Lyons v. Gorens ( 2021 )


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    2021 IL App (1st) 200499-U
    SIXTH DIVISION
    June 4, 2021
    No. 1-20-0499
    NOTICE: This order was filed under Supreme Court Rule 23 and is not precedent except in the
    limited circumstances allowed under Rule 23(e)(1).
    IN THE
    APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS
    FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    IRENE LYONS and JACOBY RADFORD,                   )      Appeal from the Circuit Court of
    )      Cook County.
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                )
    )
    v.                       )
    )
    MARSHA E. GORENS, M.D., MARSHA                    )
    GORENS, M.D., GYNECOLOGY & HOROME )
    THERAPY, SOTTOPELLE DISTRIBUTION                  )
    COMPANY, LLC, THE SOTTOPELLE GROUP, )
    LLC, SOTTOPELLE GLOBAL, LLC,                      )
    SOTTOPELLE HOLDING CORPORATION,                   )
    SOTTOPELLE, INC., and SOTTOPELLE                  )      No. 17 L 007576
    NORTH AMERICA, LLC,                               )
    )
    Defendants                            )
    )
    (SottoPelle Distribution Company, LLC, The        )
    SottoPelle Group, LLC, SottoPelle Global, LLC, )
    SottoPelle Holding Corporation, SottoPelle, Inc., )
    and SottoPelle North America, LLC, Defendants- )         Honorable Brendan A. O’Brien,
    Appellees).                                       )      Judge Presiding.
    JUSTICE CONNORS delivered the judgment of the court.
    Presiding Justice Mikva and Justice Oden Johnson concurred in the judgment.
    ORDER
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶1     Held: Circuit court did not abuse its discretion when it denied leave to file amended
    complaint; affirmed.
    ¶2     Plaintiffs, Irene Lyons and Jacoby Radford, appeal the circuit court’s denial of leave to file
    an amended complaint. On appeal, plaintiffs contend that the circuit court abused its discretion
    because the applicable factors favored allowing the amendment. We affirm.
    ¶3                                          I. BACKGROUND
    ¶4     The SottoPelle defendants (collectively known as SottoPelle) promote the use of hormone
    replacement therapy using bioidentical hormone infused pellets (hormone pellets). The SottoPelle
    entities were managed by Dr. Gino Tutera, who passed away in 2015, and his wife, CarolAnn
    Tutera. Lyons was implanted with hormone pellets by Dr. Marsha Gorens, who attended SottoPelle
    educational conferences and was a SottoPelle Certified Physician. 1 Lyons was later diagnosed and
    treated for breast cancer. As the case progressed, plaintiffs changed their theory of SottoPelle’s
    liability. In plaintiffs’ original complaint, they asserted that SottoPelle designed, manufactured,
    and sold hormone pellets. In a proposed amended complaint, plaintiffs asserted that SottoPelle was
    liable as an apparent manufacturer and under an enterprise theory.
    ¶5                         A. Original Complaint and Summary Judgment
    ¶6     Plaintiffs’ original complaint, filed on July 27, 2017, asserted in part causes of action for
    negligence and strict products liability and alleged that SottoPelle failed to warn Lyons of the risks,
    side effects, and/or complications of its hormone pellets. Plaintiffs alleged that SottoPelle “was
    and is engaged in the business of designing, manufacturing, and selling” hormone pellets. Plaintiffs
    further stated that on three occasions in 2014 and 2015, hormone pellets manufactured and sold by
    SottoPelle were implanted into Lyons. Around July 31, 2015, a general surgeon recommended to
    1
    Dr. Gorens is not part of this appeal.
    -2-
    No. 1-20-0499
    Lyons that the hormone pellets be removed because of an increased risk of cancer growth.
    According to plaintiffs, Dr. Gorens advised Lyons that the hormone pellets could not be removed.
    Lyons, who had a family history of breast and ovarian cancer, was later diagnosed and treated for
    breast cancer. Plaintiffs asserted that when the hormone pellets left SottoPelle’s control, SottoPelle
    knew or should have known that its product was unreasonably dangerous.
    ¶7      On November 14, 2017, SottoPelle filed a motion to dismiss for lack of personal
    jurisdiction, stating in part that it did not design, sell, manufacture, or distribute hormone pellets.
    Attached to the motion was an affidavit from CarolAnn Tutera, who averred that she was the CEO
    of SottoPelle and SottoPelle did not design, manufacture, sell, or distribute hormone pellets in
    Illinois or any other state.
    ¶8      On January 2, 2018, the circuit court allowed plaintiffs to issue discovery and conduct
    depositions limited to the issues relevant to SottoPelle’s motion to dismiss.
    ¶9      On January 23, 2018, SottoPelle served answers to plaintiffs’ special interrogatories.
    Responding to the question of whether any of the SottoPelle entities were the manufacturer of the
    hormone pellets used to treat Lyons, SottoPelle stated:
    “No. None of the SottoPelle Defendants are manufacturers of hormone pellets nor
    did they manufacture the pellets at issue. The SottoPelle Defendants have no knowledge of
    who manufactured the pellets at issue. The SottoPelle Defendants are familiar with
    Solutions Pharmacy in Tennessee as a manufacturer of pellets but cannot say for certain
    that they manufactured the pellets at issue in this case.”
    ¶ 10    Also in January 2018, Dr. Gorens served answers to plaintiffs’ supplemental interrogatories
    and requests for production. Asked to identify the manufacturer of the hormone pellets used to
    -3-
    No. 1-20-0499
    treat Lyons, Dr. Gorens stated, “Solutions Pharmacy, 5517 Little Debbie Parkway, Collegedale,
    TN 37315; and Belmar Pharmacy, 12860 W. Cedar Drive, Suite 210, Lakewood, CO 80228.”
    ¶ 11    At CarolAnn Tutera’s January 24, 2018, deposition, she stated that she was the CEO of the
    SottoPelle entities and her late husband, Gino Tutera, had named SottoPelle. Asked what the
    lawsuit was about, CarolAnn replied, “The only thing I understand is that she thinks SottoPelle
    makes pellets and we don’t.” According to CarolAnn, many of the SottoPelle entities “were set up
    and they are not used. *** [T]here’s nothing in them.” 2 CarolAnn stated that she could not discuss
    Dr. Gorens’s purchase of hormone pellets because CarolAnn did not purchase pellets for Dr.
    Gorens, did not sell pellets, and SottoPelle did not make pellets. CarolAnn stated that after
    completing the SottoPelle training program, physicians have to contact a pharmacy to treat
    patients. Physicians are given names for three or four pharmacies, including Solutions Pharmacy,
    a pharmacy in Florida, and others that CarolAnn could not recall.
    ¶ 12    On February 2, 2018, plaintiffs filed a motion to strike SottoPelle’s motion to dismiss.
    Plaintiffs stated that when CarolAnn appeared for her deposition, she had done no investigation
    about SottoPelle and had no knowledge about what the SottoPelle entities were incorporated to do.
    ¶ 13    The record includes the original answer and counterclaims of Gino Tutera, CarolAnn
    Tutera, and two SottoPelle entities from litigation in 2012 in Texas (the Donovitz litigation). The
    pleading alleged in part as follows. Around 2002, Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera developed a
    program of bio-identical pellet delivery hormone replacement services and products, branded as
    SottoPelle Therapy or SottoPelle Program. The Tuteras marketed and licensed their program to
    medical groups, physicians, and medical professionals. A SottoPelle entity operated a dosing
    2
    The SottoPelle entities that CarolAnn Tutera referred to during this portion of her deposition
    were SottoPelle Distribution Company, LLC, The SottoPelle Group, LLC, SottoPelle Global, LLC,
    SottoPelle Holding Corporation, and SottoPelle North America, LLC.
    -4-
    No. 1-20-0499
    website, “which [used] proprietary formulas and calculations for determining the appropriate
    dosage of its product for use by its licensees.” The dosing formulas and calculations were trade
    secrets. A counterdefendant in the case, Dr. Gary Donovitz, had entered into an operating
    agreement for an entity whose purpose was to market and sell the SottoPelle Program to medical
    groups, physicians, and medical professionals located in Texas. Allegedly, Donovitz and other
    counterdefendants breached the operating agreement. The pleading stated in part that Donovitz
    had “ordered and used substandard, compounded pharmaceutical substances in the production of
    SottoPelle products.”
    ¶ 14   Returning to this case, in a March 2, 2018, filing, plaintiffs asserted that CarolAnn’s
    deposition testimony conflicted with the Donovitz pleading. Responding to a contention that no
    more discovery about personal jurisdiction was needed because SottoPelle allegedly did not make
    hormone pellets, plaintiffs asserted, “It is well-settled that a non-manufacturer is a proper
    defendant under a products liability theory if it exercised some significant control over the design
    or manufacture of the product, provided instructions or warnings to the manufacturer relative to
    the alleged defect, had actual knowledge of the defect, or created the defect.” SottoPelle later
    withdrew its motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction.
    ¶ 15   Dr. Gorens’s deposition took place on April 25, 2018, where she stated in part as follows.
    SottoPelle trained physicians on bioidentical hormones. SottoPelle and Solutions Pharmacy put
    together conferences, and Dr. Gorens first attended a training conference in 2008, where she was
    introduced to bioidentical hormones and practiced inserting hormone pellets. Dr. Gorens was also
    given generalized information on dosing. Dr. Gorens was unsure if SottoPelle provided dosing
    instructions, as “some of that came from the pharmacist, from Solutions Pharmacy.” The pellets
    had to be manufactured by a licensed pharmacist and SottoPelle was not a pharmacist. SottoPelle
    -5-
    No. 1-20-0499
    did not require that physicians use a certain manufacturer of hormone pellets, but because
    Solutions Pharmacy was at the conference and providing training, “everybody used Solutions
    Pharmacy.” It was encouraged that the physicians use Solutions Pharmacy “because they were
    there.” Dr. Gorens acknowledged that at one conference, she won a Top 20 sales award from
    Solutions Pharmacy. All SottoPelle Certified Physicians were eligible for the award if they
    purchased pellets through Solutions Pharmacy. Sometime in 2013, Dr. Gorens stopped using
    Solutions Pharmacy and switched to Belmar Pharmacy, which was recommended to her by another
    physician who used hormone pellets. Dr. Gorens did not know if SottoPelle designed the hormone
    pellets. When Dr. Gorens started using hormone pellets in her practice, she would sometimes
    consult with Gino Tutera, who would provide instructions on certain lab values and appropriate
    dosing.
    ¶ 16      Upon completing the training in 2008, Dr. Gorens received a certificate of completion and
    became a SottoPelle Certified Physician. Dr. Gorens paid a yearly fee for the designation.
    SottoPelle provided physicians with consent forms and other paperwork to help with
    documentation. Dr. Gorens did not generally inform patients that she was a SottoPelle Certified
    Physician. Prior to ending her relationship with SottoPelle in 2015, Dr. Gorens was listed on the
    SottoPelle website and was represented as a SottoPelle Certified Physician on a location map.
    When SottoPelle advertised, “they would draw patients to their website.” Dr. Gorens had patients
    who found her through SottoPelle’s website, but Lyons did not find Dr. Gorens that way.
    ¶ 17      At a subsequent deposition, Dr. Gorens recalled that when she started implanting pellets,
    she did not believe that SottoPelle manufactured the pellets and knew that the pellets had to be
    produced by a pharmacist. Dr. Gorens explained that Solutions and Belmar are compound
    -6-
    No. 1-20-0499
    pharmacies, meaning that they put a compound of hormones in a requested form, such as creams,
    pellets, or drops.
    ¶ 18    In a filing dated July 17, 2018, plaintiffs took issue with SottoPelle “continually [arguing]
    that they are not the manufacturer of the hormone therapy pellets at issue.” According to plaintiffs,
    SottoPelle’s argument was premature because SottoPelle had not yet answered written discovery
    and there was no pending motion about the merits of plaintiffs’ case against SottoPelle. Plaintiffs
    stated that SottoPelle’s “role providing hormone therapy pellets to physicians such as *** Dr.
    Gorens to use on patients such as *** Lyons will be clearly laid out at the appropriate time. The
    evidence already available to the parties speaks for itself.”
    ¶ 19    SottoPelle’s answers to plaintiffs’ interrogatories and responses to plaintiffs’ first request
    to produce were served on plaintiffs’ counsel on July 23, 2018, and stated in part as follows.
    SottoPelle did not ever design or modify the design or engineering of hormone pellets, did not ever
    own or license a patent on hormone pellet design or a hormone pellet component, and did not ever
    own or license a trademark on a hormone pellet brand name. SottoPelle conducted informational
    seminars about hormone therapy generally and generally suggested and highlighted the types of
    information that physicians should consider when administering hormonal pellet therapy.
    SottoPelle also provided general examples of hormonal therapy dosage that was used for certain
    patients in the past, as well as outlined and demonstrated how hormone pellets are implanted under
    the skin. SottoPelle did not know who designed or manufactured the product. In a response to a
    request for documents and/or other evidence of payment, benefit, cash, monies, kickbacks, and/or
    incentives between SottoPelle and any pharmacy or compounding pharmacy, SottoPelle stated that
    it did not receive payments or “kick-backs” from any product manufacturer.
    -7-
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 20   On October 10, 2018, SottoPelle filed a motion for summary judgment, asserting in part
    that there was no genuine issue of material fact because SottoPelle did not design, manufacture, or
    sell hormone pellets. Further, the subject pellets were never in SottoPelle’s control.
    ¶ 21   Lyons’s deposition took place on November 2, 2018, where she stated in part as follows.
    In October 2013, Lyons made an appointment with Dr. Gorens after a co-worker recommended
    her. Lyons did not visit the SottoPelle website before meeting Dr. Gorens, though she visited Dr.
    Gorens’s website. At her first appointment, Dr. Gorens explained how the hormone pellets would
    be inserted and released. Lyons signed consent forms that she interpreted to mean that SottoPelle
    provided, designed, and manufactured the pellets, as well as trained and certified Dr. Gorens to
    insert them. However, no one told Lyons that SottoPelle manufactured or designed hormone pellets
    and Dr. Gorens did not indicate that the hormone pellets were designed, manufactured, or sold by
    SottoPelle. Lyons’s consent forms are in the record. A Consent for Hormone Implantation included
    SottoPelle’s logo in the corner, as did a Female Estradiol and Testosterone Acknowledgement
    Insertion Form. The latter form stated that there would be a charge depending on the number of
    hormone pellets received. Another form, which included Belmar Pharmacy’s logo and contact
    information at the bottom, authorized Belmar Pharmacy to ship Lyons’s compounded pellet
    prescriptions to Dr. Gorens.
    ¶ 22   An affidavit obtained by SottoPelle dated January 31, 2019, from the co-owner of Solutions
    Pharmacy averred that Solutions dispensed hormone pellets based on prescriptions written by Dr.
    Gorens on April 30, 2014. Another affidavit obtained by SottoPelle dated February 12, 2019, from
    the CEO of Belmar Pharmacy stated that between October 29, 2013, and July 1, 2015, Belmar
    dispensed hormone pellets based on prescriptions written by Dr. Gorens.
    -8-
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 23   In a filing relating to a discovery matter dated February 13, 2019, plaintiffs asserted that
    they had not yet received full and complete answers to written discovery and SottoPelle had
    stonewalled the entire discovery process. According to plaintiffs, SottoPelle “[pointed] the finger
    at another entity whom [it contended] manufactured the pellets at issue.” Plaintiffs also stated that
    products liability was not exclusive to the manufacturer. Plaintiffs noted that in her deposition, Dr.
    Gorens “testified extensively about [SottoPelle’s] participation in this matter, and the stream of
    commerce.” Plaintiffs further stated that their position would be addressed at length when they
    responded to the summary judgment motion. Plaintiffs added that even if being a manufacturer
    was dispositive, SottoPelle could not rely on CarolAnn Tutera’s deposition testimony to disclaim
    it was the manufacturer because her testimony was unreliable given her statements in the Donovitz
    pleading.
    ¶ 24   At a hearing on March 14, 2019, plaintiffs’ counsel stated that Solutions and Belmar could
    not be defendants due to the statute of limitations. Plaintiffs’ counsel added, “I guess we can go
    the parent manufactured route if we have to, if we have to bring them in, and the statute of
    limitations will dismiss them.” Plaintiffs confirmed that the statute of limitations had run for the
    pharmacies when Dr. Gorens testified at her deposition. Plaintiffs’ counsel also stated that he was
    examining what agreements SottoPelle had with Solutions and Belmar. Asked how that was
    relevant, plaintiffs’ counsel responded, “Well, I guess we’ll have to figure out exactly how
    entwined they are.” Plaintiffs’ counsel queried why Solutions was taking part in the seminars with
    SottoPelle and whether SottoPelle was “just an arm of Solutions.”
    ¶ 25   At a hearing related to discovery matters on April 8, 2019, the court asked why plaintiffs
    should be allowed to pursue additional discovery from SottoPelle. Plaintiffs’ counsel stated:
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    No. 1-20-0499
    “So just saying that we can’t do any of this discovery because we’re not the
    manufacturer, I still think we’re entitled to do this. *** [D]uring our phone call,
    *** [SottoPelle’s counsel] kept on asking why don’t you just subpoena this
    information that you’re asking from me from the manufacturers themselves, from
    Solutions and Belmar Pharmacies. Well, they’re the Defendant in this case, *** I
    should be able to ask them to produce this documentation first.”
    Pressed for his theory of the case, plaintiffs’ counsel suggested that SottoPelle could have
    exercised control over the hormone pellets, in that it had a dosing website, trained physicians to
    use the hormone pellets, and directed physicians to use a particular pharmacy. Plaintiffs’ counsel
    stated that if he could prove that SottoPelle had control over the product, then he could prove that
    SottoPelle should be in the case, even if it was not “the exact manufacturer.” Plaintiffs’ counsel
    also stated that he could not amend the complaint while the summary judgment motion was
    pending. According to plaintiffs’ counsel, the motion for summary judgment was premature
    because plaintiffs did not have all the evidence needed to respond.
    ¶ 26   On August 6, 2019, plaintiffs filed an emergency motion related to the briefing schedule
    for the summary judgment motion. Plaintiffs stated in part that subpoenas had been issued to
    Solutions and Belmar, but the pharmacies needed more time to comply.
    ¶ 27   Plaintiffs filed their response to the summary judgment motion on August 15, 2019,
    asserting that SottoPelle should be held liable under two theories: 1) as an apparent manufacturer
    of hormone pellets, and 2) for playing an integral role in the overall producing and marketing of
    hormone pellets, known as enterprise theory. Plaintiffs stated that whether SottoPelle held itself
    out as the apparent manufacturer was a question for the trier of fact. Further, Lyons’s belief that
    SottoPelle manufactured the hormone pellets was controlling because she was the injured party.
    -10-
    No. 1-20-0499
    According to plaintiffs, it was reasonable for Lyons to believe that SottoPelle manufactured the
    hormone pellets due to the multiple consent forms she read and signed, which bore SottoPelle’s
    logo and were provided to Dr. Gorens by SottoPelle.
    ¶ 28   As for their second theory of liability, plaintiffs asserted that through its seminars, website,
    and appearances on television shows, SottoPelle was an integral part of the marketing for hormone
    pellets and shared in the profits. Further, by certifying physicians and licensing them to use the
    SottoPelle trademark, SottoPelle created the public impression that SottoPelle was the actual
    manufacturer and induced consumers to rely on the appearance that the trademark owner was
    responsible for the product and stood behind it.
    ¶ 29   In reply, SottoPelle stated that the court did not need to consider whether SottoPelle was
    liable as an apparent manufacturer or under enterprise theory because those theories were not pled
    in the complaint. Still, summary judgment was warranted even if the new theories were considered.
    SottoPelle asserted that the belief of the purchasing public is relevant to establish liability as an
    apparent manufacturer, and here, Dr. Gorens was the purchasing public. SottoPelle noted that Dr.
    Gorens purchased the pellets and inserted them into Lyons, as well as testified in her deposition
    that she did not believe that SottoPelle manufactured hormone pellets. SottoPelle further asserted
    that there was no competent or admissible evidence that SottoPelle played any role in the design,
    manufacture, distribution, or sale of the hormone pellets, much less than integral role in the overall
    producing and marketing enterprise that placed the hormone pellets in the stream of commerce.
    SottoPelle also stated that there was no competent or admissible evidence that SottoPelle received
    payments from Solutions, Belmar, or Dr. Gorens for their sale of the subject pellets or hormone
    pellets generally.
    -11-
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 30   On September 4, 2019, the court granted SottoPelle’s motion for summary judgment. At
    the hearing, the court stated that there was no genuine issue of material fact about what was actually
    pleaded in the complaint. Plaintiffs’ counsel conceded that SottoPelle did not design, manufacture,
    or sell hormone pellets. Explaining the two new theories, plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that plaintiffs
    met the requirements to amend the complaint. The court predicted that SottoPelle would assert that
    the request was untimely, “but I can’t speak for [SottoPelle] so I’m not giving you a leave for
    pleading.”
    ¶ 31    Still, the court held argument “as if there was a claim out there on this.” Plaintiffs’ counsel
    contended that for the apparent manufacturer claim, Lyons was the purchasing public because the
    hormone pellets were marketed to patients and physicians. The court disagreed, finding that the
    purchasing public was Dr. Gorens, and moreover, there was no indication that Dr. Gorens
    specifically relied on the hormone pellets being made by SottoPelle. Turning to the enterprise
    theory of liability, plaintiffs’ counsel stated that the day after filing his summary judgment
    response, he received an affidavit containing “years of purchases made by Gino Tutera from
    SottoPelle for millions and millions of dollars[’] worth of pellets.” Plaintiffs’ counsel further stated
    that SottoPelle charged physicians an annual fee to be SottoPelle Certified Physicians and
    introduced them to Solutions Pharmacy, which gave Dr. Gorens almost all of the pellets that were
    implanted in Lyons. Further, SottoPelle marketed the product online to the public and physicians
    and licensed physicians to use a trademark on office forms. According to plaintiffs’ counsel, all of
    those acts derived an economic benefit for SottoPelle and the hormone pellet industry. Ultimately,
    the court did not find there was a genuine issue of material fact as to enterprise theory, but left
    open the option for plaintiffs to file a motion for leave to file an amended complaint.
    ¶ 32                            B. Proposed Amended Complaint
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    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 33   On October 4, 2019, plaintiffs filed a motion for leave to file a first amended complaint,
    asserting in part that they had adduced additional evidence that was not previously before the court
    and supported liability under enterprise theory. Pursuant to a subpoena from plaintiffs, Solutions
    produced 2013 tax documents showing that Solutions paid Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera over
    $200,000 each. Solutions also produced receipts for hormone pellets sold to Gino Tutera and
    CarolAnn Tutera in quantities far greater than any one physician could insert himself. Further,
    Solutions provided order forms from 2012 that revealed that Gino Tutera was credited over
    $70,000 in direct purchases from Solutions, meaning that he received an exorbitant number of
    hormone pellets free of charge. Plaintiffs also contended that an amendment would not create
    surprise or prejudice because SottoPelle asserted from the outset that it did not manufacture or
    distribute hormone pellets. Also, discovery had not closed and SottoPelle could adequately prepare
    a defense. Plaintiffs further stated that they did not subpoena the pharmacies until May and July
    2019, and moreover, they did not obtain the records from Solutions until the day after filing the
    summary judgment response. Plaintiffs also justified their waiting to amend the complaint by
    pointing to “a multitude of evidence, all put into existence by SottoPelle,” which had implicated
    SottoPelle as the actual manufacturer, including the pleading in Donovitz, SottoPelle’s website,
    and SottoPelle’s online videos.
    ¶ 34   The proposed amended complaint alleged that SottoPelle “held and holds itself out as an
    entity engaged in the business of designing, manufacturing, and selling, among other things,
    estrogen and testosterone bio-identical hormone replacement therapy pellets,” and that SottoPelle
    “played an integral role in the marketing of bio-identical hormone therapy replacement pellets and
    participated in the profits of placing bio-identical hormone replacement therapy pellets into the
    stream of commerce.” In part, the proposed amended complaint further stated:
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    No. 1-20-0499
    •   SottoPelle was compensated by Solutions through payments made by Solutions to Gino
    Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera.
    •   SottoPelle purchased the hormone pellets through Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera.
    •   SottoPelle distributed hormone pellets to physicians.
    •   SottoPelle trained physicians regarding hormone pellets.
    •   SottoPelle marketed SottoPelle Certified Physicians on its website to the public.
    •   SottoPelle licensed SottoPelle Certified Physicians to use certain forms in their practice
    that bore the SottoPelle logo.
    •   SottoPelle certified Dr. Gorens in regard to hormone pellets and Dr. Gorens held herself
    out as a SottoPelle Certified Physician.
    ¶ 35       Attached to plaintiffs’ motion was a subpoena to Solutions Pharmacy dated May 29, 2019,
    and a letter from plaintiffs’ counsel to Belmar Pharmacy dated July 3, 2019, stating that a copy of
    a subpoena was enclosed. The documents received from Solutions included 1099-MISC forms,
    sales receipts, and transfer documents. The 1099-MISC forms were issued to Gino Tutera and
    CarolAnn Tutera in 2013 and reflected $211,500 and $210,000 in nonemployee compensation,
    respectively. The receipts indicated sales to Gino Tutera for approximately $490,000 in hormone
    pellets and to CarolAnn Tutera for $504 in hormone pellets. The transfer documents were for
    hormone pellets from Solutions to Gino Tutera that were designated as “Safetynet/Reserve,”
    “Chandler,” or “Shea.” In some instances, the transfer documents indicated that Gino Tutera was
    credited for the cost.
    ¶ 36       Meanwhile, the case was given a trial date of February 1, 2021.
    ¶ 37       In response to plaintiffs’ motion, SottoPelle asserted that the proposed amendment did not
    cure the defect in the original complaint and another affidavit from Solutions that was procured by
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    No. 1-20-0499
    SottoPelle rendered baseless plaintiffs’ enterprise theory claim. SottoPelle further stated that
    plaintiffs raised alternative theories of liability in a brief filed on February 13, 2019, but waited
    until after losing the motion for summary judgment to amend the complaint.
    ¶ 38   Dated October 30, 2019, the aforementioned affidavit that SottoPelle procured from
    Solutions stated in part as follows. SottoPelle was not involved in the design, production, or sale
    of hormone pellets compounded by Solutions and sold to Dr. Gorens. The 1099-MISC forms
    reflected payments to Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera in their personal capacities for their
    appearances and speeches at seminars sponsored by Solutions in 2013. During 2012 and 2013,
    Gino Tutera’s medical practice had multiple officers and multiple practitioners. As for the transfer
    documents, “Safetynet/Reserve” was a term used by physicians to indicate reserves to replace
    pellets damaged in shipment or when supply is interrupted. Further, the credits given to Gino
    Tutera were for speaking fees from his appearances that were sponsored by Solutions. There were
    no payments from Solutions to any of the SottoPelle entities—only payments from Solutions to
    Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera in their personal capacities.
    ¶ 39   At the hearing on plaintiffs’ motion, plaintiffs’ counsel asserted that evidence supporting
    an enterprise theory of liability was new, and plaintiffs now had evidence of payment and
    kickbacks. Plaintiffs’ counsel also stated that discovery disputes prevented plaintiffs from
    amending the complaint earlier. Further, plaintiffs’ counsel had believed the original complaint
    could be valid based on evidence that SottoPelle designed the pellets. In response, SottoPelle’s
    counsel asserted in part that “the clock started ticking” in January 2018 to amend the complaint,
    when Dr. Gorens stated in an interrogatory that the hormone pellets came from Solutions and/or
    Belmar.
    -15-
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 40   On December 6, 2019, the court denied plaintiffs leave to file an amended complaint. In
    an oral ruling, the court stated that the amendment cured the defects in the original complaint,
    noting that the complaint had to be “close enough to put the defendant on notice as to what your
    theory is.” However, the amendment would create surprise or prejudice because SottoPelle would
    have to proceed on theories that were not presented in the pleadings. The court further found that
    the amendment was untimely, stating that plaintiffs had known about the alternative theory for a
    while and had not sought leave to amend until after summary judgment. Also, the case had been
    pending for two years. The court stated that plaintiffs should have sought leave to amend close in
    time to when plaintiffs knew who the actual manufacturers were and “not at this stage in the
    litigation.” The court entered a finding under Illinois Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (eff. Mar. 8,
    2016) that there was no just reason for delaying either enforcement or appeal or both.
    ¶ 41   On January 3, 2020, plaintiffs filed a motion to reconsider, asserting in part that the court
    had emphasized the case’s age without considering that trial was 14 months away at the time.
    Plaintiffs stated that they first tried to amend the complaint at the summary judgment hearing on
    September 4, 2019, which was before the case was given a trial date. Plaintiffs also raised judicial
    estoppel, contending that SottoPelle took a position in the Donovitz litigation that hormone pellets
    were its product, but now claimed that SottoPelle did not design, manufacture, or sell hormone
    pellets. Plaintiffs further asserted that SottoPelle’s pleading in Donovitz led them to believe that
    SottoPelle designed, manufactured, or sold hormone pellets. Plaintiffs also stated that they did not
    have evidence supporting the new theories until the day after filing their summary judgment
    response.
    ¶ 42   In response, SottoPelle asserted in part that plaintiffs waived the judicial estoppel claim
    because it appeared for the first time in the motion to reconsider. SottoPelle further stated that even
    -16-
    No. 1-20-0499
    if the tax forms were probative of enterprise theory liability—a point that SottoPelle did not
    concede—plaintiffs had no excuse for waiting so long to subpoena Solutions. Plaintiffs could have
    subpoenaed Solutions and Belmar as early as January 2018 to investigate their roles.
    ¶ 43   After a hearing, the court denied plaintiffs’ motion to reconsider. Plaintiffs timely appealed.
    ¶ 44                                    II. ANALYSIS
    ¶ 45   On appeal, plaintiffs contend that the circuit court should have granted them leave to file
    an amended complaint. Section 2-1005(g) of the Code of Civil Procedure (Code) states, “Before
    or after the entry of a summary judgment, the court shall permit pleadings to be amended upon
    just and reasonable terms.” 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(g) (West 2016). Although litigants do not have an
    absolute right to amend their complaint, “Illinois law supports a liberal policy of allowing
    amendments to the pleadings so as to enable parties to fully present their alleged *** causes of
    action.” Grove v. Carle Foundation Hospital, 
    364 Ill. App. 3d 412
    , 417 (2006). When ruling on a
    postsummary judgment motion to amend, the court considers whether: 1) the proposed amendment
    would cure the defective pleading; 2) the proposed amendment would create prejudice or surprise
    to other parties; 3) the proposed amendment is timely; and 4) there were previous opportunities to
    amend. United Conveyor Corp. v. Allstate Insurance Co., 
    2017 IL App (1st) 162314
    , ¶ 36 (citing
    Loyola Academy v. S&S Roof Maintenance, Inc., 
    146 Ill. 2d 263
    , 273 (1992)). The party seeking
    leave to amend has the burden to demonstrate that all four factors favor the requested relief. 
    Id.
    We review the circuit court’s ruling on whether to allow or deny an amendment for an abuse of
    discretion (Cook ex rel. Cook v. AAA Life Insurance Co., 
    2014 IL App (1st) 123700
    , ¶ 40), which
    occurs when the court’s ruling is arbitrary, fanciful, unreasonable, or where no reasonable person
    would take its view (Taylor v. County of Cook, 
    2011 IL App (1st) 093085
    , ¶ 23).
    ¶ 46                          A. Cure the Defective Pleading
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    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 47   We consider each of the four Loyola Academy factors in turn, beginning with whether
    plaintiffs’ proposed amendment would cure the defective pleading. The parties do not need to go
    through the process of filing an amended pleading and then testing its sufficiency with a motion
    to dismiss. Hayes Mechanical, Inc. v. First Industrial, L.P., 
    351 Ill. App. 3d 1
    , 7 (2004). The court
    may consider the ultimate efficacy of a claim as stated in a proposed amended pleading. 
    Id.
     Further,
    the court may deny leave to amend where the allegations in the complaint are superseded by
    extrinsic facts that have already been submitted and “would militate for summary judgment.”
    Lajato v. AT&T, Inc., 
    283 Ill. App. 3d 126
    , 139 (1996) (leave to amend properly denied where
    testimony and evidence presented fell short of establishing a genuine issue of material fact). See
    also Cook ex rel. Cook, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 123700
    , ¶ 40 (section 2-1005(g) of the Code “does not
    allow a plaintiff to amend a cause of action on which the defendant was granted summary judgment
    unless depositions and affidavits indicate that the plaintiff can replead the claim under another
    theory”).
    ¶ 48   To review, plaintiffs’ original complaint alleged that SottoPelle designed, manufactured,
    and sold hormone pellets. Plaintiffs eventually conceded that this was not the case. Plaintiffs
    contend that their proposed amendment cured this defect by removing references to SottoPelle
    itself manufacturing hormone pellets, and instead alleging that SottoPelle was liable as an apparent
    manufacturer and under enterprise theory. As for being an apparent manufacturer, plaintiffs note
    that their amended complaint states that SottoPelle marketed hormone therapy and SottoPelle
    Certified Physicians on its consumer-oriented website and provided consent forms for physicians
    to use. Plaintiffs also argue that Lyons was the purchasing public and she signed consent and
    acknowledgement forms that bore SottoPelle’s logo.
    -18-
    No. 1-20-0499
    ¶ 49    Under the apparent manufacturer doctrine, a company that holds itself out to the public as
    the manufacturer of a product is liable for the injuries caused by the product if it is found to be
    unreasonably dangerous. Root v. JH Industries, Inc., 
    277 Ill. App. 3d 502
    , 506 (1995). Whether a
    holding out occurred must be judged from the viewpoint of the purchasing public and in light of
    circumstances at the time of purchase. 
    Id. at 507
    . The primary rationale for imposing liability on
    an apparent manufacturer is that it has induced the purchasing public to believe “that it is the actual
    manufacturer, and to act on this belief—that is, to purchase the product in reliance on the apparent
    manufacturer’s reputation and skill in making it.” (Emphasis omitted.) Hebel v. Sherman
    Equipment, 
    92 Ill. 2d 368
    , 375 (1982).
    ¶ 50    Cases have found that the purchasing public is the person or entity actually buying the
    allegedly defective product, but not in all circumstances. In Hebel, the purchasing public for a
    piece of car-washing equipment was not “a casual observer, viewing the machines after their
    purchase and installation,” but rather “a reasonable purchaser of car-washing equipment,” which
    was the service station and car wash at which the injury occurred. 
    Id.
     Similarly, in Joiner v. Ryder
    System Inc., 
    966 F. Supp. 1478
    , 1489 (C.D. Ill. 1996), the purchasing public for a trailer was the
    plaintiff’s employer, who purchased the trailer that caused the subject injury. Yet, in Sipari v. Villa
    Olivia Country Club, 
    63 Ill. App. 3d 985
    , 993 (1978), the court found that there was a genuine
    question of fact as to whether an entity whose logo was on a golf cart held itself out as the golf
    cart’s manufacturer to someone who only rented the cart at a country club. The country club owned
    the golf cart. 
    Id. at 988
    .
    ¶ 51    Here, Dr. Gorens placed the actual order for hormone pellets. But the purchasing public
    was not just physicians. SottoPelle’s marketing appeared to induce patients to seek out SottoPelle
    Certified Physicians on their own. Whether a holding out occurred is an objective inquiry and does
    -19-
    No. 1-20-0499
    not turn on the individual experience of the plaintiff. See Root, 
    277 Ill. App. 3d at 507
     (referring
    to the viewpoint of the purchasing public and not the particular plaintiff). So, that Lyons did not
    seek out a SottoPelle Certified Physician herself is not the question. SottoPelle marketed to
    potential patients on the Internet using a location finder. The identification of SottoPelle with
    hormone pellet treatment carried over to the doctor’s office, where forms with SottoPelle’s logo
    were presented and signed, including one that mentioned a price for hormone pellets. There is at
    least a genuine question of fact whether SottoPelle held itself out as the manufacturer of hormone
    pellets to the purchasing public. Plaintiffs’ apparent manufacturer claim cures the defective
    pleading, though as we will discuss below, the circuit court properly denied leave to amend based
    on the other Loyola Academy factors.
    ¶ 52   Turning to the second grounds for liability raised in the proposed amended complaint,
    plaintiffs’ enterprise theory claim does not cure the defective pleading. Under that doctrine, a party
    not within the actual chain of distribution, but “who plays an integral role in the marketing
    enterprise of a defective product and participates in the profits derived from placing the product
    into the stream of commerce” faces strict liability. Carollo v. Al Warren Oil Co., Inc., 
    355 Ill. App. 3d 172
    , 181 (2004). Imposing strict liability “hinges on whether the party in question has any
    participatory connection, for personal profit or other benefit, with the injury-causing product and
    with the enterprise that created consumer demand for and reliance upon the product.” (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Bittler v. White & Co., 
    203 Ill. App. 3d 26
    , 30 (1990). The proposed
    amended complaint states that SottoPelle was owned by Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera,
    SottoPelle was compensated by Solutions through payments Solutions made to Gino Tutera and
    CarolAnn Tutera, SottoPelle purchased hormone pellets through Gino Tutera and CarolAnn
    Tutera, and SottoPelle distributed hormone pellets to physicians. The evidence in the record does
    -20-
    No. 1-20-0499
    not support these allegations. Plaintiffs point to the 1099-MISC forms that showed payments to
    Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera and documents that supposedly indicate that Gino Tutera
    received a kickback in the form of hormone pellets. Plaintiffs also state that SottoPelle executives
    spoke at seminars sponsored by Solutions and encouraged physicians to buy pellets from
    Solutions. However, the payments to Gino Tutera and CarolAnn Tutera were in their personal
    capacities, and the ordering forms were for Gino Tutera and not SottoPelle. Solutions’s affidavit
    averred that Gino Tutera—again, not SottoPelle—received credits for speaking fees, and Gino
    Tutera had multiple offices with multiple practitioners. The record supports neither plaintiffs’
    allegations nor that SottoPelle itself profited from hormone pellets sold by Solutions. Plaintiffs
    have not established a genuine issue of material fact on their enterprise theory claim and their
    allegations do not cure the defective pleading.
    ¶ 53                                  B. Prejudice or Surprise
    ¶ 54   We next to turn to whether the proposed amendment would create prejudice or surprise to
    SottoPelle, which is the most important factor in the analysis of whether to allow leave to amend.
    Lacey v. Perrin, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 141114
    , ¶ 78. Plaintiffs contend that the trial date is of
    paramount importance when assessing prejudice, and here, the case did not have a trial date when
    plaintiffs filed their motion for leave to amend. Plaintiffs further argue that there is no surprise or
    prejudice because they raised the alternate theories in February and March 2019 and in their
    summary judgment response. Plaintiffs also state that they requested evidence of payments,
    contracts, agreements, or free pellets received from the compounding pharmacies and SottoPelle
    responded that there were none, which plaintiffs later learned was untrue. Plaintiffs contend that a
    party should not be allowed to claim prejudice when the very information supporting the
    amendment was requested but not provided. Plaintiffs further state that the original and proposed
    -21-
    No. 1-20-0499
    amended complaints presented similar legal and factual issues and involve the same evidence,
    damages, and witnesses.
    ¶ 55   The stage of litigation at which a proposed amendment is brought is a relevant
    consideration. Hartzog v. Martinez, 
    372 Ill. App. 3d 515
    , 525-26 (2007). Although the trial date
    had not been set when plaintiffs moved to amend, the circuit court properly found surprise or
    prejudice because plaintiffs delayed presenting their alternative theories until after summary
    judgment and they could have acted much sooner. Plaintiffs filed their original complaint in July
    2017. Plaintiffs were on notice that Solutions was involved in January 2018, when SottoPelle and
    Dr. Gorens each answered discovery by identifying manufacturers of hormone pellets. At Dr.
    Gorens’s deposition in April 2018, she testified at length about Solutions. Plaintiffs’ comments in
    February, March, and April 2019 suggested that they knew alternative theories were needed to
    keep SottoPelle in the case. Still, plaintiffs did not subpoena the pharmacies until May and July
    2019. Plaintiffs abandoned their original theory when they filed their summary judgment response
    in August 2019, but still did not file a motion for leave to amend. They only orally requested leave
    to amend almost two months later, at the September 2019 summary judgment hearing. Finally,
    plaintiffs filed a motion for leave to amend a month later.
    ¶ 56   Plaintiffs continued to pursue SottoPelle as an actual manufacturer even as it became
    increasingly clear that another theory was necessary. Plaintiffs made no attempt to amend their
    complaint—or even seek discovery from Solutions and Belmar—when they knew an alternate
    theory was warranted. Allowing an amendment in this circumstance would be prejudicial. See
    Geisler v. Everest National Insurance Co., 
    2012 IL App (1st) 103834
    , ¶ 102 (prejudice found
    where the plaintiff did not raise new theory for nearly two years since filing, the plaintiff did not
    try to amend his pleadings until after moving for summary judgment and losing, and the defendants
    -22-
    No. 1-20-0499
    would be burdened with additional litigation if the plaintiff was allowed to start over based on
    facts and legal claims previously available to him).
    ¶ 57   Further, prejudice has been found where the proposed amendment would require a different
    defense. See United Conveyor Corp., 
    2017 IL App (1st) 162314
    , ¶ 40 (prejudice found where the
    complaint added new allegations and the defendants would have to defend against an entirely
    different claim after summary judgment had been entered in their favor more than three years after
    the original complaint was filed); Cook ex rel. Cook, 
    2014 IL App (1st) 123700
    , ¶ 44 (focus is on
    whether the proposed amendment alters the nature and quality of proof required for the defendant
    to defend the claim); W.E. Erickson Construction, Inc. v. Chicago Title Insurance Co., 
    266 Ill. App. 3d 905
    , 912 (1994) (prejudice found where new allegations required a substantially different
    defense which, in turn, required separate investigation). Plaintiffs’ proposed amendment includes
    new allegations about SottoPelle’s marketing and relationship with Solutions, a heretofore
    uninvolved third party. To the extent that plaintiffs argue that SottoPelle hid evidence of a financial
    relationship with Solutions, that assertion was not borne out by the record, as explained in our
    discussion of plaintiffs’ enterprise theory claim. Plaintiffs could have presented the new theories
    much sooner by subpoenaing Solutions after Dr. Gorens testified at her deposition about
    Solutions’s involvement. It would be prejudicial to force SottoPelle to essentially start over after
    plaintiffs made no attempt to involve a third party for over a year after learning about it.
    ¶ 58                 C. Timeliness and Previous Opportunities to Amend
    ¶ 59   We next consider the final two factors together: whether the proposed amendment was
    timely and whether plaintiffs had previous opportunities to amend. Plaintiffs state that when they
    moved to amend, discovery was still open and they had received evidence from Solutions only
    weeks earlier. Plaintiffs also argue that they diligently prosecuted their case even in the face of
    -23-
    No. 1-20-0499
    discovery-related obstacles. Plaintiffs assert that they did not want to rely on CarolAnn Tutera’s
    word that SottoPelle did not design, distribute, or sell pellets.
    ¶ 60    Plaintiff correctly notes that this court has found that the trial date can be a factor in whether
    an amendment is timely. See Todd W. Musburger, Ltd. v. Meier, 
    394 Ill. App. 3d 781
    , 796 (2009)
    (no abuse of discretion in denying leave to file affirmative defense where leave was sought the day
    before trial). Also significant is whether the party seeking amendment is adding allegations that
    were previously unavailable. See United Conveyor Corp., 
    2017 IL App (1st) 162314
    , ¶ 38 (leave
    to amend properly denied where nothing in the record revealed that the plaintiff relied on the
    discovery of any new facts to support request to amend and the amendment relied on facts known
    to the plaintiff long before it filed its complaint); Geisler, 
    2012 IL App (1st) 103834
    , ¶ 104
    (amendment untimely where there was no newly discovered evidence that was unavailable at an
    earlier time).
    ¶ 61    Plaintiffs’ summary judgment response belies their claim that the apparent manufacturer
    claim could not have been asserted earlier. In that response, plaintiffs discussed apparent
    manufacturer liability. The apparent manufacturer claim does not rely on evidence obtained from
    the pharmacies and is based on facts that were gleaned well before the pharmacies were
    subpoenaed. Moreover, section 2-1005(g) of the Code permits plaintiffs to amend the complaint
    while a summary judgment motion is pending. See 735 ILCS 5/2-1005(g) (West 2016) (a court
    “shall permit pleadings to be amended” before or after summary judgment is entered). Plaintiffs’
    request was untimely and the complaint could have been amended earlier. See Lacey, 
    2015 IL App (2d) 141114
    , ¶ 78 (leave to amend properly denied where the plaintiff amended the complaint six
    months after learning of new facts and the plaintiff did not attempt to amend her complaint
    concurrently with response to summary judgment motion); Hartzog, 
    372 Ill. App. 3d at 526
     (leave
    -24-
    No. 1-20-0499
    to amend properly denied where the plaintiffs waited five months after learning of fact supporting
    amendment, waiting until after summary judgment was resolved).
    ¶ 62   As for the enterprise theory claim, which relies on evidence obtained from Solutions,
    plaintiffs have not provided a valid reason for waiting so long to subpoena the pharmacies.
    Plaintiffs learned of Solutions’s involvement in January 2018 and at Dr. Gorens’s deposition in
    April 2018. Belmar was on one of the forms signed by Lyons. Even if plaintiffs did not want to
    rely on CarolAnn Tutera’s statements that SottoPelle did not manufacture hormone pellets,
    plaintiffs were consistently confronted with information from other sources that indicated a need
    to subpoena the pharmacies. The enterprise theory claim was untimely and could have been
    pursued earlier.
    ¶ 63   Plaintiffs also point to the Donovitz pleading as a reason for not seeking amendment earlier.
    In their opening brief, plaintiffs assert that judicial estoppel binds SottoPelle to their position in
    Donovitz, but plaintiffs appear to retreat from a strict application of judicial estoppel in their reply
    brief and instead state that judicial estoppel is a reason they did not amend the complaint earlier.
    Plaintiffs contend that SottoPelle’s pleading in Donovitz led them to believe that SottoPelle
    designed, manufactured, or sold hormone pellets.
    ¶ 64   The purpose of judicial estoppel is to protect the integrity of the judicial process by
    prohibiting parties from “deliberately changing positions according to the exigencies of the
    moment.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Seymour v. Collins, 
    2015 IL 118432
    , ¶ 36. For
    judicial estoppel to apply, the circuit court must determine whether the party to be estopped has:
    1) taken two positions; 2) that are factually inconsistent; 3) in separate judicial or quasi-judicial
    proceedings; 4) intending for the trier of fact to accept the truth of the facts alleged, and 5)
    succeeded in the first proceeding and received some benefit. Knott v. Woodstock Farm & Fleet,
    -25-
    No. 1-20-0499
    Inc., 
    2017 IL App (2d) 160329
    , ¶ 21. “Judicial estoppel must be proved by clear and convincing
    evidence.” Id. ¶ 22.
    ¶ 65   SottoPelle asserts that plaintiffs waived the judicial estoppel argument because they raised
    it for the first time in their motion to reconsider. See Continental Casualty Co. v. Security
    Insurance Co. of Hartford, 
    279 Ill. App. 3d 815
    , 821 (1996) (declining to consider on review an
    argument that was raised for the first time in a motion to reconsider). Even if the judicial estoppel
    argument were preserved, plaintiffs have not proved by clear and convincing evidence that
    SottoPelle’s positions here and in the Donovitz litigation were factually inconsistent. To review,
    the Donovitz litigation took place in 2012 and involved a breach of an operating agreement for a
    SottoPelle entity in Texas. In part, the pleading filed by Gino Tutera, CarolAnn Tutera, and two
    SottoPelle entities stated that the Tuteras developed a program of bio-identical pellet delivery
    hormone replacement services and products. The pleading further stated that SottoPelle operated
    a dosing website, which used proprietary formulas and calculations for determining the appropriate
    dosage of “its product.” The pleading alleged that Donovitz had “ordered and used substandard,
    compounded pharmaceutical substances in the production of SottoPelle products.”
    ¶ 66   The Donovitz pleading does not explicitly state that hormone pellets were designed,
    manufactured, and sold by SottoPelle. Further, the Donovitz pleading does not define “its product”
    and plaintiffs simply assert, without explanation, that “its product” refers to the hormone pellets
    themselves. Plaintiffs have not shown by clear and convincing evidence that SottoPelle’s positions
    in the two proceedings were factually inconsistent.
    ¶ 67   To the extent that plaintiffs argue, separate from judicial estoppel, that the Donovitz
    pleading led them to believe that SottoPelle designed, manufactured, or sold pellets, that argument
    is not persuasive. Even if the Donovitz pleading suggested that SottoPelle designed or
    -26-
    No. 1-20-0499
    manufactured hormone pellets, upon filing the complaint in this case, plaintiffs in this case were
    presented with information from a variety of sources—SottoPelle’s and Dr. Gorens’s answers to
    discovery, CarolAnn Tutera’s deposition in this case, and Dr. Gorens’s deposition—that SottoPelle
    was not the actual manufacturer and an alternative theory was a more viable option. Again,
    plaintiffs’ counsel acknowledged as much in February and March 2019, but still did not subpoena
    the pharmacies or amend the complaint until months later. The Donovitz counterclaim is not an
    excuse for plaintiffs’ delay.
    ¶ 68   Lastly, plaintiffs rely on Drehle v. Fleming, 
    129 Ill. App. 2d 166
     (1970), to suggest that
    this court allow the amendment as relief for SottoPelle’s obstructive discovery practices. Plaintiffs
    assert that SottoPelle was not responsive to requests about its connection with pharmacies and was
    less than truthful, claiming that “SottoPelle received cash payments and free pellets *** in a
    symbiotic relationship.” As discussed above, the record does not support this conclusion. Further,
    in Drehle, 
    id. at 172
    , the court found that a new trial was required where the defendant failed to
    disclose a witness during discovery. Here, SottoPelle did not prevent plaintiffs from learning about
    the pharmacies. Drehle is not helpful to plaintiffs.
    ¶ 69                                    III. CONCLUSION
    ¶ 70   Although the proposed amendment that alleged an apparent manufacturer claim cured the
    defective pleading, the enterprise theory claim did not. Further, the circuit court properly found
    that the proposed amendment would create prejudice or surprise to SottoPelle, was untimely, and
    there were previous opportunities to amend. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying leave to amend and the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
    ¶ 71   Affirmed.
    -27-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1-20-0049

Filed Date: 6/4/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 5/17/2024