Gamze v. Seibel

2022 IL App (1st) 211368-U
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 30, 2022
Docket1-21-1368
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2022 IL App (1st) 211368-U (Gamze v. Seibel) 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
Gamze v. Seibel, 2022 IL App (1st) 211368-U (Ill. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 IL App (1st) 211368-U

SECOND DIVISION August 30, 2022

No. 1-21-1368

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 JUDICIAL DISTRICT

JONATHAN C. GAMZE, M.D., ) Appeal from the Circuit Court of ) Cook County. Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) No. 17 L 7185 ) JOHN SEIBEL and CASSIDAY SCHADE, LLP, ) ) Honorable Edward S. Harmening, Defendants-Appellees. ) Judge Presiding.

JUSTICE HOWSE delivered the judgment of the court. Presiding Justice Fitzgerald Smith and Justice Cobbs concurred in the judgment.

ORDER

¶1 Held: We affirm the order of the circuit court in this legal malpractice case granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment; plaintiff failed to submit non-speculative evidence that a more favorable settlement in the underlying disciplinary proceedings would have been accepted by the Department; therefore, plaintiff failed to supply evidence of proximate cause.

¶2 The Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (IDFPR) filed a

disciplinary complaint against Plaintiff Jonathan Gamze, M.D. Dr. Gamze retained defendants

John Seibel and Cassiday Schade, LLP to defend him against the disciplinary action. Following 1-21-1368

negotiations, Dr. Gamze accepted a settlement from the IDFPR that resulted in restrictions on his

medical privileges.

¶3 After accepting the settlement and later regaining full medical privileges, Dr. Gamze filed

this case against Seibel and Cassiday Schade. Dr. Gamze alleges in his complaint that his

attorneys were negligent for failing to secure better settlement terms for him. Dr. Gamze claims

that, had his attorneys complied with the standard of care when representing him, he would have

received less stringent restrictions on his medical privileges and would have regained full

medical privileges much sooner. Seibel and Cassiday Schade moved for summary judgment

arguing that Dr. Gamze failed to submit evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact on the

element of proximate cause because there is no evidence the IDFPR would have accepted a

settlement with less stringent restrictions on plaintiff. Seibel and Cassiday Schade also argued

that the expert opinion offered by Dr. Gamze should be stricken or otherwise disregarded

because it is speculative and contains conclusions unsupported by facts. The trial court agreed

with Seibel and Cassiday Schade that Dr. Gamze failed to submit evidence on the issue of

proximate cause, finding that “the element of proximate cause is missing” and that there is a

“fatal gap” in Dr. Gamze’s case. Dr. Gamze appeals from the trial court’s grant of summary

judgment. For the following reasons, we affirm.

¶4 BACKGROUND

¶5 Plaintiff Dr. Jonathan Gamze is a psychiatrist. In connection with his duties as a

psychiatrist, plaintiff maintains both a medical license and a controlled substance license as he

sometimes prescribes for his patients medications that are regulated by laws governing the

distribution of controlled substances.

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¶6 The Underlying Proceedings

¶7 A pharmacist, Susan Johnson, became concerned when one of her customers, who was

one of plaintiff’s patients, frequently presented prescriptions for high doses of Adderall which

were being refilled early. Adderall is regulated as a Schedule II controlled substance because of

its potential for abuse. Johnson searched the Illinois Prescription Monitoring Program database

in which an entry is made each time a prescription is filled in Illinois for one of the controlled

drugs. When Johnson reviewed the prescriptions being filled for this particular patient, she

believed that plaintiff was overprescribing controlled substances to the patient. The amount and

frequency with which this patient was refilling Adderall prescriptions, along with the fact that

the prescriptions were being filled at multiple pharmacies, led Johnson to believe that the patient

was abusing drugs or engaged in drug-seeking behavior. Johnson made a complaint with the

IDFPR about plaintiff’s prescribing practices.

¶8 After receiving the complaint from Johnson, the IDFPR began an investigation into

plaintiff’s practice of prescribing controlled substances. The IDFPR received medical and

prescription records from plaintiff’s office. The IDFPR wanted to look at all the records of

plaintiff’s prescribing practices to make sure it was a widespread issue and not just an isolated

incident—they wanted to make sure plaintiff was engaged in a pattern and practice of

overprescribing controlled substances and that a prosecution was worth their time and effort.

¶9 An investigator from the IDFPR spoke to plaintiff. The investigator documented in his

report that plaintiff told the investigator during the interview that he did not know the law about

prescribing Schedule II controlled substances. Plaintiff also told the investigator that it appeared

he had messed up and was willing to accept the punishment.

3 1-21-1368

¶ 10 A few weeks after plaintiff met with the investigator from the IDFPR, he retained

defendants John Seibel and Cassiday Schade, LLP to represent him in the coming disciplinary

proceedings. Seibel was assisted on plaintiff’s matter by Kathleen Barrett, an associate attorney

at the firm who previously worked at the IDFPR as a clerk under Illinois Supreme Court Rule

711. Barrett had worked with Seibel on the firm’s IDFPR cases in the past because of the

experience she gained from working at the IDFPR.

¶ 11 Seven months after plaintiff retained defendants to represent him, the IDFPR filed a

complaint against plaintiff for overprescribing controlled substances. The complaint focused on

one particular patient, A.S., to whom plaintiff prescribed Adderall, the patient whose

prescriptions caught the attention of Pharmacist Johnson. The complaint detailed the evidence

gathered during the IDFPR’s investigation of plaintiff. Plaintiff prescribed multiple controlled

substances to A.S., including Adderall, Suboxone, and Valium. The IDFPR concluded that

plaintiff “authorized multiple prescriptions for controlled substances without properly evaluating

and/or monitoring patient A.S. for signs, symptoms and/or warning signs of drug abuse” and

“ignored multiple red flags and/or signs of drug abuse exhibited by patient A.S.” over a three-

year period. The IDFPR alleged in the complaint that plaintiff violated the Medical Practices Act

through his prescribing practices and claimed that plaintiff was likely to cause harm to patients in

the future. The IDFPR sought revocation or suspension of both plaintiff’s medical and controlled

substance licenses.

¶ 12 After the disciplinary complaint was filed, the prosecutor assigned to the case, Vladimir

Lozovskiy, offered plaintiff a settlement of the disciplinary case. The initial offer from

Lozovskiy was an indefinite probation for a minimum of three years for plaintiff’s medical

license and an indefinite suspension for a minimum of one year for plaintiff’s controlled

4 1-21-1368

substance license. Defendants and Lozovskiy continued to negotiate from the initial offer. After

negotiation, the IDFPR agreed to a negotiated settlement containing the same terms of probation

for plaintiff’s medical license, but instead of an indefinite suspension with a minimum one-year

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2022 IL App (1st) 211368-U, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gamze-v-seibel-illappct-2022.