ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Plaintiff Leon Luxemburg brought this employment discrimination suit pleading misrepresentation; false light invasion of privacy; deprivation of rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983; racial, national origin, and religious discrimination under 42 U.S.C. § 2000e et seq. (Title VII); the Texas “Whistleblower” statute, Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 6252-16a; and violations of the Texas Constitution. By earlier order, this Court dismissed all causes of action except the Title VII claims against Texas A & M University at Galveston (“TA-MUG”) and the individual Defendants in their official capacity and the § 1983 free-speech and state-law claims against the individual Defendants in thеir individual capacities. The Court subsequently granted the Plaintiffs partial motion to dismiss the state-law claims. Before the Court now are Defendants Merrell’s and MeCloy’s motion for summary judgment and Defendant Slotta’s motion for summary judgment on the Title VII and § 1983 claims, arguing that the Plaintiff has failed to show that the Defendants intentionally discriminated against him for purposes of a Title VII claim and that the Defendants are not liable under the § 1983 free-speech claims. The Plaintiff has failed to respond to the Defendants’ motions in a timely manner, and both Defendants’ motions are GRANTED. 1
Leon Luxemburg is a Jewish immigrant from Russia who was employed in 1989 as a part-time instructor in the Maritime College of TAMUG. Dr. Luxemburg began discussions in the spring of 1990 with TAMUG about a possible tenure-track professorship in the University. On May 10, 1990, Dr. Larry Slotta, the Director of Engineering Programs at TAMUG, sent Luxemburg a memorandum outlining discussions the two men had already had about the terms of Luxemburg’s employment. Slotta wrote that, because Luxemburg had good prospects for bringing significant research projects with him to TAMUG, Luxemburg’s salary would be “at least $41,000 for two semesters,” with TAMUG to cover two-thirds of this salary and “you to provide the other Jé of your support for these semesters and full time during the summer months.” (Slotta’s motion fоr summary judgment, Exhibit 1). The same terms of employment compensation were repeated in a letter sent by Slotta on August 8, 1990, that confirmed oral discussions the two men had concerning Luxemburg’s employment. Luxemburg was subsequently hired as a tenure-track faculty member of TAMUG.
Thus, from the very beginning of this case, all parties explicitly understood that TAMUG would provide only two-thirds of Luxemburg’s proposed salary. Although the August 13, 1990 contract lists Luxemburg’s salary as $4,555.56 per month, on September 1st a Form 500R Request was filed breaking down this payment into components that reflected the two-thirds/one-third division the parties had already discussed. (See Slotta’s motion for summary judgment, Exhibit 5). According to that form, TAMUG would pay 100% of Luxemburg’s monthly salary of $4,555.56, from September 1 to November 30, 1990, after which TAMTJG’s contribution was to drop to 57.14% of the same monthly salary. The remaining 42.86% of salary for all months beginning December 1st was to come from the research grant money to be brought into the University by Luxemburg and administered to him through the Texas A & M University Research Foundation. Although the parties are less than clear on the point, it appears that no money could be disbursed to Luxemburg from the Research Foundation until the grant monies (which never materialized) were first placed in the Foundation. (See Slotta’s motion for summary judgment, Exhibit 6). There is no record that Luxemburg made any objection to the Form 500R Request breakdown of his salary.
Unfortunately, relations between Slotta and Luxemburg progressively deteriorated into a state of personal animosity of the most poisonous kind, which began to generate conduct that would have taxed the imagination of Lewis Carroll. Among other incidents, Slotta referred to Luxemburg’s resume as “toilet paper”; Luxemburg filed complaints against Slotta; Slotta filed charges against Luxemburg for assault with a gun, causing Luxemburg’s arrest on campus (trial is currently pending); Luxemburg was assigned an “office” in an attic; and, almost incredibly, Slotta made charges to the FBI that Luxemburg was acting as a KGB agent (for which the FBI found no supporting evidence whatsoever). All of this, the Court notes, was done by educated professionals charged with the important task of training collegiate minds for the “real world.”
Against the backdrop of such ludicrous behavior, the following events occurred which are relevant to these causes of action. In September 1990, Slotta invited faculty members to attend a Saturday seminar and workshop on engineering education given by Dr. Kenneth Williamson. Luxemburg, who observes the Jewish Sabbath, informed Slotta that he would not be able to attend for religious reasons. Luxemburg claims that his non-attendance was later one basis for what he claims is a negative evaluation given him by Slotta, one that Luxemburg claims is evidence of the Defendant’s hostility towards Jews.
Unfortunately, the proposed research money that all parties seem to have assumed Luxemburg would win or would bring with him to TAMUG did not materialize, and on or about February 1,1991 his monthly salary was reduced. A January 24,1991 letter from TAMUG’s Controller, Deborah Kraft, shows that the payroll problem began on December 1,1990 — the very date when TAMUG’s 100% funding of Luxemburg’s salary was already pre-seheduled to be reduced to 57.14%. (Slotta’s motion for summary judgment, Exhibit 6). His monthly paycheck was apparently reduced to reflect overpayments for December and January, and all payments after February 1, 1991 seem to have been reduced to reflect TAMUG’s 57.14% obligation. The Plaintiff filed a charge of employment discrimination with the EEOC on or about November 15, 1990. The EEOC denied his claim, but and granted a right to sue letter.
II. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is appropriate if no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. A fact is material if its resolution in favor of one party might affect the outcome of the suit under governing law.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby,
In ruling on a Motion for Summary Judgment, the Court must accept the evidence of the nonmoving party and draw all justifiable inferences in his favor. Credibility determinations, weighing of the evidence, and the drawing of reasonable inferences are left to the trier of fact.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, supra,
Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c), the moving party bears the initial burden of “informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying thosе portions of [the record] which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Where the moving party has met its Rule 56(e) burden, the nonmovant “must do more than simply show that there is some metaphysical doubt as to the material facts---- [T]he nonmoving party must come forward with ‘specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.’ Where the record taken as a whole could not lead a rational trier of fact to find for the nonmoving party, there is no
genuine issue for trial.” Matsushita, supra,
III. The Title VII Claims
Section 703(a)(1) of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provides in relevant part:
It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer to ... discriminate against any individual with respect to hiscompensation, terms, conditions, or privileges of employment, because of such individual’s race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2(a)(l).
A Title VII retaliation claim requires
intentional
discrimination, and under the familiar
McDonnell Douglas/Burdine
framework, the Court employs a three-part test designed to determine the motivation of the defendant in taking the challenged action.
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
Second, the defendant may then rebut this presumption by articulating a legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for the alleged discriminatory action.
Olitsky v. Spencer Gifts, Inc.,
Third, once the employer satisfies this burden, the presumption of discrimination established by the employee’s prima facie ease dissolves.
Burdine, supra,
In this case, the Court finds that even where the record as a whole is looked at in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, no reasonable fact finder could determine that the Plaintiff has made a prima facie case of retaliatory discrimination. A plaintiff must show three things to establish a prima facie case of retaliation: (1) he engaged in an activity protected by Title VII; (2) an adverse employment action followed; and (3) there was some causal connection between the activity and the adverse action.
Collins v. Baptist Memorial Geriatric Center,
Assuming arguendo that Luxemburg is able to show the first two prongs of his prima facie case, he is clearly unable to demonstrate that but for actions protected by Title VII he would not have been discriminated against. Indeed, it is unclear exactly what actions beyond the vague charge of “employment discrimination” the Plaintiff even contends fall within his Title VII complaint. (See Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, Instrument # 31, at 17). This Court earlier characterized Luxemburg’s complaint as “rambling” (see Order to Dismiss, Instrument # 42, at 2), and the Court has expended an unwarranted amount of its valuable time trying to decipher Plaintiffs Title VII claims. Under a liberal reading of Plaintiffs complaint, however, Luxemburg appears to allege that he was “criticized” by Slotta in a faculty evaluation because he is a Russian immigrant of the Jewish faith; that his pay was reduced for similar reasons; and that Defendants Merrell and McCloy ratified Slot-ta’s actions.
The Plaintiff, however, has not produced
any
evidence beyond his pleadings to support these charges. Indeed, in his Second Amended Complaint, Luxemburg even fails to articulate the content of Slotta’s alleged criticism. And although his Response to the Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment was untimely filed, even a glance at Slоtta’s faculty report appended thereto clearly
Luxemburg claims that Slotta filed a negative faculty report on him because Luxemburg failed to attend a Saturday seminar for religious reasons. Dr. Slotta’s actual report, however, is far from the uniformly critical document Plaintiff makes it out to be. In fact, Slotta gave Luxemburg positive evaluations in two out of the three categories listed in the report (teaсhing and scholarly activities). In the one area rated as unsatisfactory (faculty service), Slotta’s comments clearly indicate a broad range of dissatisfaction with Luxemburg’s behavior: reports of other faculty members’ “exasperation” over Luxemburg’s “roadblocks” to coordinating faculty meetings; his general absence from campus when not teaching; and a general sense of being unavailable for faculty service except at his convenience. Luxemburg’s failure to attend the Saturday engineering seminar, which is the Plaintiffs sole example of Slot-ta’s anti-semitic attitude (othеr than the bare assertion that Slotta displayed “a bias against both persons of immigrant and/or non-anglo racial extraction and against persons of the Jewish religion,” (Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, at 8) constitutes only one of several, far more serious examples of Luxemburg’s unsatisfactory service. In fact, his failure to attend the Saturday workshop is the least negative of all the instances cited in the report. The report states that Luxemburg’s non-attendance merely gives an “impression of disinterest,” but the Plaintiffs alleged recalcitrance in scheduling meetings and his general absеnce from the campus give concrete, even compelling, examples of the professor’s actual indifference to the needs and convenience of students and faculty alike. Thus, Plaintiff is unable to show that either his religion or his racial origin forms the basis for this report, because even in the absence of Slotta’s comments on the Saturday seminar there is no reason to believe the faculty service evaluation would have been anything other than negative.
The Plaintiffs allegation that his salary was reduced in retaliation for filing a complaint over Slotta’s interference with his National Science Foundation application is even more attenuated. Luxemburg does not even specifically allege that the reduction was due to discrimination based on religion or national origin. But, even assuming a proper claim has been made, the Court finds that the Plaintiff has failed to present any evidence that he was discriminated against under Title VII.
Luxemburg’s self-contradictory pleadings clearly indicate that from the start of his employment with TAMUG, he was aware that the University looked to him to provide one-third of his estimated salary from the proposed research funding. 2 When this funding did not materialize, Luxemburg’s salary (which apparently had been fully funded by TAMUG at the specified rate of $4,555.56 a month through November 30, 1990) was reduced to reflect the new percentage of funding scheduled to take effect on December 1, 1990: 57.14% from TAMUG funds; 42.86% from Luxemburg’s research funds (see Slotta’s motion for summary judgment, Exhibit 5). 3
Once again, Luxemburg has presented this Court with no evidence that even suggests his salary reduction was anything other than a cut implemented by TAMUG in accordance
The Plaintiffs allegation of the same Title VII claim against Defendants Merrell and MeCloy are even weaker than those against Slotta. Luxemburg’s vague pleadings seem to suggest that these Defendant’s are culpable for somehow “ratifying” Slotta’s action. His only concrete comments on these Defendants are that MeCloy, the Vice President for Academic Affairs at TAMUG, reviewed some of the Plaintiff’s complaints about Slotta, rejected some, accepted others, and gave “mild recommendations” for discipline (apparently against Slotta, which is hardly evidence of an intent to discriminate against Luxemburg). (See Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint, at 10). Dr. Merrell, the head of the Maritime Department, is said to have written a “critical letter” to the Plaintiff about his decision to withdraw his grant proposal. Id. at 11. The Plaintiff nowhere claims that these Defendants retaliated against him because of his religion or racial origin, and the Court finds that his Title VII retaliation claims against them are without merit.
Although this Court is convinced that the Plaintiff has failed to make out a prima facie case of retaliation, its grant of summary judgment for the Defendants is not wholly dependent on this issue alone. The Court is aware that the Fifth Circuit has stated that even if a plaintiff has not established its prima facie case, summary judgment is not appropriate in employment discrimination cases if any genuine issue of material fact is raised.
Amburgey v. Corhart Refractories Corp., Inc.,
As stated before, if a plaintiff establishes a prima facie case of discrimination, the burden of
production
(not persuasion) shifts to the defendant to show a legitimate, nondiseriminatory reason for the action it took.
Burdine, supra,
The Court has no difficulty in this case in concluding that the Defendants have proffered legitimate and non-diseriminatory reasons for the actions taken against Luxemburg. They have provided several records indicating that the parties understood from the beginning that the Plaintiff’s salary was to be funded one-third by his research grants and that any salary payments above the two-thirds commitment by TAMUG was contingent on such funding. The Court, of course, does not consider the credibility of the De
As a result, any presumption of discrimination that may remain in this case vanishes, and the Plaintiff is left with the burden of persuasion to prove that the reasons articulated by the employer are mere pretexts.
Amburgey, supra,
IV. The § 1983 Free Speech Claims
Plaintiff Luxemburg also claims four violations of his Constitutional rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by alleging that the Defendants deprived him of a liberty interest (1) to act responsibly in his profession, (2) in employment, by misleading him as to the terms of hiring, (3) in freedom to speak out on matters of public concern, and (4) in freedom from retaliation. 5 In its earlier Order to Dismiss, the Court dismissed the first claim as a novel, apparently nonsensical, cause of action, dismissed the second action because the Plaintiff failed to show how it rose to a Constitutional level, and grouped the remaining causes under a violation of the First Amendment right to free speech.
It is well established that a public employee may not be discharged, disciplined, or punished for exercising the right to free speech.
See, e.g., Rankin v. McPherson,
1. the speech addressed a matter of public concern;
2. the employee’s interest in communicating upon matters of public concern outweighs the defendant’s interest in promoting the efficiency of the public service they perform; and
3. the employee’s discipline was motivated by the uttered speech.
Thompson v. City of Starkville, Miss.,
This Court has written that the interest in having “all manner of illegal and unethical behavior exposed and punished forces the Court to conclude that only matters of national security and the like should ever prevent a public employee from revealing or generally objecting to improper public practices.”
McDonald v. City of Freeport, Tex.,
The only remaining issue is whether the Plaintiff’s “discipline” was motivated by his complaint. This factor is determined according to the burden-shifting provisions of
Mt Healthy City School District Board of Education v. Doyle,
The Court is aware that “[w]hether an employee’s protected conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in an employer’s decision to take action against the employee is a question of fact
ordinarily
rendering summary disposition inappropriate.”
Click v. Copeland,
The present case, however, is anything but ordinary in this regard; the Plaintiff has presented
no
evidence beyond his Complaint. It is axiomatic that once the moving party makes the initial showing, negating any disputed, material fact, the party opposed to the motion must offer evidence reflecting the existence of one or more genuine issues of material fact. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e);
Celotex, supra,
The Court finds that for reasons previously discussed in relation to the Title VII claims, the Plaintiff has shown no evidence that the Defendants acted with an improper motive and thus that no genuine issue of material fact exists. The Defendants’ uncontested evidence unambiguously shows that from at least May 10,1990 on, all parties in this case understood that Dr. Luxemburg’s salary would be one-third funded by money he brought to TAMUG through research grants. Indeed, the Plaintiff admits as much. (See Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, at 5-6). The February 1, 1991 reduction of his monthly pay was mеrely an accounting measure taken in accordance with the September 1, 1990 Form 500R Request breakdown of Luxemburg’s salary, and this reduction would have occurred whether or not Luxemburg filed complaints about Slot-ta’s alleged fraud on the National Science Foundation. Finally, Defendant Slotta has provided uneontested statements that Milton Abelow, the Assistant to the President of TAMUG, was in charge of Luxemburg’s salary payments, and that he disbursed the salary according to the agreement between Luxemburg and TAMUG without any order from Slotta to do so.
This case thus resembles a recent Fifth Circuit case in which thе Plaintiff, an HIV-positive surgical assistant, claimed that he was improperly transferred to a non-surgical unit in retaliation for telling a local newspaper about his HIV status.
Bradley v. Univ. of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center,
This is not to say that Slotta (or the Plaintiff for that matter) have behaved in anything other than an exceedingly non-professional manner throughout the events leading to this miasmic case. But, outrageous behavior and personal animosity do not, per se, allow this Court to find a violation of § 1983. In this case pаrticularly, it is abundantly clear that the mutual dislike between these parties, which is almost certainly the basis of many of the events the Plaintiff complains of, preceded the exercise of any First Amendment rights. Luxemburg alleges that Slotta assaulted him during their initial discussions about the National Science Foundation, making the incident prior to the formal complaints the Plaintiff claims were the bases for TAMUG’s retaliatory action. In addition, Luxemburg complains that he was promised a two-thirds teaching load of six hours but was assigned a full load of nine hours in the fall of 1990. (See Plaintiffs Second Amended Complaint, at 7). Obviously, this assignment would have been made at the beginning of the academic semester before any of the concrete incidents making up the Plaintiffs claims even occurred.
Thus, because the Court finds that summary judgment in favor of the Defendants is warranted on the grounds stated, it does not rule on the Defendant’s claim that they are entitled to qualified immunity against Plaintiffs § 1983 claims.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Plaintiff Leon Luxemburg cannot recover against any of the Defendants in this suit under either Title VII or § 1983 as stated in his Complaint. The Defendant Slotta’s and Defendants Merrell’s and MeCloy’s motions for summary judgment are both hereby GRANTED, and the entire actiоn is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE as to all claims remaining in this suit following the Court’s earlier Motion to Dismiss. Furthermore, all other relief not specifically granted herein is DENIED. Ml parties are to bear their own costs. If is further ORDERED that the parties file no further pleadings on this issue in this Court, including motions to reconsider and the like. Instead, the parties are instructed to seek any further relief to which they feel themselves entitled in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, as may be appropriate in due course.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In its Order on the Defendants’ motion to dismiss (Instrument # 42), the Court allowed both parties sixty days from the date of the Order for continued discovеry, after which the Defendants were to file any dispositive motions. The Plaintiff was allowed twenty days after such filing to respond, as is customary under this Court’s Local Rule 6(E). Defendants Merrell and McCloy filed their motion for summary judgment on July 5, 1994, and Defendant Slotta filed his motion on July 15, 1994. The Plaintiff filed his response and motion to file out of time on August 30, 1994, well after the allotted time, without any good cause shown. The Court denied the requested time extension. Under Local Rule 6, therefore, the Defendants' motions for summary judgment are treated as unopposed. Nevertheless, in fairness to the Plaintiff, the Court has
The Court remains mindful of the Fifth Circuit’s directive that the failure to provide a written response to a motion under local rules does not warrant the issue of an automatic grant of the motion.
John
v.
State of La. (Bd. of T. for State C. & U.),
. At one point in his pleadings, the Plaintiff states that "Slotta planned, but did not so specify to Luxemburg, that 33% of the nominal remuneration to Luxemburg would be supplied by funds from research grants.” Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint, at 5. Yet only one page later, the Plaintiff admits that Slotta made clear in his August 8, 1990 letter that Luxemburg would be paid $27,333 from TUMUG funds, leaving thе Plaintiff to supply the remaining $13,666 from his own research funding. Id. at 6. Thus, the Plaintiff was fully aware of the proposed funding scheme before his teaching duties even began.
. The Plaintiff claims that the contract between TAMUG and himself unambiguously provides for a flat payment of $4,555.56 a month for nine months, but he (strangely) has not made a breach of contract claim in his pleadings. This Court, therefore, will not address Plaintiff's repeated assertion that TAMUG breached his contract.
. The Court finds it extraordinaiy, though not a typical in this case, that the Plaintiff's late-filed Motion for Summaiy Judgment actually advises this Court that the dissent in St. Mary’s Honor Center has a better grasp on reality than the majority does because the majority’s burden of proof is "tremendously difficult.” See Plaintiff's response to Motion for Summaiy Judgment, Instrument #57, at 13. Incredibly, the Plaintiff seems to urge this Court to follow the dissent, rather than the majority, in a United States Supreme Court decision, which is absolutely binding upon the Court. This Court respectfully declines such a novel invitation, although Lewis Carroll would again be proud.
. Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint does not specifically state the applicable law under which his claims arise, but under a liberal reading of the pleadings § 1983 is the appropriate statute for these claims.
