Estate of Leah Carpenter v. Weiner & Associates Pllc

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 2017
Docket332142
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Leah Carpenter v. Weiner & Associates Pllc (Estate of Leah Carpenter v. Weiner & Associates Pllc) 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
Estate of Leah Carpenter v. Weiner & Associates Pllc, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

ESTATE OF LEAH CARPENTER, by UNPUBLISHED STEPHANIE REESE, Personal Representative, October 31, 2017

Plaintiff-Appellant,

and

DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY HEALTH

Intervening Plaintiff,

v No. 332142 Macomb Circuit Court WEINER & ASSOCIATES, PLLC, RONALD M. LC No. 2013-003215-NO APPLEBAUM, ERIK J STONE, NICHOLAS M. MARCHENIA, GREAT LAKES AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTER, LLC, doing business as ENDOSURGICAL CENTER AT GREAT LAKES, GREATER LAKES ANESTHESIA, PLLC, ENTERPRISE LEASING COMPANY OF DETROIT, LLC, CYRIL V. WEINER, WILLIAM J. FOCAZIO, M.D., and MICHAEL ANGELO,

Defendants-Appellees,

PAUL PETRE, M.D., PAUL PETRE, M.D., PC, HOME CLINIC GROUP, PC, HOME CLINIC, PC, REESE J. JAMES, D.O., KELLAM & ASSOCIATES, PC, AMERICAN PAIN DOCTORS, PLC, 1800 USLAWYER, EDWARD M. FIROSZ, PACIFIC MARKETING, INC., and ELITE SURGICAL MEDICAL CONSULTANTS, LLC,

Defendants.

-1- Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and MURPHY and RONAYNE KRAUSE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff, the Estate of Leah Carpenter, appeals by right a March 7, 2016, trial court order granting summary disposition in favor of defendants-appellees pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(10), dismissing plaintiff’s claims for legal malpractice against defendants Weiner & Associates, PLLC, Cyril V. Weiner, Ronald M. Applebaum, Erik J. Stone, and Nicholas M. Marchenia (Weiner Defendants), and for civil conspiracy against all defendants-appellees. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. PLAINTIFF’S CONSPIRACY THEORY

Plaintiff’s conspiracy claim is based on her theory that defendants (except Enterprise) formed a conspiracy to enrich themselves at the expense of no-fault automobile insurance carriers. The alleged conspiracy involved three groups of actors, with defendants Michael Angelo and William Focazio, M.D., associated with two of these groups. The first group consists of the individuals Angelo and Dr. Focazio, and the entities 1-800-US-LAWYER and Pacific Marketing, Inc. Angelo and Dr. Focazio owned Pacific Marketing, which operated the 1- 800-US-LAWYER toll free number for purposes of marketing legal services.

The second group consisted of the law firm, Weiner & Associates (the “Weiner firm”), its principal, Cyril V. Weiner, its associate attorneys, Ronald M. Applebaum and Erik J. Stone, and Nicholas M. Marchenia, a paralegal who later joined the firm as an associate attorney (collectively referred to as the “Weiner defendants”).

The third group consists of Great Lakes Ambulatory Surgical Center, LLC, doing business as Endosurgical Center at Great Lakes, and Greater Lakes Anesthesia, LLC (collectively referred to as the “Great Lakes defendants”). Great Lakes Ambulatory Surgical Center operated the outpatient surgical facility, Endosurgical Center. Angelo and Dr. Focazio were joint owners of the Great Lakes defendants.

Plaintiff alleged that the conspiracy worked as follows: Angelo advertised the 1-800-US- LAWYER toll free number as a marketing service for personal injury attorneys. The Weiner firm was one of the Detroit-area practices to contract with this service. Weiner posted the 1-800- US-LAWYER number on television commercials and advertisements in other media. The Weiner firm paid a referral fee to 1-800-US-LAWYER for each client who retained the Weiner firm after contacting the Weiner firm through 1-800-US-LAWYER. The Weiner firm contracted with the client on a contingency fee basis. The Weiner firm then referred clients to the Endosurgical Center or a physician who performed procedures at the Endosurgical Center. According to plaintiff, the physician provided the client with unnecessary medical procedures, which were billed to the client’s no-fault insurance carrier. Plaintiff alleged that the Weiner firm collected one-third of the no-fault benefit payment pursuant to the contingency agreement. The remaining two-thirds of the benefit payment was distributed among the Great Lakes defendants and the treating physician. The Weiner defendants thus enriched themselves, and also enabled

-2- Angelo and Dr. Focazio to enrich themselves through their dual roles as marketers and medical providers. Plaintiff alleged that the decedent was rendered a quadriplegic, and died five months later, as a result of unnecessary medical procedures provided through this alleged conspiracy. Dr. Reese James, an orthopedic physician, performed the procedure that led to decedent’s injury and death. The allegedly unnecessary procedure was performed at the Endosurgical Center.

B. THE DECEDENT’S INJURY AND PLAINTIFF’S LAWSUIT

The decedent was driving an Enterprise rental vehicle that was struck from behind by another vehicle. The decedent did not immediately seek medical attention. Less than two weeks later, the decedent executed a contingency fee agreement with the Weiner firm after consultation with its independent contractor, Lionel Walker. Walker referred the decedent to Dr. Paul Petre, who referred her for MRI and nerve testing. Although these tests did not reveal any objective injury, Dr. Petre continued to treat the decedent and refer her for physical therapy. The Weiner firm referred the decedent to Endosurgical Center or Dr. James, who recommended that the decedent undergo “digital fluoroscopically guided cervical epidurogram and cervical epidural steroid injections” under anesthesia for treatment of pain. The decedent received injections in February and March 2010, which supposedly relieved her symptoms.

Enterprise, which acted as its own no-fault insurance carrier, referred the decedent to Dr. Philip J. Mayer, an orthopedic specialist, for an independent medical examination (IME). Dr. Mayer determined that the decedent had no objective injury corresponding to her reports of pain. He determined that the injections under anesthesia were not medically indicated and not warranted under evidence-based guidelines. He concluded that “[i]t has not been documented that there is any objective pathology that has ever been identified, related to the accident that would justify the ongoing treatments.”

The decedent received a third injection under anesthesia on April 3, 2010. She showed signs of injury upon awaking from the anesthesia. Over the following weeks and months, the decedent’s condition deteriorated. By August 2010, she was rendered completely quadriplegic and ventilator-dependent. She died on September 20, 2010. The Wayne County Medical Examiner determined that the decedent “died of pneumonia and pyelonephritis due to quadriplegia and complications thereof due to remote steroid injection into the cervical spinal cord.” The manner of death was accident.

Plaintiff brought a separate wrongful death medical malpractice action against Dr. James and Kellam & Associates. Plaintiff brought this action for civil conspiracy and concert of action against the Weiner defendants, the Great Lakes defendants, Angelo, and Dr. Focazio. She also filed a separate wrongful death medical malpractice action against Dr. James and his practice, Kellam & Associates, and also named him as a defendant in the instant lawsuit. The actions were consolidated for purposes of discovery only. Plaintiff resolved her claims against Dr. James and his practice through a voluntary settlement.

The Weiner defendants, the Great Lakes defendants, Angelo, and Dr. Focazio moved for summary disposition in the instant action. They argued that there was no genuine issue of material fact that they combined to engage in an unlawful scheme, or that their alleged conduct

-3- was a proximate cause of the decedent’s injury. They also asserted that the wrongful-conduct rule and the doctrine of intervening negligence precluded recovery.

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Estate of Leah Carpenter v. Weiner & Associates Pllc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-leah-carpenter-v-weiner-associates-pllc-michctapp-2017.