The City of Houston appealed a judgment awarding damages to Gerald Kallina under the Texas Whistleblower Act. Kallina, a former division manager for the City, conducted an audit that found $400,000 worth of assets were missing from a City warehouse. He reported this to his supervisor, Lathenia Harris. Shortly after, Kallina was fired. The court found that Kallina initiated the grievance process as required and that reporting the missing assets to Harris was sufficient, as she was authorized to regulate and enforce the relevant policies. The court affirmed the judgment in favor of Kallina.
City of Houston Appeals Whistleblower Act Judgment for Fired Division Manager
1. Case Five Fourteenth Court of Appeals CITY OF HOUSTON, et al., Plantiffs-Appellants, v. GERALD KALLINA, Defendant-Appellee No. 98-15946 LITIGANTS Plantiffs-Appellants: CITY of HOUSTON. et. al Defendant-Appellee: GERALD KALLINA BACKGROUND Kallina worked as division manager in the fixed-asset department of the City of Houston. In the course of his duties, he conducted an inventory audit at a City warehouse where both abandoned and City-owned assets were stored. It was his opinion that 800 items worth at least $400,000 were missing, and he concluded they must have been stolen. According to Kallina, he initially made an oral report of his findings to his supervisor, Lathenia Harris. He believed City policy required missing assets to be reported as stolen if not located after a thirty-day search, and eventually reported to the Mayor, the Controller, and perhaps City Council. Shortly after Kallina put his final report on Harris=s desk, she abruptly informed him he had two days to resign or he would be fired. He complied, but later sued. FACTS The City of Houston appeals from a judgment awarding $250,000 plus attorney=s fees to its former employee, Gerald Kallina, under the Texas Whistleblower Act. On February 14, 2002, a panel of this Court modified the judgment by adding to it $65,000 in back pay, and otherwise affirmed. On May 9, 2002, the Supreme Court of Texas issued its opinion in Texas Department of Transportation v. Needham, 82 S.W.3d 314, (Tex. 2002), addressing for the first time the 1995 amendments defining Aan appropriate law enforcement authority@ under the Act. See Act of May 25, 1995, 74th Leg., R.S. ch. 721, '' 1-12, 1995 Tex. Gen. Laws 3812 (current version at Tex. Gov=t Code ' 554.002(b)). We granted the City=s motion for rehearing en banc to consider the effect of the latter opinion on the former. Finding that this new authority requires a different result, we withdraw the panel=s opinion and issue this en banc opinion. DECISION As an initial matter, the City argues the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Kallina did not initiate a grievance with the City as required. See Tex. Gov=t Code ' 554.006(a). Assuming this requirement is jurisdictional, we hold it does not bar Kallina=s suit. On January 19, 1998, Kallina sent a letter to Mayor Lee Brown claiming wrongful dismissal and requesting a hearing. The City's response on February 16, 1998 stated Kallina
had no civil service protection or other internal review procedure,
pointing to a city document in which he acknowledged that he was an executive level employee and therefore exempt from all civil service protections and procedures. A governmental entity may not frustrate an employee=s efforts to initiate a grievance and then challenge subject-matter jurisdiction on that basis. Kallina's letter to the City stating his claim was sufficient to initiate a grievance in light of the City=s response that no other procedures applied to him. The City=s first point is overruled. DICTA The Whistleblower Act prohibits termination of a government employee who in good faith reports a violation of law by the employing governmental entity or another public employee to an appropriate law enforcement authority.@ Tex. Gov=t Code ' 554.002(a). The Act defines the latter as a governmental entity . . . that the employee in good faith believes is authorized to regulate under or enforce the law alleged to be violated in the report; or investigate or prosecute a violation of criminal law.@ Tex. Gov=t Code ' 554.002(b). Although the City and Kallina raised a number of other issues, we address only the City=s assertion that Kallina=s report to Harris did not fall within the scope of this definition. IMPLICATIONS The evidence strongly supports the jury=s finding that Kallina believed in good faith that Harris was an appropriate law enforcement authority as to the fixed-asset policies. As the majority correctly states, the evidence showed that Harris had administrative responsibility for the assets in the Broad Street Warehouse and that she regulated and enforced departmental rules for protecting those assets. Harris testified that she enforces the rules regarding inventory and that if somebody has a problem with these rules he can come to her about it. Kallina and Harris both testified that Harris had the authority to enforce these policies regarding the inventory at the Broad Street Warehouse. Considering the evidence in a light that tends to support the jury=s findings and disregarding all evidence and inferences to the contrary, there was legally sufficient evidence to support the jury=s finding that Kallina believed in good faith Harris was authorized to regulate under or enforce the fixed-asset policies and that this belief was reasonable in light of Kallina=s training and experience.