Sanghvi, Pravin v. Lakeshore Health

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 3, 2001
Docket00-3613
StatusPublished

This text of Sanghvi, Pravin v. Lakeshore Health (Sanghvi, Pravin v. Lakeshore Health) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanghvi, Pravin v. Lakeshore Health, (7th Cir. 2001).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 00-3613

Pravin Sanghvi, M.D.,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

St. Catherine’s Hospital, Inc., f/k/a Lakeshore Health System, Inc., and St. Mary Medical Center, Inc.,

Defendants-Appellees.

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, Hammond Division. No. 2:98-CV-202-TS--Theresa L. Springmann, Magistrate Judge.

Argued May 7, 2001--Decided July 3, 2001

Before Flaum, Chief Judge, and Ripple and Diane P. Wood, Circuit Judges.

Flaum, Chief Judge. Dr. Pravin Sanghvi appeals the adverse grant of summary judgment on his 42 U.S.C. sec. 1981 claim against St. Catherine’s Hospital./1 The plaintiff contends that he has produced sufficient direct and indirect evidence of discrimination to warrant a jury trial. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the district court’s decision.

I. Background

Dr. Sanghvi, who is dark-skinned and of Asian-Indian ethnicity, is an obstetrician/gynecologist licensed in Indiana. In 1994, he began covering the practice of Dr. A. P. Bonaventura located at St. Mary Medical Center, which is affiliated with St. Catherine’s Hospital, whenever Dr. Bonaventura was unavailable. When he covered the practice, Dr. Sanghvi billed the patients under his own name and provider number.

In October, 1996, Dr. Bonaventura sold his practice to the defendant, which was then known as Lakeshore Health System. After this sale, Dr. Bonaventura received a salary from the defendant and no longer had the authority to bill patients directly; rather, the defendant charged his patients for his services. Dr. Sanghvi continued to fill in for Dr. Bonaventura. Dr. Sanghvi was aware that Dr. Bonaventura no longer charged patients himself, and the defendant told Dr. Sanghvi that he would be paid an hourly wage for covering the practice, though apparently no amount was agreed upon. However, the plaintiff continued to bill the patients directly under his own name and provider number. While Dr. Bonaventura knew this, the executives of St. Catherine’s did not.

Dr. Bonaventura’s declining health prevented him from continuing to perform his duties in May, 1997. On June 11, 1997, the chief executive officer of St. Mary Medical Center, Milton Triana, met with Dr. Sanghvi, who expressed an interest in purchasing Dr. Bonaventura’s practice if he were unable to return. Once Dr. Bonaventura’s inability to resume treating patients became a certainty, which was apparently a few days later, Triana offered to sell the assets to either Dr. Sanghvi or another physician who regularly covered the practice.

On June 19, Triana met with Dr. Sanghvi to discuss the sale of the practice. At this meeting, Triana asked Dr. Sanghvi: "Being an older, foreign-born physician, how comfortable do you feel dealing with young, white American women?"/2 Triana also told Dr. Sanghvi that the hospital did not want to finance the purchase of the practice.

The next day Triana wrote a letter offering to sell Dr. Sanghvi the practice for $360,000, payable in full at closing. This letter also indicated the defendant’s expectation that the plaintiff would recruit another obstetrician/gynecologist to provide greater depth of coverage, though this was not a requirement of the sale. The number of women treated by the practice was important to the defendant because it expected that these patients would be referred to it by whomever purchased the practice. On June 24, Dr. Sanghvi responded with a counteroffer of twenty percent of the gross collection of the practice for the first year after he took over, to be paid monthly. This was rejected by the defendant. That same evening, Dr. Sanghvi and Triana had a discussion where the doctor offered to pay $250,000 for the practice in monthly installments over a one-year period. If Dr. Sanghvi failed to deliver the purchase price within the year, then any the payments he had made would be refunded. Triana seemed favorably inclined towards this arrangement, but said that he had to run it by a committee. Dr. Sanghvi made the same offer in writing on June 25. The defendant eventually rejected this offer.

Around this same time, in mid-to-late June, the Women’s Wellness Center ("WWC") entered the picture. WWC employed a group of physicians, who were all white men, and its president at the time was Jeffrey Yessenow. A representative of WWC contacted the defendant about buying the practice. St. Catherine’s responded that it would sell the practice for $360,000, with no financing by the hospital. In early July, the agents of the defendant and WWC began negotiations. Triana and other officers of St. Catherine’s met with Dr. Sanghvi on July 1, informing him that they intended to sell to WWC since they were paying cash, but if that deal fell through they would accept Dr. Sanghvi’s June 25 offer. On July 3, a letter of intent expressing the broad terms of the sale agreement between the defendant and WWC was drawn and executed. They settled on a purchase price of $250,000, to be paid in full at closing. However, over the coming months WWC continued to ask St. Catherine’s to consider a lower price. On July 7, Dr. Sanghvi was told that the practice had been sold.

Dr. Sanghvi sent a letter dated August 2 to some of Dr. Bonaventura’s former patients, purporting to explain why he did not take over the practice. The letter stated that Dr. Bonaventura’s practice was simply sold to the higher bidder without regard for any other considerations. The letter went on to state that many of Dr. Bonaventura’s old patients were coming to Dr. Sanghvi’s office, and asked the recipients of the letter to share it with any of Dr. Bonaventura’s former patients. Around the same time, Triana discovered that Dr. Sanghvi had billed Dr. Bonaventura’s patients directly after the defendant purchased the practice. This allegedly diverted $38,000 of receivables belonging to the defendant to Dr. Sanghvi.

In part because of these events, by late September or early October the defendant acquiesced in a price reduction for WWC to $125,000. WWC then gave St. Catherine’s a check for $50,000 with the remainder to be paid when the paperwork was formally completed, though the defendant claimed this check was accidentally destroyed. On November 1, WWC took over Dr. Bonaventura’s practice.

Dr. Sanghvi and Triana spoke by telephone on November 6. When Triana told Dr. Sanghvi that the price WWC was paying for the practice was less than $200,000 and a final agreement had not been signed, Dr. Sanghvi offered to purchase the practice outright for up to $200,000 in cash. Triana did not respond. On January 5, 1998, St. Catherine’s and WWC executed an asset transfer agreement and WWC paid the $125,000 purchase price in full.

Dr. Sanghvi brought suit in state court against the current defendant and others, alleging a violation of 42 U.S.C. sec. 1981 and various state law claims. The defendant removed the case to federal court based upon federal question jurisdiction and brought a counterclaim seeking damages under state law for Dr. Sanghvi’s directly billing the practice’s patients. The defendant moved for partial summary judgment on all of Dr. Sanghvi’s claims. The district court granted the motion on the sec. 1981 cause of action and some of the state law claims. The court found that Dr. Sanghvi had not presented any direct evidence of discrimination and could not demonstrate that the defendant’s reasons for refusing to sell the practice to him were pretextual. Having disposed of the federal claim, the district court remanded the remaining state laws claims to state court.

II. Discussion

42 U.S.C. sec. 1981 prohibits intentional discrimination on the basis of race or ethnicity concerning an activity protected by the statute.

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Sanghvi, Pravin v. Lakeshore Health, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanghvi-pravin-v-lakeshore-health-ca7-2001.