Yatinder Singhal v. Basil Simon

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedOctober 26, 2020
Docket19-2079
StatusUnpublished

This text of Yatinder Singhal v. Basil Simon (Yatinder Singhal v. Basil Simon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yatinder Singhal v. Basil Simon, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0608n.06

No. 19-2079

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED In re: OAKLAND PHYSICIANS MEDICAL ) Oct 26, 2020 CENTER, LLC, dba Doctors’ Hospital of Michigan, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Debtor. ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE YATINDER M. SINGHAL, M.D., ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT Appellant, ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN v. ) ) BASIL T. SIMON, Trustee, ) Appellee. )

BEFORE: GUY, BOGGS, and WHITE, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Appellant Yatinder Singhal, M.D., was a board

member of Oakland Physicians Medical Center, LLC, dba Doctors’ Hospital of Michigan (the

Hospital), which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Appellee Basil Simon, in his capacity

as liquidation trustee of the Hospital, filed an adversary proceeding against Singhal alleging, as

relevant here, conversion based on Singhal’s diversion of money owed to the Hospital under

contracts the Hospital had with two medical schools. The district court granted summary judgment

to Simon on his common-law-conversion claim. Singhal appeals, arguing that there is a genuine

dispute of material fact about whether the Hospital’s Board of Directors consented to the relevant

transactions and that he is entitled to a setoff in the amount of a settlement between another doctor

and Simon. We REVERSE the grant of summary judgment as to the contracts with one of the No. 19-2079, Singhal v. Simon

medical schools, AFFIRM the grant of summary judgment as to the other, VACATE the setoff

determination, and REMAND for further proceedings.

I.

The Hospital was formed in 2008 to acquire the assets of another hospital. Its members

consisted of physicians and McLaren Health Center. In 2010, McLaren demanded repayment of

a secured loan, and the other members advanced money to the Hospital to repay the loan and keep

the Hospital functioning. Singhal is a practicing psychiatrist and was a shareholder and member

of the Hospital’s Board of Directors (Board) during the relevant times.

The Hospital operated a student-education program for which the Hospital accepted

students from medical schools for clinical rotations in exchange for the schools’ payments to the

Hospital of an agreed sum for each student that the Hospital’s doctors (“preceptors”) trained. Two

of those medical schools were Ross University School of Medicine (Ross), and Windsor

University School of Medicine (Windsor).

In February 2012, Dr. Nikhil Hemady formed American Medical Education Group LLC

(AMEG), with Hemady and Singhal each holding a 50% membership interest. In March 2012,

pursuant to an affiliation agreement, Ross agreed to pay the Hospital $500 per week for each

student that the Hospital’s preceptors trained in a clinical rotation. In February 2013, Singhal sent

a letter to Ross, which he signed as “Chairman, Board of Directors” of the Hospital, stating the

following:

This letter is to request that based on a decision made by the Board of Directors of Doctors’ Hospital of Michigan earlier this week, all Ross payments moving forward be directed to [AMEG]. This decision will enable the clinical preceptors for various rotations at Doctors’ Hospital to be paid in a timely manner. Can we please add the necessary provision to the existing agreement with Ross to make sure that this change is clearly stated?

-2- No. 19-2079, Singhal v. Simon

Bk. AP R. 102-4.1

Singhal testified that the Hospital had well-known financial problems and a reputation of

not paying its bills; thus, having AMEG receive the money from Ross and pay the doctors meant

that more doctors would be willing to train the medical students. In accordance with Singhal’s

letter, Ross paid AMEG $894,500 from June 2013 through September 2015. AMEG, in turn,

distributed some of that money to Singhal, Hemady, and other preceptors. According to Singhal,

this arrangement was “net profit . . . , zero loss” for the Hospital, which was supposed to receive

$96,000 per year in profit from AMEG. Bk. AP R. 124-9 at 7. Simon alleges, however, that the

Hospital never received any money from AMEG. Singhal testified that it was Hemady’s

responsibility to remit payment to the Hospital, and that Hemady was questioned at the Board

meetings about the payments. Hemady later settled Simon’s claims against him arising out of

Hemady’s creation of AMEG for $250,000.

Similarly, in January 2013, the Hospital and Windsor entered into an affiliation agreement

in which Windsor agreed to pay the Hospital $400 per week for each student the Hospital trained

in a clinical rotation. In August 2013, Dr. Prakash Sanghvi formed DHOM Education, LLC

(DHOM), with Sanghvi and Singhal each holding a 50% membership interest. From November

2013 through November 2015, Windsor paid DHOM approximately $184,000. Sanghvi testified

that DHOM did not have a contract with Windsor or the Hospital.

Paragraph 11.6 of the Hospital’s Operating Agreement provides:

A member of the Board of Directors shall have no authority to take action on behalf of the Company in his or her individual capacity, except pursuant to specific authorization by the Board of Directors or to the extent a member of the Board of

1 The adversary proceeding against Singhal, 2:16-ap-05120 (E.D. Mich. Bankr.), will be cited as Bk. AP. The docket of the district court that filed the order being appealed, 2:18-cv-12147 (E.D. Mich.), will be cited as Dist. Ct.

-3- No. 19-2079, Singhal v. Simon

Directors also holds an executive position as an officer or agent of the Company and takes action in that capacity.

Bk. AP R. 113-4 at 4. Paragraph 11.3(a)(i) of the Operating Agreement provides that the Board

of Directors has

[t]he authority to approve any transaction involving the Company in which a . . . member of the Board of Directors has an interest . . . , provided that the transaction is fully disclosed to all members of the Board of Directors and terms of the transaction are ‘arms-length’ and fair to the Company.

Id. at 3.

In July 2015, the Hospital filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy

Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of Michigan. The bankruptcy

court appointed Simon as trustee, and later as liquidation trustee. Singhal filed a proof of claim in

the amount of $1,499,983.13. Simon then filed an adversary proceeding against Singhal. In his

second amended complaint, Simon alleged seven counts against Singhal: recharacterization of

advances by Singhal (Count I); fraudulent transfers under 11 U.S.C. §§ 544, 548(a)(1)(B), 550 and

551 (Count II); avoidance of fraudulent transfers under Michigan’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer

Act, Mich. Comp. Laws § 566.31 et seq., and 11 U.S.C. §§ 544(b) and 550 (Count III); breach of

statutory duties to act in good faith and in the best interests of the company (Count IV); common-

law and statutory conversion (Count V); equitable subordination of claims (Count VI); and claim

disallowance under 11 U.S.C. § 502(d) (Count VII).

Both parties moved for partial summary judgment, with Simon seeking summary judgment

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