McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc. v. Brooklyn Hosp. Ctr.

2004 NY Slip Op 24205
CourtNew York Supreme Court, Kings County
DecidedJune 14, 2004
StatusPublished

This text of 2004 NY Slip Op 24205 (McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc. v. Brooklyn Hosp. Ctr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, Kings County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc. v. Brooklyn Hosp. Ctr., 2004 NY Slip Op 24205 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2004).

Opinion

McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc. v Brooklyn Hosp. Ctr. (2004 NY Slip Op 24205)
McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc. v Brooklyn Hosp. Ctr.
2004 NY Slip Op 24205 [4 Misc 3d 491]
June 14, 2004
Supreme Court, Kings County
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Wednesday, September 8, 2004


[*1]
McKesson Automated Healthcare, Inc., et al., Plaintiffs,
v
Brooklyn Hospital Center, Defendant.

Supreme Court, Kings County, June 14, 2004

APPEARANCES OF COUNSEL

Manatt, Phelps & Phillips, New York City, for plaintiffs. Garfunkel Wild & Travis, P.C., Great Neck, for defendants.

{**4 Misc 3d at 492} OPINION OF THE COURT

Arthur M. Schack, J.

This case is a battle in a war between billionaire "Goliath" plaintiffs (hereinafter McKesson) and millionaire "David" defendant (hereinafter BHC). "Goliath" McKesson is a corporation that in the last nine months of 2003, according to page 4 of its Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 10-Q filing for December 31, 2003, dated January 29, 2004, had revenues in excess of $51 billion; and had a gross profit, according to page 32 of its 10-K SEC filing for fiscal 2003, ending on March 31, 2003, dated June 15, 2003, of more than $3 billion. BHC, a 483-bed not-for-profit institution, according to its Internal Revenue Service form 990 for 2002, dated November 24, 2003, had revenues in excess of $329 million and expenses in excess of $375 million for a loss of almost $46 million, while, according to its form 990 part V attachment, paying $748,303 in compensation to its president and chief executive officer. It is worth noting that stock analyst Curt Morrison's March 23, 2004 report, posted on line at Morningstar.com, described plaintiff and two other corporations, [*2]AmerisourceBergen and Cardinal Health, as part of "an oligopoly that controls 90% of the nation's drug-distribution business." Mr. Morrison begins his analysis of McKesson by stating "[w]e are concerned about a deteriorating business model, aggressive accounting, litigation risk, and poor corporate governance at McKesson."

McKesson, in the instant case, moves by order to show cause, pursuant to CPLR 7102, for an order directing the sheriff to seize Robot-Rx, serial No. S001125, from BHC, and if BHC does not deliver Robot-Rx to the sheriff, for the sheriff to "break open, enter and search for the Robot-Rx on the Hospital's premises" with a representative of McKesson accompanying the sheriff during the execution of the order of seizure "for the purpose in assisting in the identification and removal of the Robot-Rx." McKesson's counsel, in paragraph 1 of his affirmation in support of the order of seizure, states that his application{**4 Misc 3d at 493} is based upon BHC's default of an October 4, 2001 stipulation of settlement. McKesson, on October 3, 2003, had the Kings County Clerk, pursuant to CPLR 3215 (i), enter a judgment for $1,554,190.09 in money damages against defendant BHC (affirmation in support, exhibit 3). The judgment makes no mention of chattel.

This court has before it the question of whether a plaintiff who has had a judgment for money damages only entered against a defendant for defendant's failure to comply with a stipulation of settlement may use a replevin order to seize chattel rented by plaintiff to a defendant. The answer is no. Plaintiffs may have, absent a severance, only one judgment in an action. Plaintiffs had their judgment, which is res judicata, in the instant case entered on October 3, 2003. Further, replevin is a prejudgment quasi-provisional remedy, not a postjudgment remedy, and thus improper in this action. (See Siegel, NY Prac § 337, at 513 [3d ed].) Finally, allowing McKesson to seize Robot-Rx would be unconscionable and violate public policy.

Statement of Facts and Procedural History

In March 2000 BHC entered into three agreements with McKesson. First, BHC leased Robot-Rx from McKesson, with computer software, packaging software, all replacement parts, repairs, additions, and accessories, for five years from July 7, 2000 to July 6, 2005, for $19,233 per month, with a total rent of $923,192 for the term of the agreement (affirmation in support, exhibit 5). Section 1 of the rental agreement defines Robot-Rx as "[a] multi-axis robotic arm controlled by four networked personal computers, which is capable of automating the dispensing, checking, and returning functions of a centralized medication distribution system in a hospital environment."

Simultaneous with the robot lease contract, BHC and McKesson signed an installation, maintenance support, license and warranty agreement, coextensive with the lease of the robot (exhibit 2 of affirmation in opposition), with an installation fee of $65,000 and a monthly support fee of $8,902, for total support fees of $534,120 for the term of the agreement.

Then, the parties signed a Pak-Plus Rx service agreement that obligated McKesson to provide BHC with on-site pharmaceutical packaging services to be provided by no more than two full- or part-time McKesson technicians through the lease term (affirmation in opposition, exhibit 3), with a minimum payment of $9,705 for each 28-day payment period, based upon a predetermined {**4 Misc 3d at 494}number of prescriptions filled each payment period. This is a minimum annual payment of $126,165.

Defendant BHC alleges that McKesson did not fully provide the contracted services (paras 25-32 of BHC Executive Vice-President Richard Braun's affidavit in opposition) for maintenance, support and system upgrades, and failed to: ensure that the automated equipment worked properly; correct inventory problems; and respond to the hospital's complaints in a timely fashion. Pursuant to section 2.3 of the Pak-Plus Rx service agreement (affirmation in opposition, exhibit 3) BHC did not make payments to plaintiffs because the robot was not operational. Plaintiffs then commenced this action for breach of contract. In October 2001 the parties settled the action with a stipulation of settlement that modified and extended the March 2000 agreements to June 28, 2006, and BHC added McKesson's "Cartless Delivery System" to the Robot-Rx rental agreement. [*3]

BHC, in the Braun affidavit, claims that the problems continued and McKesson failed to meet its contractual obligations. Mr. Braun claims, in paragraph 32 of his affidavit, that Mr. David Adelman, the newly hired director of BHC's pharmacy, in mid-2003 "spent a tremendous amount of his own time correcting problems with the automated pharmacy equipment that McKesson should have corrected a long time before" and then "the equipment became useful to the Hospital."

According to paragraphs 11 through 13 of plaintiffs' affirmation in support, BHC stopped making its monthly payments, pursuant to the October 2001 stipulation, in March 2003. McKesson sent a letter to BHC to cure the default on September 28, 2003 (affirmation in support, exhibit 2). After the entry of the $1,554,190.09 judgment by the Kings County Clerk on October 3, 2003, the New York City Sheriff executed judgment and levied BHC's accounts at JP Morgan Chase Bank in full satisfaction of the judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 NY Slip Op 24205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckesson-automated-healthcare-inc-v-brooklyn-hosp-ctr-nysupctkings-2004.