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Vicarious Liability. Old common lawcorporate practice" prohibition means hospital cannot practice medicine or employ MDsBc hospital cannot control MD, thenNo master-servant relationship (respondeat superior)No vicarious liability for MD negligenceSome early cases include nurses. Modern view. C
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1. Hospital Liability #2
2. Vicarious Liability Old common law
“corporate practice” prohibition means hospital cannot practice medicine or employ MDs
Bc hospital cannot control MD, then
No master-servant relationship (respondeat superior)
No vicarious liability for MD negligence
Some early cases include nurses
3. Modern view Courts increasingly exposing hospital to vicarious liability for
MD employees
Independent contractor MDs IF:
apparent agency (common)
nondelegable duty (rare)
4. MDs as Employees(Respondeat superior) Residents & interns
Teaching hospital faculty (salary, etc.)
VA hospital physicians CONTROL: analogy to AIRLINE PILOTS; NURSESCONTROL: analogy to AIRLINE PILOTS; NURSES
5. MDs as Employees - 2 Other MDs call selves independent contractors
Examples: internist, OB/GYN, surgeons
BUT courts are not bound by their characterization
Courts look to substance of relat’p with H.
Multifactor test: RS Agency
key factor = control
Historically, a problem for Plaintiffs
6. Can H “control” MDs? Courts no longer seem to insist
Analogy to airline pilots, etc.
experts, but still employees.
Prime targets are hospital-based MDs
ER group; pathologist, radiologists
No office; often given exclusive contract to provide this service at the hospital
See Adamski
7. Adamski Factors there?
Does court insist on control?
What does court emphasize instead? Adamski: hospital bills and collects and sets raates
hosp. Guarantees minimum salary
no private practice/ noncompete rules
[H supplies equip/nurses]
[any rent??]
but: own insurance [some H’s pay for this]
nonexclusive (could work at other Ers)
skilled
contract says I.C.Adamski: hospital bills and collects and sets raates
hosp. Guarantees minimum salary
no private practice/ noncompete rules
[H supplies equip/nurses]
[any rent??]
but: own insurance [some H’s pay for this]
nonexclusive (could work at other Ers)
skilled
contract says I.C.
8. “Inherent function” Court emphasizes that the ER is an “integral part of the total hospital function”).
Would this apply to radiology?
Surgeons?
NOTE: willingness of courts to extend respondeat superior has not been tested bc Ps have done so well with next theory.
INHERENT could conceivably apply to all in-house MDs, but little caselaw
Adamski=one factor
Beech=determinative
Ps=most success with OSTENSIBLE theory: others have not gone anywhere.
INHERENT could conceivably apply to all in-house MDs, but little caselaw
Adamski=one factor
Beech=determinative
Ps=most success with OSTENSIBLE theory: others have not gone anywhere.
9. Other VL Theories for MD/IC’s 1. Nondelegable duty
relies heavily on state statutes requiring an ER
not applied to other MDs yet
only a couple of cases
3. Ostensible agency: by far most popular NONDELEGABLE; based in part on state ER statutes, so not likely to apply to other MDs
NONDELEGABLE; based in part on state ER statutes, so not likely to apply to other MDs
10. Ostensible Agency(Apparent Agency) Representation by Hospital
that MD is a hospital employee
Reliance by Patient
RS of Agency: reliance on representation of employment
RS of Tort: reliance on skill of servant TORT § 429 (Ostensible)
AGENCY § 267 (Apparent)TORT § 429 (Ostensible)
AGENCY § 267 (Apparent)
11. Representation of employment Traditionally, look for evidence of Hospital holding out MD as Employee.
Ads: “our team of MDs is the best in town”
MDs wear hospital ID badges, scrubs
Emerging trend:
hospital holds itself out as provider
“in an emergency, think Regional”
patients selects hospital; it provides the MDs; must back them up as if employees.
HOLDS OUT: used to be D held Agent out as its employee
subtle shift in language now--holds SELF out as provider
Adamski uses both concepts @ 487HOLDS OUT: used to be D held Agent out as its employee
subtle shift in language now--holds SELF out as provider
Adamski uses both concepts @ 487
12. Adamski (487)=both formulations “a jury could find that the emergency room personnel were “held out” as employees of the the Hospital.”
“Tacoma General held itself out as providing emergency care services to the public”
Latter usage is growing
13. “Holds Itself Out” Easiest case: ER physicians
hospital markets ER directly to consumers
they select Hospital, not physician
other HOSPITAL-BASED MDs?
radiologists, anesthesiologists, pathologists
MDs chosen by patient beforehand?
family orthopedic surgeon; negl. Surgery at H.
Care provided off premises by MD met at H Not the last 2 so far.Not the last 2 so far.
14. 2d Element: Reliance 3 definitions
1. RS Agency: detrimental reliance on representation of employment status
strict interpretation: P must prove he would have gone elsewhere if aware that D was not an employee.
Missouri=Porter (8th Cir.)
relaxed interpretation: sufficient if services were “accepted in reasonable belief” that MD is servant.
Adamski? Adamski???
Seems to be enough if P ASSUMED that D was an employee, even if not clear that he would have gone elsewhere--de facto switch to RS TORTs view.Adamski???
Seems to be enough if P ASSUMED that D was an employee, even if not clear that he would have gone elsewhere--de facto switch to RS TORTs view.
15. Reliance - 2 2. RS Tort: reliance on skill of agent
always present!
3. Trend: did P “look to” hospital for care (rather than individual MD).
patients selects hospital; it provides the MDs
note overlap with “hold out” element
Yes: ER and other hospital-based
MDs independently chosen by P?
LOOK TO? Likely to be present if “hold out” is present.
LOOK TO? Likely to be present if “hold out” is present.
16. Recap Hornbook: liability for indep contractors if
Representation of agency and
Reliance (on representation or skill)
Trend: hospital meets this test if
“holds itself out as provider” and
P “looks to hospital”, rather than MD, for care
Prime target: hospital-based MDs
17. Can Hospital Avoid? Eliminate misunderstanding about agency
Clearly state in advertisements?
Post a notice at ER?
Rarely done (bad PR)
Theoretically should suffice
BUT I have doubts:
courts have effectively created a new kind of vicarious liability for hospitals
where Hospital is the provider that the customer “looks to,” not the MD [hold out/look to=vic] ER Poster =Too late? (P already relied by going there?)
HOLD OUT=FREE-STANDING? (even if no representation re employment status).
Esp for ER!!!! (effectively nondelegable duty)
But one court did recently let a H off [where? Ala?]ER Poster =Too late? (P already relied by going there?)
HOLD OUT=FREE-STANDING? (even if no representation re employment status).
Esp for ER!!!! (effectively nondelegable duty)
But one court did recently let a H off [where? Ala?]
18. Fair to stretch Ost.Authority? Stretch?
No longer based on misrepresentation causing detrimental reliance
Yet, still “estopping” Hospital to deny m-s
Fair?
Backdoor route to respondeat superior
H selects MDs; ought to stand behind them.
Like Walmart or American Airlines
19. Vicarious Liability Rationales Provides are responsible, solvent party
Gives “employer” incentive to supervise and maximize quality.
Employer profits from work done by its “employees”--fair to take responsibility.
Applicable to Hospital-based MDs?
Probably
Better to be honest & debate openly.
20. Result Modest form of enterprise liability
limited to hospital-based employees
may be avoidable with disclaimers (?)
Scholars advocate making H responsible for all care within the facility
true enterprise liability
courts lack a common law vehicle to get there?
can’t stretch m-s or ostensible that far??
21. Recap of H Vicarious 1. Respondeat superior
multifactorial test
the more hospital control over MD the better for the plaintiff
“inherent function” test helps in some states
2. Nondelegable duty
3. Ostensible agency:
by far most successful with the courts NONDELEGABLE; based in part on state ER statutes, so not likely to apply to other MDs
NONDELEGABLE; based in part on state ER statutes, so not likely to apply to other MDs
22. Consequences of Vicarious Hospital is jointly liable with MD if MD is negligent
Hospital can seek indemnification from MD
MD-hospital contract can alter this and decide who is supposed to buy the malpractice insurance