Michael Dunn, M.D. v. FastMed Urgent Care, P.C.

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedAugust 30, 2019
DocketCA 2018-0934-MTZ
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Dunn, M.D. v. FastMed Urgent Care, P.C. (Michael Dunn, M.D. v. FastMed Urgent Care, P.C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michael Dunn, M.D. v. FastMed Urgent Care, P.C., (Del. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

MICHAEL DUNN, M.D., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) C.A. No. 2018-0934 MTZ ) FASTMED URGENT CARE, P.C.; ) FASTMED HOLDINGS I, LLC; ) FASTMED HOLDINGS, LLC; URGENT ) CARES OF AMERICA HOLDINGS I, ) LLC; and KYLE BOHANNON, ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Date Submitted: May 29, 2019 Date Decided: August 30, 2019

Neil R. Lapinski, Phillip A. Giordano, and Kate A. Mahoney, GORDON, FOURNARIS & MAMMARELLA, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff Michael Dunn, M.D.

Kathleen M. Miller and Kelly A. Green, SMITH, KATZENSTEIN & JENKINS LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Andrew Federhar and Jessica Gale, SPENCER FANE LLP, Phoenix, Arizona, Attorneys for Defendants FastMed Urgent Care P.C., FastMed Holdings LLC, FastMed Holdings I LLC, Urgent Cares of America Holdings I LLC, and Kyle Bohannon.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor. The company at the heart of this case provides urgent care medical services

in Arizona, and employed the plaintiff, who is trained as a physician, as an executive.

The company went through a merger, after which the plaintiff left the company. The

plaintiff asserts the post-acquisition company wronged him while negotiating the

terms of his employment and by asserting a restrictive covenant after he left. The

plaintiff has failed to plead wrongdoing under Delaware law that is justiciable by

this Court.

The first source of wrongdoing is a series of oral promises, which are difficult

to enforce in the shadow of a series of written agreements. In connection with the

merger, the parties executed a contract selling the plaintiff’s interest to the

defendants, as well as an employment agreement. The defendants also allegedly

promised to deviate from the terms of those agreements, but then failed to deliver;

instead, the defendants performed under the written agreements. The plaintiff

asserts the defendants defrauded him and breached the implied covenant of good

faith and fair dealing. On the defendants’ motion to dismiss, I conclude the fraud

claims impose a weighty pleading burden that the plaintiff fails to satisfy, and the

implied covenant claim is only available in certain circumstances not present here.

The second source of wrongdoing is the defendants’ assertion of a restrictive

covenant contained in the contract selling the plaintiff’s interest. That five-year

restrictive covenant prohibited the plaintiff from working in a competitive executive

2 capacity, but did not prohibit him from practicing medicine. The restrictive covenant

contained Delaware forum and choice of law provisions. The plaintiff eventually

resigned from the post-merger company, and accepted a similar executive position

with an Arizona competitor. The defendants notified the competitor that the

plaintiff’s employment would be in violation of the restrictive covenant.

Consequently, the competitor rescinded its employment offer. The plaintiff

contends that the non-compete provision is unenforceable under Delaware’s statute

governing restrictions on the practice of medicine, and that the defendants’ assertion

of the restrictive covenant therefore amounts to intentional interference with the

plaintiff’s relationship with his prospective employer. I disagree.

The plaintiff also contends that the defendants’ efforts to enforce the non-

compete amount to defamation per se and that the defendants’ acts constitute civil

conspiracy. In the absence of any other well-pled claim, this Court lacks subject

matter jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s defamation claim, and there is no underlying

wrong on which to base his conspiracy claim. The motion to dismiss is granted.

3 I. BACKGROUND

I draw the facts from the allegations in and documents incorporated by

reference or integral to the Complaint.1 I must accept as true the Complaint’s well-

pled factual allegations and draw all reasonable inferences from those allegations in

Plaintiff’s favor.2

A. Dunn Executes A Letter Of Transmittal As Part Of FastMed’s Acquisition Of Urgent Cares.

Plaintiff Michael Dunn is a physician licensed to practice medicine in the state

of Arizona. In 2003, Dunn became a member and manager of an Arizona

professional limited liability company, TriCity Express Care, PLLC, dba Urgent

Care Express (“Urgent Cares”), that offered urgent care services. Urgent Cares was

acquired in 2011; the surviving entity is also referred to as Urgent Cares. In 2012,

Dunn became Urgent Cares’ Chief Medical Officer, Arizona, and signed an

employment agreement. In May 2015, Dunn sold his ownership interest in Urgent

Cares to FastMed Holdings, LLC, when that entity acquired Urgent Cares pursuant

to a Purchase Agreement and Plan of Merger entered into by several affiliated

companies.

1 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. AIG Life Ins. Co., 860 A.2d 312, 320 (Del. 2004). All citations to the Complaint are to Plaintiff’s Verified Complaint. Docket Item (“D.I”) 1. 2 In re Gen. Motors (Hughes) S’holder Litig., 897 A.2d 162, 168 (Del. 2006).

4 At first, Dunn refused to sign a Letter of Transmittal to sell his interest in

Urgent Cares “due to disagreements regarding the scope of [its] non-compete

clause.” 3 On May 28, 2015, Dunn communicated these concerns to two

representatives of FastMed affiliates: Kyle Bohannon, a manager of FastMed

Holdings I, LLC, and Kevin Blank, CEO of FastMed Urgent Care, P.C. “Bohannon

and Blank responded to Dunn’s concerns by communicating to Dunn that he would

be unable to redeem his Profits Interest Units if he refused to sign the Letter of

Transmittal.”4 Blank then suggested “amend[ing] the language of the non-compete

to allow for Dunn to continue to work in the urgent care field.” 5 The three “agreed

that at the conclusion of the Purchase Agreement and Plan of Merger, Bohannon

would redraft the Letter of Transmittal’s non-compete clause to be for only three

years, and that there would be a separate carve out that would permit Dunn to work

as a medical director immediately following separation.”6

Based on this agreement, Dunn signed the Letter of Transmittal that same day,

exchanging his interest in Urgent Cares for approximately $1,000,000. The Letter

of Transmittal contained the following restrictive covenant (the “Restrictive

Covenant”):

3 Compl. ¶ 17. 4 Id. 5 Id. 6 Id. ¶ 18.

5 Effective as of the Closing … [Dunn] hereby agrees that, from the Closing Date until the five (5) year anniversary of the Closing Date, [Dunn] will not, without the prior written consent of Buyer, directly or indirectly, engage in any activity, or participate or invest in, or provide or facilitate the provision of financing to, or assist, in each case, whether as owner, part-owner, equity holder, member, partner, director, officer, trustee, employee, agent or consultant, or in any other capacity, or by providing any financial, operational or technical assistance to any Person that engages in, any business, organization or other Person other than the Surviving Company or a Company Subsidiary whose business activities, products or services are competitive with the Business or that otherwise competes with the Business, or interview for any potential employment, directorship, advising or consulting relationship with any such business, organization or other Person, in each case, anywhere in the United States (collectively, “Prohibited Activities”). 7

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