Tuesday, March 2, 2021

EX-TSC PRESIDENTS $1 AWARD UPHELD, ATTORNEYS GET FEES

 Special to El Rrun-Rrun

The Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has upheld the federal district court's reduction of a $13.1 million  jury award to $1 and sent the case back to reconsider its denial of fees for her attorneys saying it had misinterpreted the law. 

The ruling was issued February 24.

Texas Southmost College trustees terminated Tercero in September 2016. 

She sued in federal court and a jury awarded her 12.5 million which a federal judge reduced to $1 in July 2019.

Tercero sued TSC after the board of trustees fired her for: 

*deliberately and recklessly failing to obtain windstorm insurance with board approval in compliance with state law; 

*for allowing TSC checks to be stamped with signatures of people who were no longer trustees;

*for failing to timely search and fill the position of vice president for finance and administration; for failing to inform the board of the ailing nursing program and its pending suspension

* for refusing a board member’s request that he personally sign and review checks in the amount of $10,000 or more and for not complying with a request for information sought by another member.

 Tercero’s testimony was about events that preceded her termination hearing. And she did not challenge the district court’s conclusion on summary judgment that the pre-hearing notice – which seems to have prompted a newspaper article – did not violate her due-process rights. 

Thus the court ruled that Tercero had not shown that any injury she suffered in connection with the notice and newspaper article was caused by the due-process violation at issue, i.e., issues with the hearing itself.

Consequently, then court ruled, "we affirm the district court’s grant of judgment as a matter of law on the due-process violation damages and reduction of the jury’s award of $12,500,000 to the nominal amount of $1."

The jury found that TSC breached Tercero’s employment contract and deprived her of procedural due process. 

It awarded her $674,878.66 in damages on her breach-of-contract claims and $12,500,000 in damages on her due-process claim for "diminished earning capacity, lost career and business opportunities, loss of reputation, humiliation, embarrassment, inconvenience, and mental and emotional anguish and distress.” 

After trial, the district court awarded Tercero $117,685.67 in attorneys’ fees from TSC in connection with these claims, then denied them.

The appeals court ruled that the district court abused its discretion in vacating Tercero’s attorneys’ fees award based on her breach-of-contract claims because it erroneously determined that TSC is entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity on those claims. 

Tercero’s attorneys had argued that three pieces of testimony showed that there was sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. 

First, Tercero testified that, after her employment with TSC ended, she was a finalist for a new position. She testified that “the accusations that were made against me [at TSC] came up . . . and I have no doubt that they didn’t pick me because of what they had read.” 

However, the appeals court ruled that Tercero only speculated that the accusations were the reason she did not receive the position; and did not name, explained, or described what position she had applied for or what its attendant qualifications were; and concedes that she was a finalist for the position.

The district court’s award of attorneys’ fees was, however, based on Tercero’s attorneys’ work on both the breach-of-contract and due-process claims. It did not distinguish between work done on one claim versus the other. 

"We therefore reverse the district court’s vacatur of the portion of the attorneys’ fees award based on the breach-of-contract claims and remand for the district court to address TSC’s alternative arguments regarding those claims and to determine whether Tercero is entitled to attorneys’ fees and in what amount." 

18 comments:

Anonymous said...


The Senate confirmed Miguel Cardona to serve as education secretary Monday, vaulting the little-known Connecticut educator into the center of the national debate over how to reopen schools for face-to-face classes.

The Senate vote was a bipartisan 64 to 33 for Cardona, whose nomination moved through the chamber without any significant controversy — in contrast with the confirmation his immediate predecessor, Republican Betsy DeVos, who needed the tiebreaking vote of Vice President Mike Pence to win confirmation.

Biden won; Trump lost! ja ja ja



Anonymous said...



McAllen offers rental assistance to residents, landlords impacted by COVID-19
Y aqui? Give it to the rich and famous. Bola de ambrientos.

Anonymous said...

A Virus Variant by Any Other Name … Please

We can name more than a few here.

Anonymous said...

Democrats Aren’t Asking Cuomo to Resign
Republicans never asked trump to resign

Anonymous said...

National Latino groups condemn Goya Foods CEO for calling Trump the 'actual president'

Walmart and HEB should stop selling goya produdcts

hispanics should stop buying goya products.
He's not hispanic he's cuban...

Anonymous said...


The more Trump hogs the Republican spotlight, the more the Republican Party heads for death.

Yay!!!!


Anonymous said...

Too bad for Tercero....she got screwed

Anonymous said...

Seems like this lady just gave Trey a spanking.

Anonymous said...

Any news on the Adela Garza/Sylvia Atkinson connection mentioned in Sylvia's trial?

I would like to know.

Anonymous said...

Once a judge with cojones actually does his job and SPA's trial commences,
all these idiots will come out to be burned at the stake. They keep pushing her trial back for stupid reasons that she has figured out will help her stay out of jail. She should already be behind closed doors and making 'a new friend" in her dorm. 45 years is too long for SS to wait for her.

Is this trial going to be like the Dr. Seuss books that are being removed from the court docket and libraries? Esta vieja se va a salir con la suya y esto es una vueguenza. Quit stalling Little Sylvia. Oops, when was she little?

Anonymous said...



A jury's decision is destroyed by a judge because it is about money.
The Judge protects the system.

Tercero is punished again for speaking out, demanding respect, and defending her reputation.

Only people that have friends, relatives, and loved ones that have been fired understand the challenges she faced when she was fired from her dream job.

The Board wanted another president so they listed all the reasons they could find to get rid of Tercero. This happens every day to employees.

Anonymous said...

$675K for her and $120K for her attorneys isn't exactly a loss.

BobbyWC said...

5:14 p.m - do facts matter to you? The trial is long over. Probation asked for the latest extension, not Sylvia. But in the end it only guarantees she cannot avoid prison because of Covid. By May if everything goes well everyone who wants the vaccine should have it. So on every level you are wrong.

Bobby WC

Anonymous said...

The Board failed Tercero

1. when you are fired: you turn in your keys, ID, email account disappears
2. Fill a position .....some positions are open and then closed and open again
3. Nursing Program....few students like nursing and few study
4. Insurance, a check signed and reviewed? This had to be done by the Board...... desde cuando aca el pato le tira a la escopeta
el marinero no manda, manda el capitan

That is why the Jury awarded the big money. They knew the Board had failed in doing their job.

Anonymous said...

Eric Garza didn't win the Sheriff race should I stop using the Sheriff Dept

Anonymous said...

Juan has it all wrong... she is getting a lot more

Anonymous said...

Hey @ 10:15. You would think they teach a class on it right after business ethics. They have ways to get rid of ppl they don't like (regardless of performance), TSC is especially good at it.

Anonymous said...

ERCOT CEO has been FIRED bunch of mamones
The one here HAS TO GO FIRE HIM RIGHT NOW!

THEY ARE ALL THE SAME THEY THINK THEIR SHIT DON'T STINK FIRE HIM NOW!

rita