I'm leaving a small private EM group in California.
I worked for this single site independent group for 3 years total, 2 years as 'fee-for-service', and the first year as simple hourly. After 3 years decided to move on and gave an ample 6 month notice; because it's hard for this group to recruit.
Through emails, the director verified that they will not be continuing to disburse anymore collections from my previous patient's as they come in over the next months. Their rationale is that the first year they paid me hourly and may have lost money on me, so therefore, this is equitable.
I signed 2 contracts with them over the 3 years, the first was to negotiate the first year with hourly payments, and the second, a year later, establishing the 'fee-for-service' employment agreement. As best I can tell, there is no language in either contract stipulating what should happen upon leaving.
This is unlikely to be a trivial amount of money, I suspect that it could reach $70-$80k over the next few months as the collections wind down. My questions are:
1) Is it unreasonable to expect to receive the collections from patient's that I have already seen under a fee-for-service contract?
2) Is it worth the time, money, and sweat to chase this down with an attorney? As an aside, the contract stipulates mandatory arbitration, should I invoke that on my own and see where the chips fall?
Thank you for your help.
I worked for this single site independent group for 3 years total, 2 years as 'fee-for-service', and the first year as simple hourly. After 3 years decided to move on and gave an ample 6 month notice; because it's hard for this group to recruit.
Through emails, the director verified that they will not be continuing to disburse anymore collections from my previous patient's as they come in over the next months. Their rationale is that the first year they paid me hourly and may have lost money on me, so therefore, this is equitable.
I signed 2 contracts with them over the 3 years, the first was to negotiate the first year with hourly payments, and the second, a year later, establishing the 'fee-for-service' employment agreement. As best I can tell, there is no language in either contract stipulating what should happen upon leaving.
This is unlikely to be a trivial amount of money, I suspect that it could reach $70-$80k over the next few months as the collections wind down. My questions are:
1) Is it unreasonable to expect to receive the collections from patient's that I have already seen under a fee-for-service contract?
2) Is it worth the time, money, and sweat to chase this down with an attorney? As an aside, the contract stipulates mandatory arbitration, should I invoke that on my own and see where the chips fall?
Thank you for your help.
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