Matschke v. UroPartners, LLC

2023 IL App (1st) 221112, 227 N.E.3d 842
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 29, 2023
Docket1-22-1112
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 221112 (Matschke v. UroPartners, 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
Matschke v. UroPartners, LLC, 2023 IL App (1st) 221112, 227 N.E.3d 842 (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 221112

FIFTH DIVISION September 29, 2023

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

No. 1-22-1112

H. MERRILL MATSCHKE, M.D., ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Cook County. ) v. ) No. 2019-CH-13709 ) UROPARTNERS, LLC, and UROPARTNERS ) Honorable INVESTMENTS, LLC, ) Caroline K. Moreland, ) Judge Presiding Defendants-Appellees. )

JUSTICE MIKVA delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justices Lyle and Navarro concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 The plaintiff in this case, Dr. H. Merrill Matschke, appeals from the Cook County circuit

court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants, Uropartners, LLC, and Uropartners

Investments, LLC (collectively, Uropartners), ruling that a provision in the parties’ contract was

enforceable. Dr. Matschke argues that the court erred because (1) the provision is an unenforceable

liquidated damages clause, (2) the provision is an unreasonable restraint on trade, (3) Uropartners

waived strict compliance with the provision, and (4) his failure to comply with the provision was

a mere technical and inadvertent violation of the parties’ agreement that was promptly cured. For

the following reasons, we affirm. No. 1-22-1112

¶2 I. BACKGROUND

¶3 The following facts are taken from the parties’ pleadings and submissions supporting their

cross-motions for summary judgment.

¶4 A. Dr. Matschke’s Involvement with Uropartners

¶5 Dr. Matschke is a urologist and a founding member of Uropartners, a urology group

conducting business throughout the Chicagoland area. Dr. Matschke made an initial capital

contribution in exchange for a membership interest in the business and agreed to be bound by

Uropartners’ amended and restated operating agreement, dated October 1, 2017 (Operating

Agreement).

¶6 Section 9.7 of the Operating Agreement contains a global nonsolicitation and covenant not

to compete clause that is not directly at issue here. Members agree not to practice urological

medicine within a five-mile radius of any of Uropartners’ 16 “Strategic Business Units” (SBUs)

for a period of 24 months following the termination of their membership. Members agree that

injunctive relief is appropriate in the event of a breach of this provision and that such a breach may

be remedied only by extending the time restriction “by a period equal to the length of time from

the commencement of any such violation until such time as [the] violation is cured.”

¶7 Section 10.6 of the Operating Agreement is the basis for this dispute. Subsection (a)

establishes the price Uropartners will pay to redeem a withdrawing member’s units of ownership,

divided into an “SBU Purchase Price” and a “Common Purchase Price.” Subsection (b)(ii)

provides that, if “at any time during the 2-year period following the Closing Date, the Redeeming

Member engages in the practice of medicine on a full-time or part-time basis, within the Company

Service Area, for any person or entity other than the Company,” then the redeeming member will

forfeit the common purchase price that would otherwise be credited to them upon withdrawal from

2 No. 1-22-1112

the practice. The “Company Service Area” is defined as “a 30-mile radius of any of the Company’s

offices in existence as of the applicable Closing Date,” the closing date being the date chosen by

Uropartners for the closing of any repurchase of a redeeming member’s units of ownership.

¶8 Dr. Matschke notified Uropartners in mid- to late 2017 that, beginning in January 2018, he

would be separating from the practice and moving to South Carolina. On April 12, 2018,

Uropartners sent Dr. Matschke a letter confirming certain details regarding the redemption of his

ownership interests in the companies. It stated that Uropartners accepted the redemption of his

membership interests in the companies, effective December 31, 2017. The letter informed Dr.

Matschke that he was owed $177,071 for his interest in Uropartners, LLC, which included an SBU

purchase price of $34,307 and a common purchase price of $142,764. He was also entitled to

$60,801 for his interest in Uropartners Investments, LLC, and a severance fee of $267,237. These

amounts would be offset by his debt obligation of $266,927 and a $5000 assessment for attorney

and accountant fees incurred in connection with the redemption. After those amounts were

deducted, Dr. Matschke was entitled to a total of $233,192, paid in 60 monthly installments.

¶9 The letter reminded Dr. Matschke, under the heading “Post-Redemption Activities,” that

pursuant to section 10.6(b) of the Operating Agreement, “calculation of the Common Purchase

Price” and “the credit [he was] receiving therefor” toward his debt obligation to the practice was

“expressly conditioned upon, and subject to, his representation and warranty to Uropartners that,

during the 2-year period following the Effective Date,” he would “not practice urological medicine

within the Company Service Area.” Although section 10.6 of the Operating Agreement refers to a

“Closing Date” and the redemption letter referred to an “Effective Date,” it appears that these are

the same. The letter further explained that, if Dr. Matschke failed to fulfill that condition, the

amount of the common purchase price would not be offset against any payments still owed to him,

3 No. 1-22-1112

and if the common purchase price exceeded the amount of those payments, he would “pay back to

Uropartners the amount of such deficiency.” Dr. Matschke signed the letter, representing that he

“agree[d] to and accept[ed] the foregoing terms” and acknowledging that the amounts set out in it

“represent[ed] full and complete satisfaction of all obligations owed to [him] by Uropartners”

under the Operating Agreement.

¶ 10 B. Dr. Matschke’s Practice Upon Leaving Uropartners

¶ 11 After leaving Uropartners, Dr. Matschke practiced in both South Carolina and North

Carolina for approximately a year and a half, before returning to the Midwest in July 2019 to work

for Aurora Health Care (Aurora) in Wisconsin. Dr. Matschke testified at his deposition that before

committing to Aurora he reviewed his redemption letter and consulted the only version of the

Operating Agreement in his possession, which appears from the exhibits attached to his motion

for summary judgment to have been an older, 2005 version that does not include a definition of

the “Company Service Area.” Dr. Matschke did not inquire further into this matter. He assumed

that Wisconsin would be outside of the company service area because it was a different state

requiring a different license to practice medicine.

¶ 12 In fact, Dr. Matschke’s new medical practice included offices in Kenosha, Wisconsin,

which was within a 30-mile radius of several of Uropartners’ offices in Illinois. By spring 2019,

Uropartners had heard about Aurora’s recruitment of Dr. Matschke; its physicians exchanged e-

mails discussing his potential return to the company service area and whether he knew that, if he

practiced there, he would be violating the condition in section 10.6 of the Operating Agreement.

One doctor speculated that Dr. Matschke knew but did not care because of the salary he would be

making and the fact that the move would benefit his family. No one at Uropartners informed Dr.

Matschke of the potential ramifications of his move back to the company service area. Instead, on

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2023 IL App (1st) 221112, 227 N.E.3d 842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matschke-v-uropartners-llc-illappct-2023.