Crutcher v. Oncology/Hematology Care, Inc.

2022 Ohio 4105, 201 N.E.3d 446
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 18, 2022
DocketC-220086 & C-220106
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 4105 (Crutcher v. Oncology/Hematology Care, Inc.) 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
Crutcher v. Oncology/Hematology Care, Inc., 2022 Ohio 4105, 201 N.E.3d 446 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Crutcher v. Oncology/Hematology Care, Inc., 2022-Ohio-4105.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO

JOHN T. CRUTCHER, : APPEAL NOS. C-220086 C-220106 Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee, : TRIAL NO. A-1804358

: VS. : O P I N I O N.

ONCOLOGY/HEMATOLOGY CARE, : INC., : OHC REAL ESTATE, LLC,

and

RANDY BROUN

Defendants-Appellees/Cross- Appellants.

Civil Appeals From: Hamilton County Court of Common Pleas

Judgment Appealed From Is: Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, and Cause Remanded.

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: November 18, 2022

Freking Myers & Reul LLC, Jon B. Allison, Jacobs Kleinman Seibel & McNally LPA, and Mark J. Byrne, for Plaintiff-Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

Katz, Teller, Brant & Hild, LPA, Robert A. Pitcairn, Jr., and Peter J. O’Shea, for Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellants. OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

BERGERON, Presiding Judge.

{¶1} What began as a promising enterprise for plaintiff-appellant/cross-

appellee John T. Crutcher as Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of

Directors of Oncology/Hematology Care, Inc., (“OHC”) dissolved into bitterness

and his ouster from the corporation. Dismayed by this turn of events, Mr. Crutcher

embarked on a decade-long odyssey of litigation against OHC and its affiliates. In

the midst of this battle, however, Mr. Crutcher accepted 64 months’ worth of

payouts from OHC Real Estate, LLC (“OHCRE”)—the entity OHC created to hold the

real estate that enabled OHC to operate its medical practice—to reimburse him for his

equity stake in OHCRE. After more than five years of pocketing these payments, Mr.

Crutcher suddenly concluded that he was robbed, and commenced another front in

the widening litigation skirmish.

{¶2} In this case, he sued the defendants-appellees/cross-appellants OHC,

OHCRE, and Dr. Randy Broun (collectively “the OHCRE defendants”). Although the

trial court ruled in his favor regarding his entitlement to an equity payout from

OHCRE, Mr. Crutcher now disputes the amount on appeal. But the trial court found

him bound, by virtue of waiver by estoppel, to OHCRE’s calculations based on his

acceptance of those amounts for more than five years. As we explain below, we agree

with that conclusion. In fact, we agree with nearly all of the trial court’s

determinations, and therefore overrule both of OHCRE’s cross-assignments of error,

and the balance of Mr. Crutcher’s assignments of error, save one. We find that the

trial court improperly excluded prejudgment interest from its damage computation.

Therefore, we remand the cause for that interested to be added but otherwise affirm

the trial court’s judgment.

2 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

I.

{¶3} After OHC formed OHCRE with Mr. Crutcher as a founding member,

Mr. Crutcher took the reins as one of two managers of OHCRE in 2004, to

“manage and control the business, affairs and properties” of OHCRE in conformity

with its Operating Agreement (“Operating Agreement”). During his extensive

involvement with OHC and OHCRE, Mr. Crutcher made a series of monetary

investments in OHCRE, providing himself with an equity stake in the LLC.

{¶4} Upon the termination of a member of OHC, the Operating Agreement

calls for the remaining members or the company to purchase the departing member’s

interest. As spelled out in the document, a member’s “Financial Interest” is comprised

of various accounts, including an account that accrues 15 percent interest annually.

Mr. Crutcher, at the helm of OHCRE and conversant with the Operating Agreement,

certainly should have understood how all of this worked.

{¶5} OHC terminated Mr. Crutcher in July 2010. Thereafter, OHCRE

determined that his Financial Interest totaled $178,535—predicated on the

investments he contributed into the LLC. Pursuant to section 6.5(c)(2) of the

Operating Agreement, OHCRE elected to pay Mr. Crutcher this amount over ten years

with interest beginning in September 2010. A few months after OHCRE began making

these payments to Mr. Crutcher—payments that he gladly accepted—he launched his

first lawsuit against OHC.

{¶6} As part of that lawsuit, Mr. Crutcher submitted an interrogatory

requesting the valuation of his membership interest in OHCRE, and he received a

schedule illustrating OHCRE’s calculation. When Mr. Crutcher filed two motions to

3 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

compel discovery in 2010, he never claimed that OHC withheld information related to

the calculation of his Financial Interest or the investments he made in OHCRE.

{¶7} After our court dismissed an appeal of the 2010 lawsuit, Mr. Crutcher

filed two additional lawsuits against OHC and related parties in 2015. In the first

complaint, Mr. Crutcher alleged that OHC owed him approximately $178,535.49,

representing his shares in OHCRE. In other words, by this point, Mr. Crutcher had (1)

requested and received information concerning the calculation of his Financial

Interest, (2) moved to compel discovery on other issues but not anything pertaining to

the calculation of his Financial Interest, and (3) confirmed OHCRE’s calculation of his

stake in OHCRE.

{¶8} With the parties embroiled in litigation, in December 2015, OHC and

OHCRE went into forbearance with their senior lender, U.S. Bank. Based on this turn

of events, Dr. Broun and OHC demanded that Mr. Crutcher sign a subordination

agreement, as requested by U.S. Bank. Section 6.5(c)(2) of the Operating Agreement,

a provision concerning a former member’s payout of their Financial Interest, provides

“as a precondition to receiving any payment from the Company * * * [Mr. Crutcher]

shall execute any subordination agreement requested by any lenders or other credit

providers to the Company or any of its subsidiaries.” After fits and starts of

negotiation over the subordination agreement, Mr. Crutcher never signed it, and

OHCRE’s monthly payments to him ceased. By this point, OHCRE had made 64

monthly payments to Mr. Crutcher, but it still owed him $91,968.57.

{¶9} As the litigation dragged on, the parties started discussing settlement.

In December 2016, Mr. Crutcher and OHC entered into a settlement agreement (the

“Settlement Agreement”). Although the settlement included a broad release against

4 OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS

OHC and its affiliates, the agreement included a carveout, allowing Mr. Crutcher to

pursue “any sums that Crutcher is owed, or claims to be owed, from OHC Real Estate,

LLC.” In other words, this settlement did not resolve the dispute over the Financial

Interest payouts that lies at the heart of the present litigation.

{¶10} Meanwhile, business conditions changed for OHCRE, and its board

ultimately decided to liquidate its assets, setting in motion a process that would lead

to the dissolution of OHCRE. That meant that assets would be sold, and debts

(including Mr. Crutcher’s) would need to be paid. Happily, OHCRE fetched more for

the assets than it had in debt, and thus it began carving up the proceeds. OHCRE

eventually determined that Mr. Crutcher’s pro-rata share of the liquidation proceeds

based off his remaining debt was $149,139. This calculation inured to his benefit

because his Financial Interest (i.e., the debt owed to him) at that time totaled only

$91,968.57.

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2022 Ohio 4105, 201 N.E.3d 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crutcher-v-oncologyhematology-care-inc-ohioctapp-2022.