Pollack v. v. Karagodsky, D.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 14, 2018
Docket304 EDA 2018
StatusUnpublished

This text of Pollack v. v. Karagodsky, D. (Pollack v. v. Karagodsky, D.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollack v. v. Karagodsky, D., (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

J-A14013-18

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

VLAD POLLACK, ALLEN ALEXANDER, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF ALLCARE DENTAL GROUP, AND : PENNSYLVANIA FAMILY DENTAL OFFICE, LLC : : Appellees : : v. : : DMITRY KARAGODSKY AND PERFECT : SMILE, P.C. : : Appellants : No. 304 EDA 2018

Appeal from the Judgment Entered January 10, 2018 In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at No(s): 140401671

BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., SHOGAN, J., and PLATT*, J.

MEMORANDUM BY GANTMAN, P.J.: FILED NOVEMBER 14, 2018

Appellants, Dmitry Karagodsky and Perfect Smile, P.C., appeal from the

judgment entered in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas,

following a bench trial verdict in favor of Appellees, Vlad Pollack, Allen

Alexander, Allcare Dental Group, and Family Dental Office, LLC, in the

underlying action for breach of a settlement agreement. We affirm.

In its original opinion, the trial court set forth the relevant facts and

procedural history of this case as follows:

Summary of Facts

In 2009, [Appellee] Vlad Pollack (“Pollack”), [Appellant] Dmitr[y] Karagodsky, D.D.S. (“Dr. Karagodsky”) and [Appellee] Allen Alexander (“Alexander”) orally agreed to form a for-profit dental clinic business in Philadelphia. [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky was a successful dental ____________________________________ * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J-A14013-18

practitioner operating his own separate dental clinic. [Appellee] Pollack, a businessman, owned independent dental clinics in Philadelphia. [Appellee] Alexander, a successful manager of dental practices in the Philadelphia region, worked as an employee of [an Appellee] Pollack- owned company called Family Dental Office, LLC, aka [Appellee] Family Dental Group (“Family Dental”).

Initially agreeing to share equally in profits, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky, [Appellee] Pollack, and [Appellee] Alexander formed an unassociated business entity which relied on [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky’s dental medicine license and his insurance “provider” number to qualify for insurance payments. [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander added their Family Dental corporate network to the new business venture, and they agreed to manage and administer the new business. To keep his interest in the new venture separate from his other clinics, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky formed [Appellant] Perfect Smile, P.C., of which he was the sole owner.

The new dental clinical business was known to the public as “Perfect Smile.” The clinic hired dentists other than [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky as independent contractors to perform most of the dental work. Initially, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky agreed to provide his own dental clinical services two days a week for the new business while [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander agreed to perform all administrative duties, including hiring and firing dentists, billing, collecting accounts receivable, marketing, purchasing, payroll, tax preparation, and developing expansion plans for more clinics under the Perfect Smile name.

This new dental business organized by the three men was high volume and relied heavily on timely and accurate insurance billing. Nothing memorializing their agreement was set in writing. Sometime after the Perfect Smile clinic was opened, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky and the other two men agreed to change [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky’s profit structure allowing him to stop providing his own dental services to the business. The men agreed that [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky’s annual profit would be 11 percent of gross revenue going forward, not one-third of net profits. This

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modification was not put into writing either. By 2013, when the clinical business known as Perfect Smile was dissolved, the men were running four clinics with gross revenue in excess of $2,000,000.

Toward the end of their business run, [Appellee] Pollack organized [Appellee] Allcare Dental Group LLC (“Allcare”) in 2013 with [Appellee] Alexander’s involvement. Neither [man] told [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky about Allcare’s existence until [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky saw the name on the door of a Perfect Smile clinic was “Allcare” instead of “Perfect Smile.” Not surprisingly, the Perfect Smile business arrangement soon collapsed.

[Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky, [Appellee] Alexander, and [Appellee] Pollack decided to dissolve the Perfect Smile business amicably. With attorney involvement, the three men negotiated a Mutual Release and Settlement Agreement (hereinafter, the “Settlement Agreement”) which all three men signed on November 2, 2013. This Settlement Agreement is clear and comprehensive. [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander agreed that [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky was entitled to a portion of revenue that was still due from dental insurance carriers after November 2, 2013. [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander also agreed to indemnify [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky. They agreed to reimburse him individually and/or his Perfect Smile, P.C. for money either owed or might owe after resolution of several lawsuits filed against them during the course of their 2009- 2013 business venture. In exchange, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky agreed that [Appellee] Pollack’s Allcare Dental Group, LLC would assume ownership of the business formerly operating under the “Perfect Smile” name. This included its patient charts and lists. The men agreed [Appellee] Allcare would not use [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky’s dental license to certify authorization for insurance payments.

Other Settlement Agreement terms allocated accounts receivable from insurance companies for dental work already performed. As part of their negotiated allocation, the parties agreed that a lump sum of $80,000 was to be paid to [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky by [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander in eight monthly $10,000 increments

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beginning on November 1, 2013, running through June 1, 2014. There was no term prohibiting [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander from paying this $80,000 from a checking account in [Appellee] Allcare’s name.

Finally, [t]he Settlement Agreement includes a release characterized as: “Full and Final Settlement of a dispute between the Parties with respect to the business arrangements, payment of management fees, distribution of profits and operation of the Entities, as well as the ownership of the office equipment, office supplies and inventory.”

[Appellees] Alexander and Pollack paid more than $30,000 in three installments over the next three months. However, a dispute arose over a portion of checks totaling $62,426.00 paid by insurance companies to [Appellant] Perfect Smile, P.C. [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander believed a portion of the money was due to them under the accounts receivable allocations of the Settlement Agreement.

[Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky disagreed and refused to make the reimbursement, thereby triggering a breach of the Settlement Agreement. Evidence shows [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander were in fact jointly owed $23,926.50. Upon [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky’s breach, [Appellees] Pollack and Alexander withheld a $10,000 payment due on February 4, 2014. On February 19, 2014, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky filed a pro se confession of judgment in the Commerce Court in the amount of $162,000 including interest and collection fees. This confession of judgment was struck by the Honorable Gary S. Glazer who opened judgment on March 7, [2014]. The court found [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky had executed a warrant of attorney, though he is not member of the Bar. In doing so, [Appellant] Dr. Karagodsky impermissibly lodged liens on [Appellee] Allcare accounts. [Appellee] Allcare owner [Appellee] Vlad Pollack paid legal fees in the amount of $21,536.68 to dislodge the liens.

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