Arch Insurance Co. v. PCH Management Alpha, LLC

2024 IL App (1st) 230738-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 9, 2024
Docket1-23-0738
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2024 IL App (1st) 230738-U (Arch Insurance Co. v. PCH Management Alpha, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arch Insurance Co. v. PCH Management Alpha, LLC, 2024 IL App (1st) 230738-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

2024 IL App (1st) 230738-U

No. 1-23-0738

Order filed December 9, 2024.

First Division

NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1). _____________________________________________________________________________

IN THE

APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

FIRST DISTRICT

______________________________________________________________________________

ARCH INSURANCE COMPANY, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellee and Counterdefendant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 2018 L 12681 ) PCH MANAGEMENT ALPHA, LLC; PEOPLE’S ) The Honorable CHOICE HOSPITAL, LLC; and PCH LAB ) Caroline Kate Moreland, SERVICES, LLC, ) Judge Presiding. ) Defendants-Appellants and Counterplaintiffs, ) ) (Weimar Medical Holdings, LLC, and Francis L. Price, ) Defendants). ) _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE LAVIN delivered the judgment of the court. Justices Pucinski and Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: The circuit court properly held that the insurer had no duty to defend or indemnify the insureds in the underlying litigation, that the insurer was not liable for damages for breach of contract, and that the insureds had no claim against the insurer for vexatious or unreasonable conduct under the Illinois Insurance Code. We affirm. No. 1-23-0738

¶2 In this insurance coverage dispute, PCH Management Alpha, LLC, People’s Choice

Hospital, LLC, and PCH Lab Services, LLC (collectively, PCH) appeal the circuit court’s

finding that PCH’s insurance claim to Arch Insurance Company (Arch) was not covered under

the policy. As will be discussed below, PCH was sued by a third-party medical holdings

company and its managing member wherein they alleged that PCH had engaged in a fraudulent

billing scheme with the company. PCH subsequently demanded coverage from Arch for the

underlying claim, but Arch denied coverage based on an interrelated wrongful acts exclusion

within the policy. Specifically, Arch asserted the claim triggered that exclusion because it was

interrelated with another claim brought by a hospital against PCH in a different lawsuit before

the policy period had begun. The circuit court ultimately agreed and entered a final judgment in

favor of Arch. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶3 I. BACKGROUND

¶4 Arch issued a “claims-made” liability insurance policy to PCH for the period of

September 11, 2017, to September 11, 2018. The policy provided liability coverage for PCH’s

directors and officers. Coverage, however, only applied if a claim for wrongful acts was made

during the policy period and did not fall under one of the policy’s exclusions. Specifically, the

policy contained the following relevant provisions:

“B. Organization Reimbursement

The Insurer shall pay Loss on behalf of an Insured Organization that such Insured Organization has, to the extent permitted or required by law, indemnified the Insured Persons resulting from a Claim first made against the Insured Persons during the Policy Period or Extended Reporting Period, if applicable, for a Wrongful Act by the Insured Persons.

C. Organizational Liability

-2- No. 1-23-0738

The Insurer shall pay Loss on behalf of an Insured Organization resulting from a Claim first made against such Insured Organization during the Policy Period or Extended Reporting Period, if applicable, for a Wrongful Act by an Insured Organization.”

The policy defined “Wrongful Act” as “any actual or alleged: 1. act, error, omission,

misstatement, misleading statement, neglect or breach of duty by Insured Persons in their

capacity as such or in an Outside Capacity or, with respect to Insuring Agreement C, by an

Insured Organization; or 2. matter claimed against an Insured Person solely by reason of their

serving in such capacity, including service in an Outside Capacity.”

¶5 Relevant here to determine whether a claim was first made during the policy period is

section 10 of the General Provisions of the policy, as amended. That section governed

“Interrelated Claims” and provided the following:

“Regarding the Liability Coverage Parts only, all Claims arising from, based upon, or attributable to the same Wrongful Act or Interrelated Wrongful Acts shall be deemed to be a single Claim first made on the earliest date that:

A. any of such Claims was first made, even if such date is before the Policy Period;

B. proper notice of such Wrongful Act or Interrelated Wrongful Act was given to the Insurer pursuant to Section 9.B. above; or

C. notice of such Wrongful Act or Interrelated Wrongful Act was given under any other directors and officers liability, employment practices liability, fiduciary liability, management liability or similar insurance policy.

The policy defined “Interrelated Wrongful Acts” as “Wrongful Acts that have as a common

nexus any fact, circumstance, situation, event, transaction, cause or series of causally connected

facts, circumstances, situations, events, transactions or causes.”

-3- No. 1-23-0738

¶6 Finally, section 4 of the policy contained a prior and pending litigation exclusion, also

known as the “PPL Exclusion,” that provided, in relevant part:

“4. Exclusions

“A. The Insurer shall not pay Loss for any Claim against an Insured:

1. arising from, based upon, or attributable to any fact, circumstance or situation that, before the inception date of this Policy, was the subject of any notice given under any other insurance policy;

2. arising from, based upon, or attributable to any:

a. demand, suit or proceeding made or initiated against any Insured on or prior to the applicable Pending and Prior Litigation Date in Item 6 of the Declarations; or

b. Wrongful Act specified in such prior demand, suit or proceeding or any Interrelated Wrongful Acts thereof[.]”

That section, however, was later amended by Endorsement 5, which provided:

“23. Pending and Prior Litigation Exclusion

Section 4.A.2. is deleted and replaced by:

a. written demand, suit or proceeding made or initiated against any Insured within the scope of a Directors and Officers Liability, Employment Practices Liability, Fiduciary Liability, or similar management liability insurance policy (whether covered or not) on or prior to the applicable Pending and Prior Litigation Date in Item 6 of the Declarations.

b. Wrongful Act specified in such prior demand, suit or proceeding or any Interrelated Wrongful Acts thereof[.]

¶7 In June 2017, before the policy period, Newman Memorial Hospital, Inc. (Newman) filed

a declaratory judgment lawsuit against PCH Management, LLC, PCH Lab Services, LLC, and

others (hereafter referred to as PCH), in the district court of Ellis County, Oklahoma. The

Newman plaintiffs alleged, in relevant part, that Newman “was on the brink of closure and

-4- No. 1-23-0738

unable to make payroll” when PCH “presented itself to Newman as [the] white knight who

would save the hospital and set it on a court for success.” Consequently, Newman entered into an

agreement with PCH that gave PCH nearly total control of the hospital. Newman also entered

into an agreement with PCH to increase the hospital’s overall revenue with the addition of a

laboratory reference program. The Newman plaintiffs alleged that the program was part of a

fraudulent billing scheme by PCH.

¶8 The following year, PCH was involved in another lawsuit containing similar allegations

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2024 IL App (1st) 230738-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arch-insurance-co-v-pch-management-alpha-llc-illappct-2024.