MEAC v. State

19 S.W.3d 803
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 16, 1999
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.W.3d 803 (MEAC v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MEAC v. State, 19 S.W.3d 803 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

19 S.W.3d 803 (1999)

MEDICAL EDUCATION ASSISTANCE CORPORATION, Plaintiff/Appellee,
v.
STATE of Tennessee, through the EAST TENNESSEE STATE UNIVERSITY QUILLEN COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, Intervenor/Appellee,
v.
Ashok V. Mehta, M.D. Defendant/Appellant.

Court of Appeals of Tennessee, Eastern Section, at Knoxville.

December 16, 1999.
Application for Permission to Appeal Denied June 5, 2000.

*805 Thomas C. Jessee, Johnson City, TN, for the appellant, Ashok V. Mehta, M.D.

Jack Tallent, II, Knoxville, TN, for the appellee, Medical Education Assistance Corp.

Edward J. Kelly, Johnson City, TN, for the Intervenor State of Tennessee-ETSU Quillen College of Medicine.

Application for Permission to Appeal Denied by Supreme Court June 5, 2000.

*804 OPINION

SWINEY, J.

This is an appeal of the Trial Court's enforcement of a covenant not to compete against Ashok V. Mehta, M.D. ("Dr. Mehta"), a pediatric cardiologist, in favor of Medical Education Assistance Corporation ("MEAC"), and the State of Tennessee through East Tennessee State University Quillen College of Medicine ("ETSU"). The Trial Court enjoined Dr. Mehta from practicing medicine in a seven county area for five years, and awarded damages of $358,265 to MEAC.

On appeal, Dr. Mehta states the issues as follows:

1. The Trial Court erred in finding that as a matter of public policy in Tennessee a covenant not to compete involving a medical speciality is enforceable by a non profit corporation.
2. The Trial Court erred in finding that there were special circumstances which entitled MEAC and ETSU to protection by enforcement of the covenant.
3. The Trial Court erred in finding that the covenant in question, if enforceable, was fair and reasonable under the circumstances as set forth in existing case law.
4. The Trial Court erred in failing to find that there was not [sic] intentional/negligent misrepresentation relating to Mehta's inducement to sign the employment contract containing the covenant.
5. The Trial Court erred in failing to find that MEAC and ETSU had waived their entitlement to enforcement of the covenant by their actions.
6. The Trial Court erred in not finding that MEAC and ETSU breached its contract with Mehta for failure to provide adequate equipment, space, research funds, and facilities.
7. The Trial Court erred in awarding damages and the computation of the same as well as erred in granting a five year enforceable covenant.

MEAC appeals the Trial Court's award of six months' severance pay to Dr. Mehta as provided under the employment contract.

For the reasons stated in this opinion, we modify the judgment so as to enforce the covenant not to compete for an additional two years starting thirty days from *806 the date of the entry of judgment of this Court. We remand this case to the Trial Court for the determination of additional damages to be awarded to MEAC for the period from the entry of the Trial Court's judgment through the date of entry of this Court's judgment. In all other respects, we affirm the decision of the Trial Court.

BACKGROUND

The East Tennessee State University Quillen College of Medicine was established pursuant to the Teague-Cranston Act. One of its goals, in addition to training physicians generally, was to encourage physicians to enter into practice in rural areas of Tennessee. ETSU has the ability to pay its faculty physicians only a state-furnished base salary, an amount much lower than the salaries generally earned by similar physicians in private practice. ETSU depends upon the Medical Educational Assistance Corporation (MEAC) to supplement that base salary in order to attract highly qualified faculty members. MEAC is a non-profit, professional corporation affiliated with ETSU for the purposes of allowing physician faculty members to conduct a clinical practice in addition to their faculty duties, and providing a means by which students in the College of Medicine and resident physicians can have valuable hands-on integral experience. Such an arrangement is known as a "faculty practice plan."

The State of Tennessee funds approximately $19 million per year of the ETSU College of Medicine budget. MEAC supplements this by providing 31% of the total College of Medicine annual budget from the income brought in by faculty physician clinical practices. Nationally, medical school budgets are supplemented an average of 41% from similar practice group funds.

In 1986, Dr. Mehta accepted a pediatric cardiology faculty position at ETSU, after reading a vacancy announcement in a professional journal. The previous pediatric cardiology professor at ETSU had died, and Dr. Mehta was hired to take over her responsibilities and to expand the program by adding his expertise in electrophysiology and pediatric cardiology interventional techniques.

In 1983 or 1984, there had been a major physician-faculty loss at ETSU when the entire cardiac surgical team withdrew from the College of Medicine and MEAC and set up a competing medical practice in Kingsport. This caused various administrators at ETSU and MEAC to become concerned about the potential effect of such departures on medical school accreditation. Some faculty and administrators perceived that the college was being used as a tool whereby a young surgeon, internist or pediatrician completing the residency program would find it attractive to join the faculty, receive a basic guaranteed salary support, build up a practice over two or three years, and then leave to go into the private sector, having built up a private practice at the State's expense.

In a move to reduce or eliminate such defections, the Board of Directors of MEAC, at its June 5, 1986 meeting, adopted a resolution requiring faculty hired after that date to sign a covenant not to compete. The covenant was deemed to be crucial to ETSU because of the location of the medical school in a rural area. In such an environment, there is a finite number of patients available for teaching activities, especially in subspecialty areas such as pediatric cardiology, and ETSU needed to keep its patient base for these teaching purposes. Appendix A of this Opinion is a copy of the covenant not to compete from Dr. Mehta's contract.

Although the covenant not to compete was to be included in the employment contracts of physician faculty members after July 1, 1986, it did not apply to physicians hired before that date. Moreover, some later-hired faculty were not required to sign the covenant, some were allowed to sign modified covenants, and some who signed the covenant were later released *807 from it by vote and approval of the MEAC Board, based on individual circumstances. For example, physicians who joined MEAC after having already established a private practice were not required to sign the covenant. Psychiatrists and family practitioners were exempt. Physicians who had family ties to the area sometimes had a modified version wherein, if they taught and practiced at ETSU for five years, they were not restrained from competing against MEAC, so long as they agreed to teach at ETSU for another five years after establishing a non-MEAC private practice. MEAC board minutes indicate that a Dr. Evans and a Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.3d 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meac-v-state-tennctapp-1999.