20250212_C366529_51_366529.Opn.Pdf

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 2025
Docket20250212
StatusUnpublished

This text of 20250212_C366529_51_366529.Opn.Pdf (20250212_C366529_51_366529.Opn.Pdf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
20250212_C366529_51_366529.Opn.Pdf, (Mich. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

MARK A. DITTENBIR, M.D., UNPUBLISHED February 12, 2025 Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellee, 9:08 AM

v No. 366529 Kalamazoo Circuit Court BRONSON HEALTHCARE MIDWEST, LC No. 2019-000274-CK BRONSON METHODIST HOSPITAL, and BRONSON HEALTHCARE GROUP, INC., doing business as BRONSON HEALTHCARE,

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellants.

MARK A. DITTENBIR, M.D.,

Plaintiff/Counterdefendant-Appellant,

v No. 366530 Kalamazoo Circuit Court BRONSON HEALTHCARE MIDWEST, LC No. 2019-000274-CK BRONSON METHODIST HOSPITAL, and BRONSON HEALTHCARE GROUP, INC., doing business as BRONSON HEALTHCARE,

Defendants/Counterplaintiffs- Appellees.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and MURRAY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

This is a consolidated appeal involving a compensation dispute. Following a bench trial, the trial court awarded judgment in favor of plaintiff/counterdefendant, Dr. Mark A. Dittenbir, on his claims against defendants/counterplaintiffs for unjust enrichment, implied contract, and

-1- quantum meruit, and ultimately awarded him $409,920 in damages. The trial court also dismissed defendants’ counterclaim to recover a $240,500 alleged overpayment to plaintiff.

In Docket No. 366529, defendants appeal by right the amended order, asserting that the trial court erred as a matter of law by concluding that plaintiff’s express contract with defendants did not bar plaintiff’s equitable, quasi-contract claims and that, if plaintiff’s claims were not barred, by failing to deduct from plaintiff’s damages award the $322,911.32 that defendants had already paid him for surgical services. Defendants also argue that the trial court erred by dismissing their counterclaim for $240,500 that they mistakenly paid plaintiff. We affirm the trial court’s orders finding an implied contract, declining to set off $322,911.32 from the amount that defendants were ordered to reimburse plaintiff, and dismissing defendants’ counterclaim.

In Docket No. 366530, a consolidated appeal, plaintiff appeals the same order, asserting that he was entitled to a fair market hourly rate of $212.71 for his services and that the trial court clearly erred by awarding him $409,920 when the great weight of the evidence established that fair market value of his services was $1,447.038.88. We affirm the trial court’s fair-market-value determination but remand for the trial court to correct the amount of plaintiff’s damages award to $415,044.

I. FACTS

Plaintiff is a general surgeon and former shareholder of Healthcare Midwest, a private group practice comprised of various medical specialists, as well as general and vascular surgeons. In 2010, plaintiff was involved in launching “Unassigned Surgical Services” at Bronson Methodist Hospital, a service that provided acute-care surgical services for “unassigned” patients, i.e., individuals who presented at Bronson Methodist Hospital in urgent need of surgical services, but who did not have a previous relationship with a surgeon (henceforth “BGS services”). In 2012, defendants contracted with Healthcare Midwest to provide BGS services. The contract required Healthcare Midwest to provide coverage for BGS services for three out of four weeks by having each full-time participating surgeon spend one 60-hour week at Bronson Methodist Hospital on a rotating basis. Defendants paid Healthcare Midwest a flat fee of $212.71 an hour for BGS services provided from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. In addition, defendants paid Healthcare Midwest $100 an hour to provide on-call surgeons from 7:00 p.m. until 7:00 a.m. Weekend compensation was $212.71 an hour for the first six daytime hours of in-house service; the remaining hours were compensated at $100 an hour. Defendants retained the income generated by the procedures that the surgeons performed.

Conversations began in late 2012 about the possibility of defendants acquiring the assets of Healthcare Midwest, including its physicians. Healthcare Midwest was represented in the negotiations primarily by its chief executive officer, James McKernan; defendants were represented primarily by one of their vice presidents, John Jones, Jr. Among the preacquisition concerns for Healthcare Midwest was what BGS services would look like after the acquisition. Healthcare Midwest surgeons who provided BGS services were concerned about a potential loss of income under defendants’ compensation model, specifically because they believed that that model did not consider the amount of work and time required to provide daytime BGS services because defendants’ productivity-oriented method of compensation was based on WRVUs, i.e., “work related value units.” Plaintiff and others believed that WRVU-based compensation was

-2- inadequate for BGS services because the surgeons saw very sick, emergency room patients who required additional time and interactions that were not accounted for by WRVUs.

In March 2013, plaintiff and other Healthcare Midwest shareholders signed a ballot that permitted McKernan and other authorized representatives to negotiate on the shareholders’ behalf any changes to a template employment agreement between defendants and the shareholders that McKernan deemed to be in their best interests and that of Healthcare Midwest. The ballot also authorized McKernan to act as plaintiff’s agent to negotiate modifications to the template employment agreement “to address matters specific to” plaintiff that would then appear in plaintiff’s individual employment agreement. In June 2013, plaintiff signed an employment agreement with Bronson Healthcare Midwest (BHM), which was, essentially, the postacquisition successor to Healthcare Midwest.

Paragraph 3 of the employment agreement stated that, as his “compensation for all services rendered during the term of this Agreement, Physician shall receive the amounts described in Exhibit A . . . .” Exhibit A provided that plaintiff would receive first-year compensation of $432,102, plus incentives. In addition, “and notwithstanding any other provisions of this Exhibit or the attached Employment Agreement to the contrary,” plaintiff was “entitled to receive” approved service arrangement (ASA) income for, among other things, “General Surgery Service Panel.” Exhibit A defined an ASA as an agreement under which a physician performed professional, administrative, or other services. To be valid, the agreement had to (1) be described in Exhibit A or another written document, (2) be signed by the physician, (3) state the effective date of Exhibit A or the other written document, and (4) state the amount that the physician would receive as ASA income. Before signing the employment agreement, plaintiff confirmed with McKernan that “General Surgery Service Panel” referred to BGS services, and McKernan told him that a “contract specific to call” would arrive shortly.

At some point, BHM and Bronson Methodist Hospital signed a “General Surgical Services Agreement” (henceforth, “BGS agreement”). The agreement required BHM surgeons to provide Bronson Methodist Hospital with continuous in-house dedicated BGS services from 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, three weeks out of four. Coverage was to be on a rotating basis, with each BHM surgeon covering a full 60 hours of dedicated in-house coverage. In addition, $73,200 would be withheld from the base compensation of the BGS services providers to fund a call pool. Generally, physicians who provided BGS services from 7:00 p.m. until 7:00 a.m. Monday through Friday, and from 7:00 p.m. on Fridays until 7:00 a.m. on Mondays, would be compensated out of the pool at the rate of $1,200 per 12-hour shift.

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