Jayne Kendle v. Chavda Medical Services, Pllc

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 5, 2023
Docket2023 CA 000081
StatusUnknown

This text of Jayne Kendle v. Chavda Medical Services, Pllc (Jayne Kendle v. Chavda Medical Services, Pllc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jayne Kendle v. Chavda Medical Services, Pllc, (Ky. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

RENDERED: OCTOBER 6, 2023; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2023-CA-0081-MR

JAYNE KENDLE APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM CHRISTIAN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE JOHN L. ATKINS, JUDGE ACTION NO. 21-CI-00439

CHAVDA MEDICAL SERVICES, PLLC; DR. GEETA CHAVDA; DR. SANJAY GEETA; GEETA S. CHAVDA, M.D., PLLC; AND THE BELL CLINIC, PLLC D/B/A BELL CLINIC APPELLEES

OPINION AFFIRMING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CETRULO, KAREM, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

CETRULO, JUDGE: Appellant Jayne Kendle (“Employee”) appeals the Christian

Circuit Court’s November 2022 Order denying Employee’s pre-trial motion for

summary judgment and its Final Trial Order and Judgment indicating its denial of

her motion for directed verdict. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In February 2018, Employee, a pediatric nurse practitioner, entered a

five-year employment contract with Appellees Dr. Sanjay Chavda (“Dr. Sanjay”);1

Dr. Geeta Chavda (“Dr. Geeta”); and their “practices,” including Chavda Medical

Services, PLLC; Geeta S. Chavda, M.D., PLLC; and the Bell Clinic, PLLC, d/b/a,

Bell Clinic (together, “Employer”). The employment contract was the Employer’s

standard form and included, in pertinent part, that Employee’s salary was set for

the five-year period and that she would receive 10 days of vacation time per year.

A year later, Employee informed Employer that she was searching for

job opportunities at other clinics. In order to keep Employee, the parties negotiated

an “Addendum to Contract Dated 2/14/2018” (the “Addendum”). The Addendum

stated that its term ran through April 2023 and provided that Employee’s salary

would increase five percent per year. Further, it stated Employee’s vacation time

would “increase a total of 160hrs per year.” The Addendum detailed Employee’s

work schedule – four 10-hour shifts per week unless a clinic opened in Cadiz and

they needed her to work 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday – and

stated that Employer would purchase fluoride varnish, an ASQ Toolkit, visual

screener, and hearing screener for Employee’s practice.

1 Occasionally, the record (as well as the case caption) refers to Dr. Sanjay Geeta, but he introduced himself as Dr. Sanjay Chavda at trial, so we use Dr. Sanjay Chavda here.

-2- In April 2020, Employee asked the Employer’s office administrator,

Latisha Edmonds (“Administrator Edmonds”), when Employee’s next salary and

vacation increases would take place, and Administrator Edmonds told her that the

salary increase would begin on her first paycheck after April 24, 2020, but that

Employee’s vacation time had already increased to 160 hours. However,

Employee explained that she had interpreted the Addendum to mean she would

receive an additional 160 hours of vacation time every year – i.e., 160 the first

year, 320 the second, 480 the third, etc. After confirming with Dr. Geeta,

Administrator Edmonds informed Employee that her interpretation was incorrect.

Employer had intended the vacation time to be set at 160 hours per year, increasing

from the initial employment contract’s 10-day-provision, not increasing 160 hours

every year.

Three months later, in July 2020, Administrator Edmonds sent a note

to Employee notifying her that “[d]ue to the need of availability we will be needing

your hours to be changed to Monday-Friday 8am-5pm. Starting July 27th, 2020.”

Administrator Edmonds and Dr. Geeta testified in their depositions that Employee

had requested the scheduling change. According to them, Employee had trouble

seeing at night and asked to work different hours so she could get home earlier,

before it was too dark outside. Therefore, to accommodate Employee’s

availability, Employer shifted her work schedule.

-3- The record indicated that the new schedule and the fixed 160-hour

vacation time remained in place for the next eight months without issue. Then, in

March 2021, Employee sent a letter to Dr. Geeta, Dr. Sanjay, and Administrator

Edmonds recounting Employee’s conversations with Administrator Edmonds in

April 2020 and July 2020, detailed above. Additionally, the letter indicated that

Employee had been splitting her time between two clinic locations – Bell Clinic

and Hopkinsville Clinic – even though the Cadiz clinic, referenced in the

Addendum, had not opened. Employee explained that she had contacted an

attorney regarding contract enforcement in Kentucky, and the attorney had told her

contracts are binding. She then asked “that [Employer] honor the commitments

you made to me in my contract addendum including the return to working four-ten

hour shifts at Bell Clinic, the annual increases in paid vacation time, and the

acquisition of an ASQ toolkit, a hearing screener, and vision screener.”

Four days later, Administrator Edmonds responded.2 The response

again explained that Employee was incorrectly interpreting the vacation time

provision. Administrator Edmonds stated that such an interpretation – increasing

vacation time by an additional 160 hours every year – was unrealistic. As to

2 Although Employee’s attorney submitted this response as an exhibit and noted that Employer had provided the response in discovery, Employee testified that she had not received that letter. She testified that the only response she had received was a letter from Dr. Sanjay. The attorneys agreed that both response letters were “very similar.” However, Dr. Sanjay’s letter stated that Employee did not have enough patient volume to justify purchasing the ASQ toolkit, hearing screener, and vision screener.

-4- Employee’s work schedule, Employer had not be able to open the Cadiz Clinic

“[d]ue to issues outside [their] control”; however, “[d]ue to the low patient

count/not seeing enough patients as per [Employee’s] contract and [Employee]

hav[ing] requested several times to be closer to home to shorten [] driving distance,

we accommodated you to take care [of] patients in our Hopkinsville office, which

is closer to your home.” The response detailed the clinics’ operating hours –

8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. at the Bell Clinic and 9:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. at the

Hopkinsville Clinic – and concluded that Employee’s request to work 10-hour days

at the Bell Clinic could not be accommodated by the clinics’ hours. Additionally,

it stated that working Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., would help

build her patient base, per her contract. Finally, it noted that Employee had not

provided quotes for the equipment she was requesting.3

In April 2021, Employee submitted her letter of resignation and filed

suit against Employer, claiming Employer had breached the Addendum.

Employee requested a declaratory judgment stating Employer had violated the

contract. Employee further claimed her resignation resulted in income loss she

would have had during the remainder of the employment contract. Following

discovery, in September 2022, Employee filed a motion for summary judgment,

3 Administrator Edmonds, Dr. Geeta, and Dr. Sanjay testified that they had asked Employee to provide specific model numbers and pricing information to ensure they purchased the appropriate items.

-5- arguing that it was undisputed that Employee had a valid employment contract and

Addendum and Employer had breached those terms. Specifically, Employee

argued that Employer breached the Addendum when it failed “to procure any of

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Jayne Kendle v. Chavda Medical Services, Pllc, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jayne-kendle-v-chavda-medical-services-pllc-kyctapp-2023.