Abrams v. Siegel

850 N.E.2d 99, 166 Ohio App. 3d 230, 2006 Ohio 1728
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 6, 2006
DocketNos. 86386 and 86659.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 850 N.E.2d 99 (Abrams v. Siegel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abrams v. Siegel, 850 N.E.2d 99, 166 Ohio App. 3d 230, 2006 Ohio 1728 (Ohio Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Kakpinski, Presiding Judge.

{¶ 1} Defendant, Howard S. Siegel, M.D., appeals the trial court’s ruling in the suit filed against him by Marc A. Abrams, M.D., Ph.D., individually as a shareholder of Ophthalmology Associates, Inc. (“OAI”) and on behalf of OAI and all other shareholders similarly situated. The rather complex facts in this case are as follows:

*237 {¶ 2} Dr. Siegel began practicing ophthalmology at St. Vincent Charity Hospital (“Charity”) in the 1960s as a shareholder in OAI. He was joined in his practice at OAI by Dr. Carl Asseff. Across the street from Charity was an office building, the Central Medical Arts building (“the medical building”), where a number of the doctors who practiced at Charity, including those in .OAI, had offices. In 1985, the year that Dr. Abrams began practicing as an employee with Dr. Siegel, the medical building was owned by a group of doctors (“2475 E. 22nd Street, Inc.”), who were, along with OAI, tenants in the building.

{¶ 3} At that time, Dr. Siegel was engaged in a very public dispute with Charity. Part of the dispute between Dr. Siegel and Charity concerned city-owned parking lots that each wanted to develop. See Siegel v. St. Vincent Chanty Hosp. (1987), 35 Ohio App.3d 143, 520 N.E.2d 249. 1 In 1986, Charity also made a bid to purchase the medical building from the doctors who owned it. The purchase agreement would have honored all existing leases. OAI’s 1984 lease with the medical building was due to expire in 1989. Because Dr. Siegel believed that Charity would refuse to renew this lease when it expired, Drs. Asseff and Siegel entered into a new lease (“the 1986 lease”), which would last until 1996. This 1986 lease provided OAI with an entire floor of the medical building and included free renovation of the space for OAI. Two members of the 2475 E. 22nd Street, Inc. board of directors ratified the lease.

{¶ 4} The remainder of the board of directors and trustees, however, objected to the lease and revoked it. In 1987, Drs. Siegel and Asseff outbid Charity for the medical building and formed a corporation that became the owner of the building (“CMA”). One of the disputes in the case at bar is which lease, the 1984 or the 1986 lease, was in effect during the time Drs. Siegel and Asseff owned the building and OAI was a tenant.

{¶ 5} In 1989, after working for OAI as an employee for several years, Dr. Abrams, one of the plaintiffs in this suit, became an equal partner with Drs. Siegel and Asseff in OAI. In 1994, Dr. Siegel approached Dr. Abrams to sign a new lease for the office. Dr. Siegel told Dr. Abrams that the former lease had expired in 1989 and that OAI had been a month-to-month tenant since then. Dr. Abrams had no knowledge of the 1986 lease, so he agreed to sign the 1994 lease, which charged a significantly higher rent than the 1986 lease.

{¶ 6} In late 1997, at the annual meeting of OAI, of which only the three doctors were shareholders, Dr. Asseff announced that he was leaving the practice and that there was nothing to discuss. Dr. Asseff removed all his files and *238 belongings from the office; only Drs. Siegel and Abrams remained in the practice at the beginning of 1998.

{¶ 7} In March 1998, Dr. Siegel presented his partners, Drs. Asseff and Abrams, with a letter announcing his impending retirement. The contract each doctor had with OAI stated that upon reaching the age of 65, any shareholder could, with a one-year notice, retire and redeem his shares in the corporation. They tried to find a third ophthalmologist to join the practice, but apparently cut back on this search as the relationship between Dr. Siegel and Dr. Abrams deteriorated.

{¶ 8} Dr. Siegel continued to collect his full-time salary, although he admitted at trial that he informed his insurance company he had cut back his practice to part-time. Dr. Abrams tried, numerous times, to negotiate a change in Dr. Siegel’s salary to reflect his reduced hours, but Dr. Siegel refused to discuss the question.

{¶ 9} In July 2000, while OAI was still short-staffed, Dr. Siegel announced that he was going on a cruise in late winter of 2001. Dr. Abrams suggested that the timing of this vacation was poor in light of the short-handed situation in the practice. Dr. Siegel remained unpersuaded and did not change his plans. At some point after Dr. Asseff left the practice, Dr. Siegel announced that he would no longer operate on patients; thus all the surgery work was left to Dr. Abrams.

{¶ 10} On January 27, 2001, Dr. Siegel sent the following letter to OAI’s statutory agent:

Please advise Ophthalmology Associates that the current, contentious, stressful situation at OAI has so adversely affected my mental state that I am no longer able to properly render medical care to my patients.
Therefore, effective immediately, I will be on medical leave of absence until further notice. I will attempt to attend to patients the week of January 29, but all future appointments to see me should be canceled.
Please direct all inquiries to Mr. Michael Shore.

Dr. Siegel then began his medical leave/vacation. He returned to the practice in April 2001.

{¶ 11} Meanwhile, after Dr. Siegel left for his medical leave/vacation, Dr. Abrams filed, on behalf of himself and on behalf of OAI, a complaint against Dr. Siegel for corporate dissolution, receivership, injunction, damages, and declaratory judgment. He also filed a derivative action on behalf of OAI. In March 2001, Dr. Siegel filed his answer, along with a counterclaim against Dr. Abrams and a cross-claim against OAI. Shortly thereafter, the medical building, with Dr. Siegel as sole shareholder of the corporation owning the building, sued OAI. The court consolidated the two suits. In May 2001, Drs. Siegel and Abrams entered *239 into an agreement for the dissolution of OAI. OAI was officially dissolved in early June 2001.

{¶ 12} The litigation over the corporation continued and proceeded to a bench trial in which the court found that Dr. Siegel’s testimony “contained inconsistencies and lacked credibility.” The court issued multiple rulings, which Dr. Siegel appealed, raising eight assignments of error, the first of which states:

I. The trial court erred to the prejudice of the appelant [sic] in interpreting Dr. Siegel’s employment contract with OAI.

{¶ 13} Dr. Siegel argues that the trial court erred in its interpretation of his employment contract with OAI when it held that Dr. Siegel was in breach of his contract because “Dr. Siegel did not provide OAI with an approximate equal number of scheduled office hours toward the practice and related services to OAI.” The trial court further held that Dr. Siegel’s failure to provide OAI with sufficient office hours resulted in his unjust enrichment and a breach of his fiduciary duty to OAI.

{¶ 14} The trial court found that the evidence demonstrated that, for the years of 1996 through 2000, Dr. Abrams generated a profit of approximately $821,000 for OAI, and Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
850 N.E.2d 99, 166 Ohio App. 3d 230, 2006 Ohio 1728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abrams-v-siegel-ohioctapp-2006.