Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 2016
DocketH040411
StatusUnpublished

This text of Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6 (Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6, (Cal. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Filed 3/7/16 Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6 NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

RONALD ALLISON et al., H040411 (Santa Clara County Plaintiffs and Appellants, Super. Ct. No. 109CV145956)

v.

NATIONAL MEDICAL VENTURES, Inc., et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

Plaintiffs Ronald Allison, M.D. and 12 other physician limited partners in a California limited partnership called Litho I (Litho) appeal from a judgment entered after the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of defendants Litho, its former general partner National Medical Ventures, Inc. (NMV), and NMV’s parent company Tenet HealthSystems Hospitals, Inc. (TH Hospitals) in a combination derivative and class action lawsuit arising out of the alleged mismanagement and dissolution of Litho. Plaintiffs contend that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because (1) triable issues of fact remain with respect to the transfer of Litho’s funds to an account controlled by Tenet Healthcare Corporation (Tenet) for 40 months;1 (2) triable issues of fact remain with respect to NMV’s alleged transfer of Litho’s “goodwill” to a third party

1 Tenet is the parent company of TH Hospitals. without consideration; and (3) the partnership agreement did not and as a matter of law could not permit NMV to withhold partnership funds to defend and indemnify itself against allegations that it breached its fiduciary duty. Plaintiffs also contend that the trial court erred in sustaining demurrers to certain causes of action in their first and second amended complaints. We affirm.

I. Factual Background Tenet operates general hospitals in the United States through a number of subsidiaries and affiliates that include TH Hospitals2 (an operating company subsidiary), NMV, and Community Hospital of Los Gatos (Community Hospital). Former defendant HCP, Inc. is a real estate investment trust. Former defendant Health Care Property Partners (HCPP) is a California partnership that owns hospital properties in North America and leases them to operating companies like TH Hospitals. HCPP owned the land and buildings that Community Hospital occupied under the terms of a lease between HCPP and TH Hospitals (the Master Lease). TH Hospitals assigned the Master Lease to Community Hospital in 2002. Lithotripsy is a medical procedure that uses shock waves generated by a machine called a lithotripter to break up kidney stones. Litho was formed in 1985 to develop a kidney stone treatment center utilizing a lithotripter “and to generate profits through the lease or operation of such Center.” Litho was in essence a profit-sharing arrangement between a hospital corporation and a group composed primarily of physicians. Litho did not perform lithotripsy procedures; only licensed physicians can do so. As more specifically stated in its 1995 and 2001 amended and restated partnership agreements, Litho’s purpose was to provide certain non-physician clinical, management and

2 TH Hospitals was formerly known as NME Hospitals, Inc. We refer to both entities as TH Hospitals.

2 administrative services to Community Hospital in connection with the hospital’s kidney stone treatment center, which contained a lithotripter owned by the hospital. Three agreements controlled the parties’ business dealings. The partnership agreement governed the relationship between NMV and Litho’s limited partners. NMV was the sole general partner. NMV was also a limited partner, and it held a majority of the partnership shares at all relevant times. Sixty-two limited partners held the remaining shares. The partnership agreement provided that NMV as general partner had exclusive control over the management of partnership affairs. The second agreement was the Center Use Agreement (CUA) between Litho and TH Hospitals. The CUA granted Litho a license to use the space and equipment in Community Hospital’s Lithotripsy Center and the services of one operating room nurse to provide services to the hospital’s patients. The CUA made Litho’s license to use the Center “subject and subordinate to all of the terms and provisions of” the Master Lease between HCPP and TH Hospitals and the rights of HCPP as lessor under that Master Lease. The CUA provided that it would “automatically” terminate on December 31, 2015, or on the date of Litho’s dissolution, “whichever is earlier.” The third agreement was the Lithotripsy Services Agreement (LSA) between Litho, NMV, and TH Hospitals. By that agreement, TH Hospitals engaged Litho as an independent contractor to administer, manage, and operate the Lithotripsy Center, but only for patients with non-government-funded insurance. Patients with Medicaid, Medicare, or other government-funded insurance received the same lithotripsy services from the same non-physician personnel in the same space at Community Hospital, but those services were provided by TH Hospitals rather than by its independent contractor Litho. The LSA provided that it would terminate “in the event that the [CUA] is terminated for any reason.” The LSA made TH Hospitals responsible for billing and collection for services that the Lithotripsy Center provided. Patients with non-government-funded insurance 3 who were referred for lithotripsy treatment registered at Community Hospital as outpatients. The patients’ own physicians performed the procedures, using the Center’s operating room and equipment and the technical and administrative services provided by Litho. The physicians separately billed their patients or the patients’ insurers for professional services, while TH Hospitals billed for the facility fee or “ ‘technical component’ ” of services rendered by the Center. TH Hospitals retained a percentage of Litho’s portion of the gross receipts collected “as compensation for its billing expense and for the supplies provided.” It remitted the remainder to Litho. NMV had since Litho’s formation maintained Litho’s funds in a separate partnership bank account. In late 2003, Tenet decided to move all Tenet-related entities into a single accounts payable application. The change, which was made to reduce the risk of fraud, required the consolidation of funds maintained in small bank accounts all over the country into a single corporate-level bank account. On November 29, 2004, NMV transferred $1.7 million from Litho’s bank account to a Tenet account that also held funds from other Tenet affiliates. After the transfer, NMV continued to account for the expenses, revenues, and distributions of Litho as it had done before the transfer, and it continued to make distributions to the limited partners according to the terms of the partnership agreement. The limited partners were notified of the bank account change in early 2005 and raised no objections until mid-2007, when certain limited partners asked NMV to reestablish a separate partnership account. NMV did so in February 2008. On March 17, 2008, NMV transferred Litho’s funds to the new account with the interest the funds would have earned had they remained in the original Bank of America money market account. In June 2008, Community Hospital gave notice to HCPP that it would not exercise its option to renew the Master Lease but would instead let it expire on May 31, 2009.

4 Litho was dissolved on December 31, 2008 by the vote of NMV, which held a majority of the outstanding partnership shares. The CUA automatically terminated on Litho’s dissolution, and the CUA’s termination triggered the termination of the LSA. NMV proceeded to wind up the partnership business.

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Allison v. Nat. Medical Ventures CA6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allison-v-nat-medical-ventures-ca6-calctapp-2016.