OPINION
This is a defamation case arising out of a negative employment reference given by appellees, Scott M. Richards and Jacobs Engineering Group, Inc., to a private investigator hired by appellant, Barry A. Oliphint. The trial court granted appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment, and,
Factual and Procedural Background
According to the undisputed summary judgment evidence, Oliphint began working for a subsidiary of Jacobs Engineering in 1984, and he eventually worked directly for Jacobs Engineering until his employment ended in 1991. From 1989 through 1991, Richards was one of Oliphint’s supervisors.
The day before Oliphint’s employment ended, Oliphint had a heated telephone discussion with another of his supervisors, Jimmy Lee. Lee asked Oliphint to perform an inspection earlier in the day than originally scheduled. Oliphint refused to do so and hung up on Lee. The next day, Richards called Oliphint into his office and said they had decided to terminate Oli-phint’s employment. After telling his side of the story, Oliphint told Richards that he wanted to quit because he could not work with Lee anymore. Oliphint claims that Richards agreed to document the separation as a resignation. Richards denies this and wrote that Oliphint was terminated for performance and other problems, “all of which are related to alcohol.”
A few months later, Oliphint was interviewing for another job. The interviewer asked about his separation from Jacobs Engineering, and Oliphint said he had resigned. Oliphint testified that the interviewer “shook his head in disgust and told me that he could take a lot, but he could not take a liar.” When Oliphint pressed the interviewer for more details, the interviewer said, “That’s not what Jacobs told me.”
Oliphint eventually obtained another job, and during the 1990s, he held various jobs, though he says he was turned down from a second job based on a suspected negative reference from Richards. Oliphint began looking for a new job in 2000 and was not satisfied with the results of his search. In March 2002, Oliphint hired a private investigator to check all of his references. At Jacobs Engineering, the investigator first called the human resources department, which would only verify dates of employment and positions held. The investigator then called Richards directly, who told her that Oliphint had been terminated for “substance abuse problems.”
Oliphint denies that he has ever had any substance abuse problems, and based on Richards’s statement to the investigator, Oliphint sued Richards and Jacobs Engineering for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence. Appellees filed a motion for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. This appeal followed.
Analysis
Standard of Review
Appellees filed both a traditional motion for summary judgment and a no-evidence motion.
See
Tex.R. Civ. P. 166a(c), (i). The standard of review for a traditional motion for summary judgment is whether the successful movant at the trial level carried its burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that judgment should be granted as a matter of law.
KPMG Peat Marwick v. Harrison County Hous. Fin. Corp.,
Defamation
A plaintiff may not recover on a defamation claim based on a publication to which he has consented or which he has authorized, procured, or invited.
Lyle v. Waddle,
Relying on
Buck
and
Free v. American Home Assurance Co.,
Whereas in both
Buck
and
Free
the evidence did not establish that the plaintiff had reason to expect defamation when he requested the reference check, that is not the situation here. According to Oliphint’s own testimony, he knew within months of leaving that appellees were contradicting Oliphint’s account of his separation from Jacobs Engineering, leading a prospective employer to call him a liar. Though he may not have known the exact words that would be said, the undisputed evidence shows that Oliphint clearly had reason to expect a defamatory statement. By hiring an investigator to check his references under these circumstances, Oliphint invited the defamation, and therefore his claim is barred.
See Saucedo v. Rheem Mfg. Co.,
Intentional Infliction of Emotional Distress
Oliphint’s claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress is based solely on the alleged defamatory statement made to the investigator. However, the Texas Supreme Court has held that intentional infliction of emotional distress is a gap-filler tort that has no application when the conduct at issue invades some other legally-protected interest.
See Hoffmann-La Roche Inc. v. Zeltwanger,
Negligence
Oliphint’s negligence claim is also based on the alleged defamatory statement made to the investigator. Oliphint asserts that appellees owed him a duty not to defame him or supply false information about him to third parties. Appellees argue that such a claim is not a separate cause of action but merely a re-labeled defamation claim. We agree. The courts of this state frown on attempts to fracture one cause of action into multiple claims.
Ross v. Arkwright Mut. Ins. Co.,
To support his argument that a defamation claim can support a claim for negligence, Oliphint relies on
Mitre v. Brooks Fashion Stores, Inc.,
Because we have determined that appel-lees presented one meritorious ground for summary judgment on each of Oliphint’s claims, we need not address the other bases of appellees’ summary judgment motion. We overrule Oliphint’s sole issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
