205
    (210) 472-1110 Facsimile             (210) 472-11111 Telephone
    (210) 881-6752 Facsimile
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS
    1
    TABLE OF CONTENTS
    Page
    TABLE OF CONTENTS..........................................................................................2
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES.....................................................................................3
    INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................................4
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES .......................................................................7
    I. LOWE’S ARGUMENT IMPLICITLY DISREGARDS THE STANDARD OF REVIEW
    APPLICABLE TO DIRECTED VERDICTS ...............................................................7
    II. THERE IS MORE THAN A SCINTILLA OF EVIDENCE THAT APPELLANTS’
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS WERE A CAUSE OF THEIR TERMINATIONS.
    ..........................................................................................................................8
    III. THE LEAVE OF ABSENCE POLICY WAS NOT FOLLOWED; THIS CASE IS FAR
    MORE SIMILAR TO ECHOSTAR THAN THE CASES RELIED ON BY LOWE’S.........18
    CONCLUSION .......................................................................................................24
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE.................................................................................26
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE .......................................................................26
    2
    TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
    Page
    Cases
    Armendariz v. Redcats USA, L.P., 
    390 S.W.3d 463
    (Tex. App. – El Paso 2012, no pet.)...........14
    Aust v. Conroe Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    153 S.W.3d 222
    (Tex. App. – Beaumont 2004, no pet.) ..........14
    Baptist Memorial Healthcare Sys. v. Casanova, 
    2 S.W.3d 306
    (Tex. App.--San Antonio 1999, pet.
    denied) .............................................................................................................................................. 16
    Benners v. Blanks Color Imaging, Inc., 
    133 S.W.3d 364
    (Tex. App. – Dallas 2004, no pet.)..........10
    City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    (Tex. 2005) ....................................................................9, 22
    Coastal Transp. Co. v. Crown Cent. Petroleum Corp., 
    136 S.W.3d 227
    (Tex. 2004) ........................6, 8
    Collora v. Navarro, 
    574 S.W.2d 65
    (Tex. 1978) ...................................................................................8
    Cont'l Coffee Prods. Co. v. Cazarez, 
    937 S.W.2d 444
    (Tex. 1996) .............................................passim
    Echostar Satellite, L.L.C. v. Aguilar, 
    394 S.W.3d 276
    (Tex. App. – El Paso 2012, pet. denied)
    .................................................................................................................................................... passim
    Haggar Clothing Co. v. Hernandez, 
    164 S.W.3d 386
    (Tex. 2005) ......................................................24
    Henson v. Reddin, 
    358 S.W.3d 428
    (Tex.App. – Fort Worth 2012, no pet.)...................................9
    Jenkins v. Guardian Indus. Corp., 
    16 S.W.3d 431
    (Tex. App. – Waco 2000, pet. denied) ..............9
    Kings Aire, Inc. v. Melendez, 
    416 S.W.3d 898
    (Tex. App. – El Paso 2013, pet. filed)...........passim
    Omoro v. Harcourt Brace & Co., No. 05-96-01454-CV, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS 133, 
    1999 WL 10388
    , at *3 (Tex. App. – Dallas 1999, no pet.)(mem. op.) .....................................................16
    Parker v. Valerus Compression Servs., LP, 
    365 S.W.3d 61
    (Tex. App. – Houston [1st Dist. 2011,
    pet. denied)....................................................................................................................................... 24
    Texas Division-Tranter, Inc. v. Carrozza, 
    876 S.W.2d 312
    (Tex. 1994) ............................................24
    White v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 
    651 S.W.2d 260
    (Tex. 1983) ...................................................6, 8
    3
    INTRODUCTION
    There are two glaring infirmities in the argument presented by Lowe’s Home
    Centers, Inc. (“Lowe’s”) in its brief to this Court. First, a careful review of the
    argument reveals that Lowe’s is fundamentally misunderstanding or misapplying the
    standard of review applicable to appellate review of a directed verdict.           Lowe’s
    arguments are repeatedly characterized in terms of how the evidence for each of the
    Cont’l Coffee factors “weighs” in favor of Lowe’s. However, that is not the standard of
    review applicable to the directed verdict in this case. Rather, the Court is tasked with
    determining whether there is at least a scintilla of evidence to support the Cont’l Coffee
    factors.1
    Framed around the proper scope of this Court’s review of a directed verdict,
    the Court’s task is very specific and direct: the Court must determine if there is a
    scintilla of evidence to support at least three of the five Cont’l Coffee factors, which is
    all that is required under Texas law to demonstrate causation in a workers’
    compensation retaliation case. This is not an evidentiary weighing process as Lowe’s
    implies. Weighing evidence is for a jury, the trial court’s directed verdict prevented a
    jury from weighing the evidence.
    The Court must “consider all of the evidence in a light most favorable to the
    party against whom the verdict was instructed and disregard all contrary evidence and
    inferences” and “give the losing party the benefit of all reasonable inferences created
    1   Cont'l Coffee Prods. Co. v. Cazarez, 
    937 S.W.2d 444
    , 450 (Tex. 1996).
    4
    by the evidence.” Coastal Transp. Co. v. Crown Cent. Petroleum Corp., 
    136 S.W.3d 227
    ,
    233-234 (Tex. 2004) (citing White v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 
    651 S.W.2d 260
    , 262 (Tex.
    1983)). Applying this standard, there was substantial evidence to support – not just
    three – but all five of the Cont’l Coffee factors.
    The second infirmity is Lowe’s inability to distinguish the most directly on-
    point case cited by either party in their briefing to this Court. The case most similar
    to this one is Echostar Satellite, L.L.C. v. Aguilar, 
    394 S.W.3d 276
    (Tex. App. – El Paso
    2012, pet. denied), in which the El Paso Court of Appeals found sufficient evidence
    of retaliatory motive and causation where a company “deviated from their policies” by
    making an employee who had made workers’ compensation claims work against their
    light duty restrictions or be fired, and further deviated from their policies by failing to
    notify the worker in writing, advising him of the expiration of his leave prior to
    terminating his employment.” 
    Id. at 288.
    Lowe’s briefing does not even address the
    Echostar case, despite that it was extensively discussed and block-quoted in Appellants’
    brief. Appellants’ Brief at p. 45-46.
    The record evidence here shows that Lowe’s management actually knew these
    employees were working on light duty restrictions and had made workers’
    compensation claims. There is more than a scintilla of evidence that these same
    Lowe’s managers made disparaging and negative remarks not just about workers’
    compensation claimants in general, but these four workers in particular, including
    testimony from two individuals who were personally present in discussions with those
    5
    managers and heard such statements. There is more than a scintilla of evidence that
    each of the Appellants was worked against their light duty restrictions and threatened
    with termination and insulted when they protested – just as in Echostar. There is more
    than a scintilla of evidence that Lowe’s managers did not notify the employees that
    they had been put on a “personal leave” system with a limited duration – just as in
    Kings Aire, Inc. v. Melendez, 
    416 S.W.3d 898
    (Tex. App. – El Paso 2013, pet. granted).
    Finally, there is evidence that none of these employees were warned they would be
    terminated under the personal leave policy (to which they did not even know they had
    been subjected) until after each of them had already been terminated – just as in
    Echostar.
    Considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable to Appellants, as the
    Court must, there was more than a scintilla of evidence to establish retaliation was the
    cause of their terminations and that Lowe’s attempt to rely on its personal leave
    policy, which it did not even follow, was a false pretext. Under the proper standard of
    review, this evidence must be weighed by a jury. The directed verdict was error and
    the judgment must be reversed and remanded for a full trial on the merits.
    6
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    I.     LOWE’S ARGUMENT IMPLICITLY DISREGARDS THE STANDARD OF REVIEW
    APPLICABLE TO DIRECTED VERDICTS
    With regard to almost every Cont’l Coffee factor, Lowe’s selectively chooses parts
    of the record it believes supports its factual positions and argues that the evidence
    “weighs” in favor of Lowe’s. Appellee’s Brief at pp. 26, 28, 31-32 and 34. This is not
    a proper legal argument in support of a directed verdict. In the procedural posture in
    which this case stands before the Court, this Court’s task is not to weigh evidence that
    was never considered by a jury.
    As explained in Appellants’ principal brief, in reviewing a directed verdict, the
    Court must determine whether there is more than a scintilla of evidence to raise a fact
    issue on the challenged elements. See Coastal Transp. (citing Collora v. Navarro, 
    574 S.W.2d 65
    , 68 (Tex. 1978)). The Court must “consider all of the evidence in a light
    most favorable to the party against whom the verdict was instructed and disregard all
    contrary evidence and inferences” and “give the losing party the benefit of all
    reasonable inferences created by the evidence.” Coastal Transp. at 233 (citing White v.
    Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 
    651 S.W.2d 260
    , 262 (Tex. 1983)).
    The standard of review for evidentiary sufficiency does not allow for the
    arguments Lowe’s makes here – picking through the record and finding its own
    controverting favorable evidence that “weighs” in its favor. Instead, the Court must
    credit favorable evidence if reasonable jurors could, and disregard contrary evidence unless
    7
    reasonable jurors could not. City of Keller v. Wilson, 
    168 S.W.3d 802
    , 822, 827 (Tex.
    2005)(emphasis added); Henson v. Reddin, 
    358 S.W.3d 428
    , 434 (Tex. App. – Fort
    Worth 2012, no pet.).
    Under this standard, there was more than a scintilla of evidence to support
    more than three of the five Cont’l Coffee factors and to support the conclusion that
    Lowe’s attempt to rely on its personal leave policy in terminating Appellants’
    employment was a false pretext.
    II.    THERE IS MORE THAN A SCINTILLA OF EVIDENCE THAT APPELLANTS’
    WORKERS’ COMPENSATION CLAIMS WERE A CAUSE OF THEIR
    TERMINATIONS.
    Since rare is the case where an employer expressly admits a retaliatory motive
    for a termination, Texas law permits an employee to prove the causal link between the
    adverse employment decision and the workers’ compensation claim by direct or
    circumstantial evidence. Jenkins v. Guardian Indus. Corp., 
    16 S.W.3d 431
    , 436 (Tex. App.
    – Waco 2000, pet. denied). Both parties agree that circumstantial evidence of
    causation in a retaliation case is determined by considering the factors set forth in
    Cont’l Coffee. Those factors are:
    (1) knowledge of the compensation claim by those making the decision
    on termination;
    (2) expression of a negative attitude towards the employee's injured
    condition;
    (3) failure to adhere to established company policies;
    8
    (4) discriminatory treatment in comparison to similarly situated
    employees; and
    (5) evidence that the stated reason for the discharge was false.
    Cont’l 
    Coffee, 937 S.W.2d at 451
    ; Benners v. Blanks Color Imaging, Inc., 
    133 S.W.3d 364
    ,
    369 (Tex. App. – Dallas 2004, no pet.).
    1. Lowe’s managers knew of the claims: Lowe’s plays a bit of a shell game when it
    comes to whether local managers were those making the termination decision. While
    Lowe’s concedes, as it must, that there was evidence the managers at the Palestine
    store were aware that all four employees had made workers’ compensation claims and
    knew that all four were back on light duty under Lowe’s workers’ compensation
    policies, they claim that the final decision to terminate them under the personal leave
    policy was made by someone else at Lowe’s corporate. Lowe’s argument rests on the
    false assumption that the retaliation was at the moment the termination letters were
    issued rather than when the decision was made at the store level to force the
    employees to work against their light duty restrictions and then place them on limited
    personal leaves of absence without their approval or knowledge.
    That switch, which happened at the local Palestine store level, made their
    terminations inevitable. Essentially, the evidence supports the reasonable inference
    that the local store manager knew about the workers’ compensation claims, wanted
    these employees to become Lowe’s next customers, and figured out that he could rig
    the situation to automatically terminate the four employees by forcing them to stop
    9
    working by threatening and intimidating them to work against their physical
    restrictions and then categorizing them as taking personal leave, triggering a clock that
    would guarantee their termination.
    The decision that resulted in their termination was made at the store level, not
    by Lowe’s corporate, as Lowe’s argues. The same managers that knew of the claims,
    expressed negative attitudes toward them and admitted to wanting to make them
    “Lowe’s next customers” are the same managers who took those actions that would
    necessarily culminate in all four employees being terminated.           How this was
    accomplished, and the record citations for each part of that explanation, is described
    in detail on pages 22-25 of Appellants’ principal brief. In sum, however:
     Under Lowe’s leave of absence policies, there was no time limit on leave
    taken by a workers’ compensation claimant, but there was a maximum
    leave established for personal leaves of absence. (RR6:6-9)
     To place someone into the limited personal leave and trigger these
    maximum periods, a form has to be filled out either by the employee or
    by someone at the store designating that the employee was taking
    personal leave, and this would then be coded into Lowe’s computer
    system. (RR6:13-15)
     Once the employee is designated at the store level as being on a personal
    leave instead of a workers’ compensation leave, Lowe’s system then
    treats that employee as subject to the maximum number of days allowed
    under the Leave of Absence policy and will automatically terminate
    those employees when they exceed the maximum. (RR6:9-12)
     None of the four Appellants requested to be placed on personal leave.
    (RR6:26-27, 30, 31) None of them were aware that they were subject to
    a maximum period of leave until after they were already terminated,
    10
    either, because they did not even receive warning notices before they
    were terminated. (RR4:28, 132, 203; 5:79)
    There is more than a scintilla of evidence that the terminations of these four
    employees were carried out using Lowe’s system by its local managers at the store
    level. Put another way, the retaliation at issue in this case was working employees
    against restrictions so that they could be placed on a conveyor belt toward inevitable
    termination without their knowledge or consent. There is no genuine dispute that the
    managers who retaliated against Brewer, Meador, Adams and Curry were well aware
    that all four employees were on light duty restrictions because they had made workers’
    compensation claims.
    The evidence shows the store manager, Gonzalez, and other high-level
    managers including Mike Bohem, a Zone Manager, and Nick Boren, the Operations
    Manager, knew about and expressed negative attitudes about these four employees
    because of their injuries is detailed on pages 35-36 of Appellants’ principal brief.
    Thus, there is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the first of the Cont’l Coffee
    factors – the managers that took the actions resulting in the terminations of these
    employees actually knew that each employee was on workers’ compensation.
    2.     Lowe’s managers expressed a negative attitude. The second factor is also
    supported by sufficient evidence. Though Lowe’s points to testimony wherein its
    managers deny any retaliatory motive, reviewing the record in the light most favorable
    to the Appellants, there is direct evidence that Lowe’s managers at the Palestine store
    11
    expressed negative attitudes evidencing retaliatory motives toward workers’
    compensation claimants, including these four claimants in particular. This evidence is
    detailed on pages 35-37, and includes testimony that the store’s general manager and
    other managers expressing doubts about the injuries, and wanting to make them
    “Lowe’s next customers.” There is also evidence that all four were subjected to
    intimidation, threats and insults when they tried to protest that they were being
    worked against the light duty restrictions provided under Lowe’s workers’
    compensation policies. (RR3:52-53; 4:13-14, 123, 191; 5:76) They were all threatened
    with losing their jobs if they protested being worked against the light duty policy.
    (RR3:50, 52-53; 4:13-14; 5:72) Setting aside Lowe’s erroneous argument that the
    Court is to “weigh” evidence in reviewing a directed verdict, there is sufficient
    evidence to support the second Cont’l Coffee factor as well.
    3.      Lowe’s failed to follow numerous policies.     The third factor is likewise
    supported by more than a scintilla of evidence.            There was evidence of several
    substantial failures to abide by established policies. Several of these are detailed
    above, including the failure to honor and follow the light duty restrictions provided
    under Lowe’s workers’ compensation policy by making the employees work outside
    their restrictions and threatening and intimidating them if they protested.
    In addition, the evidence showed Lowe’s failed to document when and why the
    employees were switched from workers’ compensation to “personal leave” in the
    Lowe’s computer system. For each employee, there should have been a form or
    12
    computer screen capture in their employee file showing that a request for personal
    leave had been made for each employee. Yet there were no forms for any of these
    four employees. (RR6:26-28, 30, 31) Each employee’s personnel file should have also
    had a leave of absence checklist if this had been the start of a personal leave – yet
    there were none. (RR6:22) In fact, Lowe’s corporate representative could not explain
    how Lowe’s could even calculate the start of the personal leave periods for these
    employees since there was no documentation to support when they even started these
    supposed “personal leaves.” (RR6:25) None of these employees were ever even aware
    they were categorized by Lowe’s as taking personal leave until each received her
    termination letter. (RR4:28, 132, 203; 5:79)
    There were yet other failures to follow company policy. The evidence shows
    Lowe’s had a policy requiring warning letters to each employee that went out prior to
    exceeding the personal leave maximum had these employees actually been properly
    subjected to the personal leave policy. (RR6:20-21) Yet, none of the employees were
    aware they had been put on personal leave, or near exceeding the maximum number
    of days allowed, until after each was terminated. (RR4:28, 132, 203; 5:79)
    The Court need not even consider the other two factors, as a showing that any
    three of them were supported by sufficient evidence to create a fact issue would
    require reversal of the directed verdict. Armendariz v. Redcats USA, L.P., 
    390 S.W.3d 463
    , 469 (Tex. App. – El Paso 2012, no pet.); Aust v. Conroe Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    153 S.W.3d 222
    , 229 (Tex. App. – Beaumont 2004, no pet.). However, even if the Court
    13
    were unconvinced that there was sufficient evidence of the first three factors, the
    record supports the remaining two Cont’l Coffee factors.
    4.     The employees were treated differently from non-claimants. The most direct and
    clear evidence of this is the fact that Lowe’s policies required a decision to start
    personal leave be documented in Lowe’s system upon request by the employee. None
    of the four employees requested that they be placed on personal leave. None of them
    knew that they were on personal leave and subject to a maximum number of leave
    days until after they were terminated. Lowe’s policies also required notice to be sent
    to employees that were ordinarily on personal leave warning them that their leave was
    about to expire before they were terminated. Thus, had these been ordinary Lowe’s
    employees taking personal leave, they would have requested it, been aware that they
    were on it, been aware of how long they had before they would be terminated, and
    would have received a warning letter prior to termination to confirm they were about
    to exceed the maximum leave.
    The evidence here shows that these employees, all of whom should have been
    on workers’ compensation leave after being deliberately worked against their physical
    restrictions in violation of Lowe’s workers’ compensation policy, did not request to be
    put on personal leave, no personal leave was properly documented in Lowe’s system,
    and no warning was sent prior to termination. The record supports that none of
    these four women knew they were even subject to the personal leave maximum until
    14
    after each one’s employment had already been terminated. (RR4:28, 132, 203; 5:79)
    There is more than a scintilla of evidence to support the fourth Cont’l Coffee factor.
    5. Stated reason is false. Finally, there is also evidence of the fifth Cont’l Coffee
    factor because there is some evidence that Lowe’s stated reason for the termination
    was false.     The evidence shows Lowe’s managers mis-categorized workers’
    compensation claimants as though they were taking “personal leave” to trigger the
    maximum leave provision of Lowe’s leave policy – which otherwise would not have
    applied if Lowe’s treated them as workers’ compensation claimants they actually were.
    As explained in Appellants’ principal brief, if an employee’s termination is
    claimed to be the result of an attendance policy, the employee raises a fact issue by
    providing some evidence of retaliatory intent. Kings Aire, Inc. v. Melendez, 
    416 S.W.3d 898
    (Tex. App. – El Paso 2013, pet. filed); Echostar Satellite, L.L.C. v. Aguilar, 
    394 S.W.3d 276
    , 288 (Tex. App. – El Paso 2012, pet. denied); see also Baptist Memorial
    Healthcare Sys. v. Casanova, 
    2 S.W.3d 306
    , 309 (Tex. App.--San Antonio 1999, pet.
    denied); Omoro v. Harcourt Brace & Co., No. 05-96-01454-CV, 1999 Tex. App. LEXIS
    133, 
    1999 WL 10388
    , at *3 (Tex. App. – Dallas 1999, no pet.)(mem. op.)(employee
    may raise fact issue in face of attendance policy compliance by producing competent
    “evidence of a retaliatory motive”).
    As detailed above, the absence control policy was not even followed as to these
    four employees. For each employee, there should have been a form or computer
    screen capture in their employee file showing that a request for personal leave had
    15
    been made for each employee, and each personnel file should have also had a leave of
    absence checklist if this had been the start of a personal leave – yet there were none.
    There should also have been warning letters to each employee that went out
    prior to exceeding the personal leave maximum had these employees actually been
    properly subjected to the personal leave policy. (RR6:20-21) There were none –
    indeed none of the four workers knew they had been categorized as being on personal
    leave subject to a maximum number of days until they each received their letter of
    termination. (RR4:28, 132, 203; 5:79)
    Thus, there was evidence that the leave of absence policy was not uniformly
    followed. Indeed, the leave of absence policy was not followed by Lowe’s with regard
    to these four employees. In fact, it does not even appear that any part of it was
    followed other than issuing termination letters to set up the pretext that these
    employees were fired for taking too much personal leave instead of being fired for
    making workers’ compensation claims.
    This evidence not only further supports the third Cont’l Coffee factor – failure to
    abide by set policies – but it also supports the fifth factor – Lowe’s stated reason for
    the termination of these employees was false. If the neutral application of the absence
    control policy were the actual reason for the termination of Brewer, Meador, Adams
    and Curry, then the evidence would show Lowe’s actually followed that policy. A
    reasonable jury could infer Lowe’s reliance on its absence control policy, which would
    not apply to workers’ compensation leave because it had no maximum leave period,
    16
    was a false pretext. Gonzalez’s statements during managers’ meetings that workers’
    compensation claims impacted the store budget and his bonuses and intended to
    make workers’ compensation claimants into “Lowe’s next customers” also shows
    Lowe’s proffered non-discriminatory reason is a false pretext covering a retaliatory
    motive.
    Finally, Tinsley’s testimony that Gonzalez would move injured employees
    around in order to make them “quit” (RR7:24) is direct evidence that they were not
    actually terminated for taking too much personal leave, but were terminated because
    they were workers’ compensation claimants whose claims and light duty status were
    impacting managers’ bonuses.
    In sum, a reasonable jury, had it been allowed to deliberate on this record,
    could have concluded that Lowe’s managers in Palestine deliberately moved these
    four employees around, working them against their light duty restrictions in violation
    of Lowe’s workers’ compensation policy in order to get them to quit or force them to
    take time off from work that Lowe’s would then categorize as “personal” leave
    subject to the leave of absence policy. There was both direct and circumstantial
    evidence that a retaliatory motive was a cause of these employees’ terminations. In
    fact, as explained in the next section, there is quite a bit more evidence in this case
    than was found sufficient in either Kings Aire or Echostar.
    17
    III.   THE LEAVE OF ABSENCE POLICY WAS NOT FOLLOWED; THIS
    CASE IS FAR MORE SIMILAR TO ECHOSTAR THAN THE CASES
    RELIED ON BY LOWE’S.
    The facts of this case make the retaliatory motive even more clear than in
    either, Kings Aire or Echostar, where both courts found sufficient evidence that an
    ostensibly neutral absence control policy was rebutted by evidence of a retaliatory
    motive and failure to follow the policy. Lowe’s attempts to distinguish Kings Aire rely
    on its mistaken arguments about the record evidence in this case, and minor factual
    distinctions that make no meaningful difference. For instance, Lowe’s argues the
    employer in Kings Aire knew about the claims but the managers responsible for the
    termination here did not. However, as explained above, this is based on Lowe’s
    misleading argument that the managers at the Palestine store were not responsible for
    categorizing these employees as being on personal leave without their knowledge in
    order to trigger the personal leave policy and terminate them.
    In Kings Aire the employer re-categorized the employee from the unlimited
    workers’ compensation leave to a limited FMLA leave, then terminated the employee
    ostensibly for violating the amount of leave that would be available for FMLA. 
    Id., 416 S.W.3d
    at 910. As here, the amount of leave would have been unlimited had the
    employee been treated as taking workers’ compensation-related leave. Finding that
    record presented a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the employee
    requested to be put on FMLA leave or whether the employer did it without the
    employee’s consent, the court concluded:
    18
    There is a fact question as to whether Melendez elected to switch from
    the indefinite worker's compensation leave to the time-limited FMLA
    leave himself — in which case Kings Aire properly allowed a cause-
    neutral absence control “clock” to expire before termination — or
    whether Kings Aire switched him to time-limited FMLA leave without
    his consent for the specific purpose of retaliating from behind a cause-
    neutral veil.
    
    Id. The court
    affirmed the jury’s verdict in favor of the employee, finding it was
    supported by sufficient evidence. 
    Id. Contrary to
    Lowe’s arguments distinguishing Kings Aire, the facts here are far
    more clear than those in Kings Aire. Here, in addition to evidence that the employer
    switched the employee to a limited category of leave without the employees’
    knowledge, the record also supports:
     Lowe’s deliberately worked these employees beyond their light duty
    restrictions to force them into taking leaves of absence;
     Lowe’s store manager, Gonzalez, stated that he did this in order to make
    injured employees “quit,” that he resented the effect these injured
    employees had on the store’s budget, and that he sought to make them
    “Lowe’s next customer”;
     Other managers engaged in a pattern of bullying, intimidation and
    threats when the employees attempted to protect themselves by
    protesting they were on physical work restrictions;
     After they had been worked against restrictions long enough that they
    could no longer perform their work, without the employees’ request or
    knowledge, Lowe’s categorized all four employees as taking “personal
    leave” instead of what should have been unlimited workers’
    compensation leave, thereby triggering a time clock they were unaware
    was ticking until after they received notice that their employment was
    terminated;
    19
     Lowe’s followed almost none of the policy requirements for a
    termination that would have been accomplished through a “neutral”
    leave policy, including failure to document the start of the leave, failure
    to create a leave checklist, failure to notify the employees they were even
    on limited personal leave, and failure to issue warning letters prior to
    termination apprising these employees that they were about to exceed
    the maximum leave policy.
    If anything, this case much more readily and obviously raises evidence of a valid
    retaliation claim than the facts of Kings Aire.
    The facts of Echostar, which Lowe’s does not even attempt to distinguish (or
    even mention in its brief) are even more similar to this case.   There, the employee,
    Aguilar, was a satellite installer who suffered a work-related injury and made a
    workers’ compensation claim.        He returned to work on “light duty” answering
    phones, but within a few days his managers and others began “mocking his injury.”
    
    Id., 394 S.W.3d
    at 283. The evidence included statements by Aguilar’s manager that
    his workplace injury “created a negative financial impact” on the company, was
    “costing money” and “disrupting” the installation department’s “quota system.” 
    Id. Aguilar was
    then threatened by his manager that if he could not do installation work,
    he would be fired. 
    Id. He was
    offered the choice of going on FMLA instead, which
    he accepted because his manager would not allow him to continue on light duty. 
    Id. Three weeks
    after the conclusion of his FMLA leave period, Aguilar was terminated.
    
    Id. at 284.
    Affirming the jury’s verdict for Aguilar, the court found there was sufficient
    evidence that a retaliatory motive was a contributing cause of Aguilar’s termination –
    20
    applying the same legal sufficiency standards applicable to a directed verdict. 
    Id. at 287
    (citing City of Keller).   Relying on the Cont’l Coffee factors as the standard for
    circumstantial evidence in such cases, the court concluded:
    In the instant case, several of the Cont’l Coffee Prods. Co. and Wyler factors
    are present and establish the initial causal link. For example, there is no
    question that Appellants had knowledge of the compensation claim and
    that the people making the decision to terminate were aware of the
    claim, a factor favoring Aguilar. Aguilar testified that other employees
    showed a negative attitude towards his condition, while Appellants
    provided contravening testimony. Appellants deviated from their
    policies in a number of respects, specifically in that Appellants' policy is
    to provide transitional or light duty for injured employees, however after
    only a few days on light duty, Aguilar was told to either return to his
    regular duties or be fired. Appellants further deviated from their policies
    by failing to notify Aguilar in writing, advising him of the expiration of
    his leave prior to terminating his employment.
    
    Id. at 288.
    Although the court found no evidence of disparate treatment of non-
    injured employees (the fourth factor), the court still concluded the Cont’l Coffee factors
    were supported by enough evidence in the factors described above to support the
    jury’s finding that a retaliatory motive was the cause of Aguilar’s termination. 
    Id. The court
    also found that the employer’s failure to follow the FMLA leave
    policy created a fact issue as to whether the enforcement of the leave policy was a
    “neutral” explanation for the termination. Specifically, the court found that since the
    employer had not followed the FMLA termination policy as to Aguilar himself, which
    would have required his termination after 3 days of absence, there was sufficient
    evidence that the policy was not uniformly enforced. 
    Id. at 286-87.
    21
    All of these facts – and more – are present in this case. The store-level
    management in Palestine where these employees were mis-designated as taking
    personal leave without their knowledge were well aware that all four employees had
    made workers’ compensation claims and were on light duty restrictions under Lowe’s
    workers’ compensation policy.        There is abundant evidence that Lowe’s store
    management had a negative attitude toward the workers and their injuries, including
    evidence of a deliberate plan by Gonzalez to move injured employees around to
    different jobs to try to make them quit, threats of termination, intimidation and insults
    and similar conduct far more severe than that detailed in Echostar. As in Echostar,
    Lowe’s had a policy of providing light duty work to workers’ compensation claimants,
    but refused to honor the light duty, threatening the employees with termination unless
    they worked against their light duty restrictions.
    Finally, just like the employer in Echostar, there is evidence Lowe’s did not
    uniformly apply or follow its personal leave policy. Thus, there was evidence that the
    personal leave policy was not uniformly applied – and specifically not uniformly
    applied as to these four employees, who were put on limited personal leaves of
    absence without requesting it, without being notified of it, without it being
    documented in their personnel records and without advance written warning that they
    would be terminated for exceeding the maximum leave allowed under the policy.
    Even beyond the facts of Echostar, this case shows that workers’ compensation
    claimants were treated differently than regular employees by moving them around to
    22
    make them quit and by placing them on personal leaves without their request or
    knowledge. Moreover, in Echostar at least the employee, Aguilar, was aware he had
    been placed on FMLA leave with a limited duration. Here, the evidence is that these
    employees were completely unaware they had been categorized as taking limited
    personal leave until after they were already terminated.
    Tellingly, Lowe’s brief does not even mention the Echostar case. The only
    meaningful distinction that could be drawn between this case and Echostar is that the
    evidence supporting the Cont’l Coffee factors and the deviations from the supposed
    uniform policy is even more extensive here than it was in Echostar. By contrast, the
    cases relied on by Lowe’s are easily distinguishable. In none of those cases - Texas
    Division-Tranter, Inc. v. Carrozza, 
    876 S.W.2d 312
    (Tex. 1994), Parker v. Valerus
    Compression Servs., LP, 
    365 S.W.3d 61
    (Tex. App. – Houston [1st Dist. 2011, pet.
    denied) or Haggar Clothing Co. v. Hernandez, 
    164 S.W.3d 386
    (Tex. 2005) – did the
    evidence show that individuals were targeted because of their workers’ compensation
    claims in order to be put on limited personal leaves without their knowledge as in this
    case and Kings Aire. In none of those cases did the evidence show that the supposedly
    neutral policy was not even followed. Rather, as in Echostar and Kings Aire, this case
    involves evidence raising a genuine issue of fact establishing that the policy was not
    uniformly applied, was not followed and was a false pretext to conceal a retaliatory
    motive. Indeed, this case involves direct evidence of that retaliatory motive in the
    form of statements by the store manager that he intended to move light duty
    23
    employees around the store in order to make them quit. As detailed extensively in the
    discussion of the fact in Appellants’ principal brief (pp. 10-19), that is precisely was
    Lowe’s management did to all four of these women.
    Because there was more than a scintilla of evidence to support most of the
    Cont’l Coffee factors and evidence that the “personal leave” policy was not uniformly
    applied or followed, there is factually and legally sufficient evidence that a retaliatory
    motive was a contributing cause of the terminations of Brenda Brewer, Sabra Curry,
    Deanna Meador and Penny Adams.
    CONCLUSION
    A reasonable jury could conclude both (1) that the making of workers’
    compensation claims in good faith was a cause of the terminations of Brewer,
    Meador, Adams and Curry, and (2) that Lowe’s stated alternative reason was false. It
    was error to direct a verdict for Lowe’s. The judgment should be reversed and this
    case should be remanded to the trial court for trial to a jury.
    Respectfully submitted,
    GRAVELY & PEARSON, LLP
    425 Soledad, Suite 600
    San Antonio, Texas 78205
    Telephone: (210) 472-1111
    Facsimile: (210) 472-1110
    By:
    Matthew R. Pearson
    24
    State Bar No. 00788173
    And
    THE MCBRIDE LAW FIRM, of counsel
    to GRAVELY & PEARSON, LLP
    425 Soledad, Suite 620
    San Antonio, Texas 78205
    Telephone: (210) 472-1111
    Facsimile: (210) 881-6752
    By:
    Brendan K. McBride
    State Bar No. 24008900
    ATTORNEYS FOR
    APPELLANTS, BRENDA
    BREWER, DEANNA
    MEADOR, PENNY ADAMS, and
    SABRA CURRY
    25
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing document has been
    forwarded on this 9th day of July, 2015 via electronic service through Texas.gov on
    Appellee’s counsel of record:
    Holly Williamson
    Jamilah Mensah
    Hunton & Williams, LLP
    Brendan K. McBride
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    I hereby certify that this brief is in compliance with the rules governing the length
    of briefs prepared by electronic means. The brief was prepared using Microsoft Word
    2010. According to the software used to prepare this brief, the total word count,
    including footnotes, but not including those sections excluded by rule, is 5,341.
    Brendan K. McBride
    26