VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, L.P. v. PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR INSTITUTE, LLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 2024
Docket2:22-cv-05011
StatusUnknown

This text of VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, L.P. v. PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR INSTITUTE, LLC (VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, L.P. v. PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR INSTITUTE, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, L.P. v. PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR INSTITUTE, LLC, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

JAMES MCGUCKIN, M.D., and PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR : INSTITUTE, LLC, : Appellants, v. : WILLIAM WHITFIELD GARDNER, CIVIL NO. 22-4981 Appellee.

VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, LLC, and JAMES MCGUCKIN, M.D., : Appellants, v. : WILLIAM WHITFIELD GARDNER, CIVIL NO. 22-5011 Appellee. MEMORANDUM Scott, J. September 30, 2024 Before the Court are two appeals from orders issued by the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania in Jn re Vascular Access Centers, L.P., No. 19-17117. In Case Number 22-cv-5011, Appellants James McGuckin, M.D. (“McGuckin”) and Vascular Access Centers, LLC (““VAC, LLC”) appeal the Bankruptcy Court’s order denying Appellants’ motion to reconsider appointing a Chapter 11 Trustee and the underlying order appointing a Chapter 11 Trustee (Trustee Order Appeal). In Case Number 22-cv-4981, Appellants McGuckin and Philadelphia Vascular Institute, LLC (“PVI”) appeal the Bankruptcy Court’s order which awarded Appellee William Whitfield Gardner (“Gardner”) $1,417,861.75 in fees/expenses (Sanction Order Appeal).

In each appeal, Gardner filed substantially identical motions to dismiss arguing that the appeals should be dismissed based on Appellants’ failure to timely file their brief and their required disclosures. See Case No. 22-cv-5011, ECF No. 7; Case No. 22-cv-4981, ECF No. 6. Thereafter, Stephen V. Falanga, Chapter 7 Trustee (“Falanga” or “the Trustee”) for the bankruptcy estate of the Debtor, Vascular Access Centers, L.P. (“WAC” or the “Debtor’’) joined Gardner’s Motion to Dismiss the Trustee Order Appeal and articulated additional arguments for dismissal. Case No. 22-cv-5011, ECF No. 19. For the reasons set forth below, the Court declines to dismiss the appeals upon a balancing of the Poulis factors; however, the Court will dismiss the Trustee Order Appeal, Case No. 22-cy-5011, as moot. I. BACKGROUND The Court writes for the parties and thus, only briefly summarizes the facts necessary to the disposition of the pending Motions. The entity at the center of this dispute is VAC, which McGuckin founded in April 2005. VAC is a Pennsylvania limited partnership, which conducted its business through a number of limited liability company subsidiaries. These subsidiaries operated and managed outpatient vascular access centers, whereby physician interventionalist performed dialysis access procedures and certain other vascular access procedures on patients with end-stage renal disease and other vascular conditions or diseases. The general partner of VAC was VAC, LLC, of which McGuckin was the sole member and manager. In May 2005, Gardner became a limited partner of VAC. Gardner’s investments and substantial capital infusion made him the majority-in-interest limited partner of VAC.

On November 12, 2019, three purported creditors of VAC: (1) PVI, an entity owned and controlled by McGuckin; (2) Metter & Company, an accounting firm owned by Stan Metter, one of VAC’s limited partners, and (3) Crestwood Associates, LLC, an entity owned by McGuckin’s brother, Brian McGuckin, filed an involuntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code against VAC. The next day, VAC consented to the involuntary petition. Thereafter, on November 22, 2019, Gardner filed a motion to dismiss the involuntary Chapter 11 petition pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 1112(b) or to appoint a Chapter 11 trustee under 11 U.S.C. § 1104(a) (“Gardner’s Motion’), alleging that the petitioning creditors had instituted involuntary proceedings in bad faith. On February 6, 2020, the Bankruptcy Court held a hearing on Gardner’s Motion and held that the bankruptcy case was filed in bad faith and that it was “in the best interests of VAC’s creditors and the bankruptcy estate to appoint a Chapter 11 Trustee.” Immediately following the dismissal hearing, McGuckin resigned his management positions at VAC and withdrew VAC, LLC as the general partner of VAC, effective immediately. Then, on February 12, 2020, the Bankruptcy Court entered an order approving Falanga’s appointment as Chapter 11 Trustee in the Bankruptcy Case. On February 20, 2020, McGuckin and VAC, LLC appealed the trustee order, initiating Civil Case No. 20-1028 (First Appeal). A month later, Gardner filed a motion for sanctions against McGuckin and PVI. Following briefing and a hearing, the Bankruptcy Court stayed adjudication of the motion for sanctions pending disposition of the First Appeal.

In July 2020, briefing on the First Appeal was completed. However, in April 2021, McGuckin filed a motion to supplement the record to include “new evidence” obtained in McGuckin’s lawsuit against VAC’s former counsel. On April 15, 2021, the District Court dismissed the First Appeal and remanded the matter back to the Bankruptcy Court so that “Appellants may file a motion for reconsideration of the Bankruptcy Court’s Order’ based on the “new evidence.” On May 1, 2021, McGuckin and VAC, LLC filed their motion for reconsideration of the trustee order based on the “new evidence.” On September 30, 2021 and October 1, 2021, the Bankruptcy Court held evidentiary hearings on the motion for reconsideration and Gardner’s motion for sanctions against McGuckin and PVI. Thereafter, on October 28, 2021, the Bankruptcy Court issued an order finding that Gardner sufficiently established the liability of McGuckin and PVI under the sanctions motion and directing Gardner to submit his fees and expenses incurred in response. Within this order, the Bankruptcy Court noted in a footnote that it had not found any basis to reconsider/vacate the trustee order. On November 10, 2021, McGuckin and VAC, LLC seized on this footnote in order to appeal the trustee order for the second time. Civil Case No. 21-5015 (Second Appeal). However, the District Court dismissed the Second Appeal on March 22, 2022, finding that the issues were not ripe for review as the opinion on the motion for reconsideration had not yet issued.

On December 1, 2022, the Bankruptcy Court issued the two decisions that are the subject of the appeals currently before this Court. In one decision, the Bankruptcy Court denied the motion to reconsider or vacate the trustee order finding that the “new evidence” would not have had any impact on the outcome of the proceedings related to the appointment of a trustee had it been brought to the court’s attention prior to the issuance of the trustee order. In the other decision, the Bankruptcy Court found that sanctions were “warranted against McGuckin and PVI jointly and severally due to their bad faith efforts to file the involuntary petition for improper purposes without sufficient evidentiary support for the claims asserted in the petition” and awarded Gardner $1,417,861.75 in fees and expenses. On December 12, 2022, McGuckin and VAC, LLC filed a notice of appeal of the reconsideration order (and by extension, the trustee order), initiating the Trustee Order Appeal, Case No. 22-cv-5011. That same day, McGuckin and PVI filed a notice of appeal of the sanctions orders, initiating the Sanction Order Appeal, Case No. 22-cv-4981. Three days later, McGuckin and PVI moved for a stay of the sanctions order pending the appeal, which the Bankruptcy Court denied on February 8, 2023, finding that a stay was not warranted because, among other reasons, McGuckin and PVI did not demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits on appeal nor any evidence of irreparable harm. On January 25, 2023, notices that the Bankruptcy Court records for both appeals had been fully transmitted were docketed on the Bankruptcy Court docket.

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VASCULAR ACCESS CENTERS, L.P. v. PHILADELPHIA VASCULAR INSTITUTE, LLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vascular-access-centers-lp-v-philadelphia-vascular-institute-llc-paed-2024.