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      "WALTERS, J., concurs.",
      "SUTIN, J., concurs in result."
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    "parties": [
      "Ivy W. DESSAUER, Personal Representative, Plaintiff, v. MEMORIAL GENERAL HOSPITAL and Glorious Bourque, Defendants and Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Ronald J. Malleis, Third-Party Defendant-Appellee."
    ],
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      {
        "text": "OPINION\nWOOD, Judge.\nThe personal representative of the Estate of Dessauer sought damages for wrongful death on the basis of negligence in administering a dosage of medication. The defendants were the Hospital (Memorial General Hospital) and the Nurse (Bourque), who was an employee of the Hospital. The Hospital and the Nurse filed third-party complaints against the Doctor (Malleis). The third-party claims alleged the Doctor was negligent in his care and treatment of Dessauer, and was negligent in his supervision of the Nurse. The third-party claims sought either contribution or indemnity from the Doctor. Among the defenses to the third-party complaints was the contention that negligence of each of the third-party plaintiffs was the sole cause of Dessauer\u2019s death. The Estate\u2019s suit against the Hospital and the Nurse was settled for $225,000.00, and a joint tortfeasor release was executed. The third-party contribution and indemnity claims were tried, and the jury\u2019s answers to interrogatories were to the effect that neither of the third-party plaintiffs should recover against the Doctor. The Hospital and the Nurse appeal. We (1) answer two issues summarily and discuss (2) the question of a general verdict, and (3) a refused instruction based on vicarious liability of the Doctor.\nIssues Answered Summarily\n(a) The trial court instructed the jury on the theories of negligence asserted against the Doctor. However, it refused requested instructions which would have told the jury that the Hospital and the Nurse sought either indemnification of the entire $225,000.00, or contribution of one-half of that amount. The refusal of these requested instructions was not error for two reasons. First, as we point out in discussing the issue involving vicarious liability, the claims of the Hospital and of the Nurse must be distinguished. The refused instructions failed to make any distinction between the difference in the relationship of the Hospital and of the Nurse to the Doctor and, in the form requested, they were incomplete statements of the law which were properly refused. Panhandle Irrigation, Inc. v. Bates, 78 N.M. 706, 437 P.2d 705 (1968). Second, the jury\u2019s answers to interrogatories determined the rights of both the Hospital and the Nurse to contribution and indemnity; if the answers had determined a right to recovery by either the Hospital or the Nurse, the amounts would have been a simple matter of accounting. If the jury should have been instructed on the facts of the joint tortfeasor settlement, a point we do not decide, the Hospital and the Nurse were not prejudiced because an accounting could have been achieved by utilization of the jury\u2019s answers. Bailey v. Jeffries-Eaves, Inc., 76 N.M. 278, 414 P.2d 503 (1966).\n(b) The trial court instructed the jury, in accordance with the second paragraph of U.J.I. Civ. 8.1, that the only way it could decide whether the Doctor was negligent was \u201cfrom evidence presented in this trial by physicians and surgeons testifying as expert witnesses.\u201d The Hospital and the Nurse assert that this was not a case for limiting the testimony to expert witnesses; rather, that the circumstances of this case permit application of the \u201ccommon knowledge\u201d exemption. See Gerety v. Demers, 92 N.M. 396, 589 P.2d 180 (1978). We disagree. This case involved emergency treatment. The Hospital and the Nurse rely on one aspect of the matter in asserting applicability of the common knowledge exemption. Singling out one aspect would have been improper because it would have ignored the fact of emergency treatment and distorted the circumstances under which an overdose of the medicine was administered. There was no error in requiring the Doctor\u2019s asserted negligence to be determined by expert testimony.\nGeneral Verdict\nBecause the issues being tried involved contribution and indemnity claims of two parties, the trial court was of the view that the best procedure would be by interrogatories which, when answered, would amount to a special verdict. Accordingly, no \u201cgeneral verdict\u201d in the traditional sense was submitted to the jury.\nFollowing are the pertinent interrogatories, and the answers thereto:\nINTERROGATORY NO. 1: Was Dr. Ronald J. Malleis negligent? Answer \u2014No.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 3: Was Glorious Bourque negligent? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 4: \u2022 If the answer to Interrogatory No. 3 is \u201cyes\u201d, was the negligence a proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer? Answer \u2014Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 5. If the answers to Interrogatories Nos. 3 and 4 are \u201cyes\u201d, was Memorial General Hospital negligent apart from the negligence of Glorious Bourque? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 6: If the answer to Interrogatory No. 5 is \u201cyes\u201d, was the hospital\u2019s negligence a proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nThe Hospital and the Nurse do not claim that the above answers were improper under the evidence. Nor do they claim that the answers would not have disposed of the case if there had been a general verdict. The contention is that the answers have no legal effect because there was no general verdict.\nThe Hospital and the Nurse rely on R.Civ. Proc. 49, which reads:\nIn civil cases, the court shall at the request of either party, in addition to the general verdict, direct the jury to find upon particular questions of fact, to be stated in writing by the party requesting the same. When the special finding of facts is inconsistent with the general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court shall give judgment accordingly.\nThis rule is very similar to the statute enacted by Laws 1889, ch. 45. This statute is quoted in Walker v. N. M. & So. Pac. R\u2019y Co., 7 N.M. 282, 34 P. 43 (1893), and the United States Supreme Court upheld the statute, against constitutional attack, at 165 U.S. 593, 17 S.Ct. 421, 41 L.Ed. 837 (1897).\nRule of Civ.Proc. 49 refers to a general verdict and \u201cspecial findings\u201d, also known as special interrogatories. A third category is the special verdict, which the trial court utilized in this case.\nThe United States Supreme Court opinion in Walker v. Southern Pacific Railroad, supra, distinguished between general verdicts and special verdicts as follows:\nNow a general verdict embodies both the law and the facts. The jury, taking the law as given by the court, apply that law to the facts as they find them to be and express their conclusions in the verdict. . . . Beyond this, it was not infrequent to ask from the jury a special rather than a general verdict, that is, instead of a verdict for or against the plaintiff or defendant embodying in a single declaration the whole conclusion of the trial, one which found specially upon the various facts in issue, leaving to the court the subsequent duty of determining upon such facts the relief which the law awarded to the respective parties.\nThe distinction between a special verdict, and special interrogatories with a general verdict, is stated in Childress v. Lake Erie & W. R. Co., 182 Ind. 251, 105 N.E. 467 (1914):\nThere is, however\u2014\n\u201ca manifest difference between a special verdict and a finding of the facts in answer to interrogatories propounded to the jury. A special verdict is in lieu of a general verdict, and its design is to exhibit all the legitimate facts and leave the legal conclusions entirely to the court. Findings of fact in answer to interrogatories do not dispense with the general verdict. A special verdict covers all the issues in the case, while an answer to a special interrogatory may respond to but a single inquiry pertaining merely to one issue essential to the general verdict.\u201d Words and Phrases, vol. 7, p. 6596; Morbey v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 116 Iowa 84-89, 89 N.W. 105, 107.\nIf a jury finds on special questions of fact in answer to interrogatories, without a general verdict, the finding is of no force, and the court cannot give to the special finding any weight unless they are sufficiently numerous and explicit to leave nothing for the court to do but to determine questions of law. If they affirmatively show the existence of every fact necessary to entitle plaintiff to a recovery and the nonexistence of every defense presented under the issues, or if they show as a matter of law that a valid defense has been established by the evidence, they may then constitute a special verdict.\nThe distinction made in Childress, supra, was recognized in Claymore v. City of Albuquerque, (Ct.App.) Nos. 4804/4805, filed December 9, 1980 (N.M.StB.Bull. Vol. 20 at 75). However, the distinction seems not to have been recognized in other decisions. Bryan v. Phillips, 70 N.M. 1, 369 P.2d 37 (1962), is a special interrogatory situation consistent with the Childress distinction. Bryant v. H. B. Lynn Drilling Corporation, 65 N.M. 177, 334 P.2d 707 (1959), seems to use special interrogatories and special verdict as interchangeable terms, contrary to Childress. The questions answered in Saavedra v. City of Albuquerque, 65 N.M. 379, 338 P.2d 110 (1959), amounted to a special verdict although referred to as special interrogatories.\nSaavedra answers the question whether the jury\u2019s answers in this case are sustainable as a special verdict. It states:\n[T]he only provision for submitting special interrogatories to a jury is when they are accompanied by a general verdict, unless the latter is waived or it is so submitted by consent.\nCareful consideration has been given the contention of the defendant that what was done here amounted to a submission on a special verdict, and that such is not prohibited under our rules, but our rule 49 is too limited to allow such construction. Reversible error was committed by the action taken in this case over the objection of the claimant as he was entitled to a general verdict as a matter of right when he asked for it. Such action must be held to have been prejudicial, and this in the face of the negative answer to interrogatory No. 2, supra.\nBecause of Saavedra, supra, we cannot uphold the jury\u2019s answers in this case as a special verdict, despite Judge Sutin\u2019s apparent willingness to disregard the prohibition against special verdicts. Because there was no traditional general verdict, as explained in Walker v. N. M. & So. Pac. R\u2019y Co., supra, the question is whether the jury\u2019s answers were the equivalent of a general verdict. We particularly consider the answer to Interrogatory No. 1. If that answer was, in fact, the equivalent of a general verdict, the absence of a verdict form labeled \u201cGeneral Verdict\u201d does not matter. Brannin v. Bremen, 2 N.M. (Gild.) 40 (1880).\nThe Hospital and the Nurse requested that three \u201cGeneral Verdict\u201d forms be submitted to the jury. The first would have awarded $225,000.00 to the Hospital and the Nurse on a theory of indemnity. The second would have awarded $112,500.00 to the Hospital and the Nurse on a theory of contribution. As we point out in discussing the issue involving vicarious liability, the claims of the Hospital and the Nurse must be distinguished. Because the verdict forms failed to make that distinction, they were properly refused.\nThe third general verdict form submitted by the Hospital and the Nurse provided: \u201cWe find that the Defendant [Doctor] was free from any negligence . . . . \u201d The answer to Interrogatory No. 1 said the same thing. This verdict form went on to state: \u201cPlaintiffs are not entitled to recover any sum.\u201d Such is the legal effect of the jury\u2019s answer; not being negligent, the Doctor was not liable for either contribution or indemnity as an alleged tortfeasor. See Standhardt v. Flintkote Company, 84 N.M. 796, 508 P.2d 1283 (1973).\nBecause the jury\u2019s answer was determinative of the right of the Hospital and the Nurse to recover damages from the Doctor as an alleged tortfeasor, that answer is the equivalent of, and is to be given effect as, a general verdict. Smith v. Gizzi, 564 P.2d 1009 (Okl.1977). This result is not contrary to Saavedra, supra, which held that prejudice resulted from the absence of a general verdict; here we have a general verdict.\nAlthough the foregoing disposes of this point, we recommend to the Supreme Court a change in R.Civ.Proc. 49 to permit special verdicts. We do so because (1) an Order of the Supreme Court, dated March 30, 1981, approves special verdicts in comparative negligence cases, and (2) where the jury\u2019s answers dispose of a party\u2019s right to recover, good judicial administration is not furthered by disputes over the label to be applied to those answers.\nVicarious Liability\nConsistent with the third-party claims of the Hospital and the Nurse against the Doctor, the requested instructions and verdicts which were refused, and the instructions and interrogatories submitted to the jury were based on negligence on the part of the Doctor. The jury\u2019s answers established that the Doctor was not negligent. Negligence on the part of the Doctor is not involved in this point.\nThe Hospital and the Nurse requested an instruction which was adopted by the Supreme Court for use beginning April 1, 1981. The heading of U.J.I. Civ. 11.14 is: \u201cLiability of Operating Surgeon \u2014 Agency (Captain of Ship Doctrine)\u201d. This heading resulted in extensive discussion in the briefs of the special agency rule called \u201cCaptain of the Ship\u201d. This label was recognized, at the oral argument, to be inappropriate and misleading because the contents of the instruction did not contain this special agency rule. See Sparger v. Worley Hospital, Inc., 547 S.W.2d 582 (Tex.1977). We point this out to emphasize that the requested instruction does not involve the Captain of the Ship Doctrine.\nThe instruction requested read:\nA doctor who has the right to control and supervise the activity of assistants, nurses and others, is responsible for negligent acts or omissions of any such person during specific treatment under the immediate and direct control and supervision of the doctor.\nThe Hospital and the Nurse contend this instruction is no more than the borrowed servant or special employee doctrine approved in Dunham v. Walker, 60 N.M. 143, 288 P.2d 684 (1955). The claim is that this doctrine also applies in situations involving doctors, Sparger v. Worley Hospital, Inc., and the trial court erred in refusing this requested instruction.\nIt is unnecessary to decide whether the borrowed servant doctrine applies in medical malpractice cases where an injured plaintiff is seeking its application. We assume that it does apply. This, however, is not a case where an injured party is seeking its application; the Estate has settled its claims against the Hospital and the Nurse. This case involves contribution and indemnity. Whether a borrowed servant instruction would have been appropriate depends upon the nature of the liability stated in the requested instruction, and the application of contribution and indemnity law to that liability.\nThe requested instruction, quoted above, would make the Doctor liable for the negligence of the Nurse in this case. Liability to an injured party may be imposed by the doctrine of respondeat superior. Romero v. Shelton, 70 N.M. 425, 374 P.2d 301 (1962). Liability under this doctrine is a form of vicarious liability. When vicarious liability is imposed upon the master (in this case, the Doctor), the liability \u201chas nothing to do with fault\u201d and, whatever the rationalization, seems to be imposed in order to assist an injured person to collect any damage award from a deep pocket. James, Vicarious Liability, 28 Tul.L.Rev. 161 (1954).\nThe fact that the Doctor could be held vicariously liable to the injured party for the Nurse\u2019s negligence requires that the claim of the Hospital and the Nurse be distinguished.\nThe claims were for contribution and indemnity. The distinction between these claims must also be made. \u201c[T]he difference between indemnity and contribution in cases between persons liable for an injury to another is that, with indemnity the right . . . enforces a duty on the primary wrongdoer to respond for all damages; with contribution, an obligation is imposed by law upon one joint tortfeasor to contribute his share to the discharge of the common liability.\u201d Rio Grande Gas Company v. Stahmann Farms, Inc., 80 N.M. 432, 457 P.2d 364 (1969). Indemnity is not allowed, however, when the parties are in pari delicto. Standhardt v. Flintkote Company, supra; Harmon v. Farmers Market Food Store, 84 N.M. 80, 499 P.2d 1002 (Ct.App.1972). Contribution is not allowed unless the party seeking contribution has paid more than its pro rata share. Section 41-3-2(B), N.M.S. A.1978; Commercial U. Assur. v. Western Farm Bur. Ins., 93 N.M. 507, 601 P.2d 1203 (1979). The concepts of contribution and indemnity are \u201cdeeply rooted in the principles of equity, fair play and justice.\u201d Aalco Mfg. Co. v. City of Espanola, 95 N.M. 66, 618 P.2d 1230 (1980).\nThe Nurse\nA common example of indemnity is \u201cwhere a blameless employer recovers from a negligent employee, after the employer has been held liable to the injured third person upon the theory of respondeat superior.\u201d Rio Grande Gas Company v. Stahmann Farms, Inc.; see Employers\u2019 Fire Insurance Company v. Welch, 78 N.M. 494, 433 P.2d 79 (1967). Here we have the converse. The Nurse, who settled the Estate\u2019s liability claim against her, seeks indemnification from the Doctor on the basis of respondeat superior. Being the primary wrongdoer, she had no claim for indemnification. Rio Grande Gas Company v. Stahmann Farms, Inc., supra; 1 Mechem on Agency \u00a7 1608 (2d ed. 1914); see Prosser, Law of Torts \u00a7 51 (4th ed. 1971).\nNor can the Nurse obtain contribution from the Doctor because the Doctor\u2019s liability, as a tortfeasor, see \u00a7 41-3-1, N.M. S.A.1978, under respondeat superior, is based on the Nurse\u2019s negligence. Melichar v. Frank, 78 S.D. 58, 98 N.W.2d 345 (1959), approved the following from a Uniform Laws publication: \u201c \u2018Where a master is vicariously liable for the tort of his servant, the servant has no possible claim to contribution from the master ....\u2019\u201d If the negligence of the Nurse were eliminated, the Doctor would not be liable at all. It is not equitable to require the Doctor to contribute to the Nurse when the contribution would be based on the Nurse\u2019s negligence. Larsen v. Minneapolis Gas Company, 282 Minn. 135, 163 N.W.2d 755 (1968); see Aalco Mfg. Co. v. City of Espanola, supra. The Nurse had no claim for contribution from the Doctor.\nThe law does not grant to the servant the same right given to the party injured by the servant\u2019s negligence. As we have already noted, the doctrine of vicarious liability developed to provide recovery to plaintiffs injured by servants who (1) were about their masters\u2019 business, and (2) were unable to respond in damages themselves. The combination of those circumstances produced what Prosser calls \u201ca rule of policy, a deliberate allocation of a risk\u201d because \u201cit is just that he [the master], rather than the innocent injured plaintiff, should bear [losses caused by the torts of servants] . . . . \u201d Prosser, supra, \u00a7 69 at 459. Nevertheless, Prosser also points out in his treatise, \u00a7 51 at 311, that \u201cthere may be indemnity in favor of one who is held responsible solely by imputation of law because of his relation to the actual wrongdoer, as where an employer is vicariously liable for the tort of a servant . . . . \u201d\nIf the master may obtain indemnity from a servant, for whose tort the master has responded in damages, it is totally illogical to think the servant may claim a right to contribution or indemnity from the innocent master once the servant has paid his liability to the injured plaintiff. The doctrine of vicarious liability was fashioned to provide a remedy to the innocent plaintiff, not to furnish a windfall to a solvent wrongdoer.\nThe Hospital\nIn considering the Hospital\u2019s claims, we reiterate that no negligence of the Doctor is involved; the Hospital\u2019s claims against the Doctor are based on his assumed vicarious liability for the Nurse\u2019s negligence. The Doctor cannot be liable to the Hospital unless the Nurse was liable to the Hospital. See U.J.I. Civ. 4.3 and 4.6. Unless the Hospital has a claim against the Nurse, it has no claim against the Doctor. Larsen v. Minneapolis Gas Company, supra.\nAt the time the requested instruction was refused, the Doctor was claiming that both the Hospital and the Nurse were negligent; this claim was subsequently established by the jury\u2019s answers to the interrogatories. Indemnity is allowed against the primary wrongdoer and not against a tortfeasor in pari delicto. Standhardt v. Flintkote Company, supra; Harmon v. Farmers Market Food Store, supra. The Hospital had no indemnity claim against the Nurse as a joint tortfeasor; the Hospital made no claim at the trial that, as between the Hospital and the Nurse, the Nurse was the primary wrongdoer. The Hospital\u2019s allegations being insufficient to show an indemnity claim against the Nurse, the Hospital\u2019s indemnity claim against the Doctor was also insufficient.\nThe Hospital\u2019s contribution claim against the Doctor was based on the negligence of the Nurse. Similarly to the indemnity claim, the Hospital made no claim at the trial that the Nurse was a joint tortfeasor with the Hospital. However, because the jury\u2019s answers to interrogatories subsequently established that the Hospital and the Nurse were joint tortfeasors, we assume that at the time the instruction was refused, a contribution claim against the Doctor, on the basis of the Nurse\u2019s negligence, was before the trial court. Such a claim would be for the Nurse to contribute to the Hospital her pro rata share; or, stated another way, that the Hospital had contributed more than its pro rata share. Section 41-3-2(B), supra; Commercial U. Assur. v. Western Farm Bur. Ins., supra. The record shows that the Hospital and the Nurse had paid $225,000.00 to the Estate, but there is nothing to show which of the two made the payment. Nor is there a claim that the Nurse\u2019s part of the $225,-000.00 was less than her pro rata share. The Doctor, if liable under any theory, would be in the same position as the Nurse. Larsen v. Minneapolis Gas Company, supra. Thus, the Hospital\u2019s contribution claim against the Doctor was also insufficient to support a vicarious liability instruction, directed to the Doctor, at the time the instruction was refused.\nNo instruction told the jury that the Doctor could be held liable for the Nurse\u2019s negligence. There being a failure to instruct, the Hospital was required to tender \u201ca correct instruction\u201d. R.Civ.Proc. 51(1). An incorrect instruction is properly refused. Panhandle Irrigation, Inc. v. Bates, supra. The requested instruction was properly refused because it was incorrect. It was incorrect because (1) it failed to distinguish between the claims of the Hospital and the Nurse; (2) it failed to distinguish between contribution and indemnity; and (3) the instruction was inapplicable, in this case, under all of the distinctions.\nThe judgment of the trial court is affirmed.\nThe Hospital and the Nurse are to bear their appellate cost.\nIT IS SO ORDERED.\nWALTERS, J., concurs.\nSUTIN, J., concurs in result.",
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      {
        "text": "SUTIN, Judge.\nI concur in the result.\nINTRODUCTION\nJudge Wood\u2019s opinion, concurred in by Judge Walters, replaced mine because our views, with respect to the important issues raised by plaintiffs, differ, a commonplace. Points raised in this appeal should be answered perspicaciously to advise the parties, the bench and bar of the basis for the result reached.\nWith all due deference, Judge Wood did not set forth the issues nor explain their significance. Applicable law has been misplaced. Two crucial issues have been erroneously resolved; (1) The general verdict vs. special verdict as applied to Rule 49 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. If Judge Wood\u2019s opinion remains the law, except in comparative negligence cases, the concept of a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d has been outlawed in New Mexico. (2) The doctor-nurse relationship in treatment of patients and the liability of hospital-nurse-doctor to one another in the treatment of a patient. These issues were not adequately discussed. The resolution of this important, decisive issue, is one of the foremost problems in New Mexico and the country.\nThe failure to resolve these issues with certainty, leaves them in abeyance. To decide issues summarily, to fail an answer to crucial issues, to resolve issues vaguely and technically, to erroneously state the law to escape a harsh result, contributes nothing to judicial law. It demeans the efficacy of the opinion. As Judge Frank, dissenting, said in United States v. Antonelli Fireworks Co., 155 F.2d 631, 661 (2d Cir. 1946):\nThe practice of this court \u2014 recalling the bitter tear shed by the Walrus as he ate oysters \u2014 breeds a deplorably cynical attitude toward the judiciary.\nMy opinion follows:\nIvy W. Dessauer, as personal representative of the estate of Wiley J. Dessauer, filed her Complaint against Memorial General Hospital and its employee Glorious Bourque, alleging defendants\u2019 negligence and that such negligence was the proximate cause of the death of decedent. Defendants filed Third Party Complaints against Dr. Ronald J. Malleis alleging negligence and claiming that his liability was that of a joint tortfeasor; it was further alleged that Dr. Malleis was the sole proximate cause of the death of the decedent and should be held liable for damages found due to plaintiff. At the time of trial, a Stipulation and Release was entered into between plaintiff Dessauer and defendants. Pursuant to the terms of the Release, Dr. Malleis was also released from liability by Dessauer.\nThe facts concerning the incident which formed the basis for the lawsuit are straightforward. The deceased was admitted to the Hospital emergency room complaining of chest pains. The nurse on duty was Glorious Bourque, an obstetrical specialty nurse, who was transferred to emergency room duty. Dr. Malleis was called to the Hospital, made the tentative diagnosis that the patient was having an acute myocardial infarction, and ordered that fifty (50) milligrams of Lidocaine be administered to the patient. The nurse erroneously injected the wrong vial which resulted in decedent receiving eight hundred (800) milligrams of Lidocaine. The patient suffered a grand mal seizure and had a cardiac respiratory arrest; resuscitation was undertaken and a relatively normal heartbeat established. However, a subsequent diagnosis of irreversible brain damage was made, life support was discontinued, and the patient died.\nThe action was tried upon the Third Party Complaint. The trial court designated the Hospital and Glorious Bourque as plaintiffs and Dr. Malleis as defendant. The case was submitted upon six \u201cInterrogatories to the Jury,\u201d unaccompanied by a general verdict. In accordance with the answers returned by the jury, judgment was entered for defendant and plaintiffs appeal. We should affirm.\nPlaintiffs raise four points in this appeal, each of which will be discussed seriatim.\nA. The submission of interrogatories not accompanied by a general verdict was not erroneous.\nPlaintiffs claim that the trial court erred in submission of the case to the jury on interrogatories unaccompanied by a general verdict and in the court\u2019s statement of issues for decision.\n1. The forms of verdicts tendered by plaintiffs were erroneous.\nThe trial court submitted six interrogatories to the jury but refused to submit the following three verdicts requested by plaintiffs:\n(1) VERDICT\nWe find that the Plaintiffs and the Defendant are jointly guilty of negligence which was the proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer and Plaintiffs are entitled to contribution from the Defendant in the amount of $112,500.00.\n(2) VERDICT\nWe find that the Defendant was free from any negligence which was the proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer and that the negligence of the Plaintiffs herein was the proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer and Plaintiffs are not entitled to recover any sum.\n(3) VERDICT\nWe find that the Defendant was negligent and was the primary wrongdoer and that such negligence was the proximate cause of Wiley J. Dessauer\u2019s death and the Plaintiffs are entitled to indemnification from the Defendant in the amount of $225,000.00.\n\u201cIn drawing verdict forms care must be taken to ensure that they cover every possible finding the jury may make under the evidence from the point of view of each plaintiff and each defendant. Illinois Pattern Jury Instructions, p. 201. These forms of verdict do not.\u201d Eggimann v. Wise, 41 Ill.App.2d 471, 191 N.E.2d 425, 432 (1963); McDrummond v. Montgomery Elevator Company, 97 Idaho 679, 551 P.2d 966 (1976).\nThe first requested verdict form on contribution was erroneous. It was not a general verdict form required under UJI 18.9, entitled Uniform Contribution Among Joint Tort-Feasors Act. Under Directions For Use, \u201cThis form of verdict is to be used when Instruction UJI 14.30 is applicable.\u201d Plaintiffs did not request UJI 14.30 which pertains to \u201cUniform Contribution Among Joint Tort-Feasors Act Where Settlement Is Made With One Of The Several Defendants.\u201d This instruction could have been adapted for use in the instant case. The first requested verdict form was also erroneous because it treated the Hospital and Glorious Bourque, the nurse, as one party entitled to a 50% recovery. The evidence raised issues of active negligence on the part of both the Hospital and the nurse. No provision was made in the requested verdict form for three tort-feasors \u2014 hospital, nurse, doctor.\nThe third requested verdict form on indemnity was erroneous. Based upon the evidence, the Hospital and Bourque were not entitled to indemnification.\nTo have submitted the second requested verdict form alone would have been reversible error. Eggimann, supra; McDrummond, supra. To have submitted the three requested verdict forms would have been reversible error.\nThe requested verdict forms were erroneous.\n2. Rule 49 of the Rules of Civil Procedure is not applicable.\nThe trial court, sua sponte, submitted six interrogatories to the jury. No request was made by plaintiffs or defendant. In fact, they objected. Error is claimed for failure of the trial court to submit a general verdict along with the interrogatories, based primarily on Rule 49 of the Rules of Civil Procedure and Saavedra v. City of Albuquerque, 65 N.M. 379, 338 P.2d 110 (1959).\nRule 49 of the Rules of Civil Procedure reads:\nIn civil cases, the court shall at the request of either party, in addition to the general verdict, direct the jury to find upon particular questions of fact, to be stated in writing by the party requesting the same. When the special finding of facts is inconsistent with the general verdict, the former shall control the latter, and the court shall give judgment accordingly. [Emphasis added.]\nWe should look askant at this rule in effect since territorial days. It mandates the submission of questions of fact when requested, yet is judicially declared to be within the discretion of the trial court. The word \u201cshall\u201d has been translated to mean \u201cmay\u201d in the application of the rule. Rule 49 should be amended to read that \u201cthe court may at the request of either party . . . direct the jury to find upon particular questions of fact.\u201d Otherwise \u201cshall\u201d and \u201cmay\u201d will remain a thorn in the side of \u00a7 12-2-2(1), N.M.S.A.1978 wherein \u201cshall\u201d is declared to be mandatory and \u201cmay\u201d permissive.\nRule 49 becomes applicable when either party requests the trial court \u201cto direct the jury to find upon particular questions of fact.\u201d In the instant case, none of the parties made a request of the trial court. Rule 49 is not applicable. Plaintiffs mistakenly rely upon Rule 49.\nJudge Wood agrees with plaintiffs that Rule 49 is applicable and states:\nBecause of Saavedra, supra, we cannot uphold the jury\u2019s answers in this case as a special verdict. . . .\nJudge Wood relied on Smith v. Gizzi, 564 P.2d 1009 (Okl.1977) to support the position that answers to interrogatories in the instant case were in effect a general verdict in compliance with Saavedra and Rule 49. To follow Judge Wood\u2019s attempt to escape Saavedra, is to force a reversal of this case, not an affirmance, because Saavedra specifically rejected Oklahoma law.\nI join with Justice Clark who opened a dissent in Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S.Ct. 1602, 16 L.Ed.2d 694 (1946) as follows:\nThe ipse dixit of the majority has no support in our case.\n\u201cIpse dixit\u201d statements of the law have caused confusion and explanation through the course of New Mexico judicial history. State v. Alderette, 86 N.M. 600, 608, 526 P.2d 194 (Ct.App. 1974), Sutin, J., dissenting.\nIn Saavedra, the employer claimed that special interrogatories submitted to the jury amounted to a special verdict. The court said:\n[B]ut our Rule 49 is too limited to allow such construction. . . . [Emphasis added.] [65 N.M. 382, 338 P.2d 110.]\n\u201cToo limited to allow such construction\u201d means that we cannot construe Rule 49 to include a special verdict because it is confined within limits to such a degree as to be regrettable. When a party relies upon Rule 49 in the district court, the party cannot change horses in an appeal and seek relief by way of special verdict. Saavedra did not say that \u201cspecial verdict\u201d is forbidden, prohibited, cannot be used, or does not allow the use of \u201cspecial verdict,\u201d in the trial of a case. Neither did it deny a district court the right to seek a special verdict sua sponte. By judicial interpretation of Rule 49, it lacks common sense to say the Supreme Court intended so horrendous a result. To read into Rule 49 that \u201cspecial verdicts are outlawed in New Mexico,\u201d which creates \u201ca horse of a different color,\u201d is like calling a black horse a white horse or like calling an eagle a humming bird.\nBy omission of \u201cspecial verdict\u201d from Rule 49, the Supreme Court simply discouraged use of special interrogatories alone rather than special interrogatories accompanied by a general verdict. Rule 49 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which includes the \u201cspecial verdict,\u201d was designed to encourage the use of the special verdict. Keller v. Brooklyn Bus Corporation, 128 F.2d 510 (2d Cir. 1942), Frank, J., dissenting.\n3. Any right to have general verdicts submitted was waived.\nEven though Rule 49 be applicable, plaintiffs waived their right to submission of a general verdict to the jury. In Saavedra, interrogatories were submitted to the jury unaccompanied by a general verdict. The claimant objected. The court said:\nBecause of the long established practice of submitting these compensation cases to a jury on special interrogatories alone, we have . . . reluctantly reached the conclusion that the only provision for submitting special interrogatories to a jury is when they are accompanied by a general verdict, unless the latter is waived or it is so submitted by consent. [Emphasis added.] [65 N.M. 382, 338 P.2d 110.]\nThe Hospital objected only to the court\u2019s refusal to submit the Hospital\u2019s requested verdicts in lieu of interrogatories. No request for proper general verdicts were made and denied. No objection having been made for failure of the court to submit proper general verdicts, plaintiffs waived any right to have proper general verdicts submitted to the jury along with questions of fact. Neither is it an issue that can be raised for the first time in this appeal.\nPlaintiffs waived the giving of a general verdict. This waiver avoided the application of Saavedra.\n4. Saavedra has been interpreted to include a special verdict.\nIn Wright v. Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway Co., 64 N.M. 29, 37, 323 P.2d 286 (1958), the Supreme Court said:\n[I]t is within the sound discretion of the trial judge, based upon the facts and circumstances involved in the particular case, to determine whether the matter shall be submitted to the jury on general verdicts of special interrogatories or both. .. . [Emphasis added.]\nOne year later, in 1959, Saavedra appeared. In arriving at its \u201creluctant\u201d conclusion, Saavedra did not mention Wright, supra. However, Saavedra stands alone in New Mexico. Under Rule 49, it was followed in the appellate courts of Illinois, Haywood v. Swift and Company, 53 Ill.App.2d 179, 202 N.E.2d 880 (1964); Sangster v. Van Heck, 41 Ill.App.3d 5, 353 N.E.2d 192 (1976) until Sangster, on review, was reversed by the Supreme Court, Sangster v. Van Heck, 7 Ill.Dec. 92, 67 Ill.2d 96, 364 N.E.2d 79 (1977). One interrogatory was submitted to the jury on the contributory negligence of Billy Sangster. The jury answered \u201cyes\u201d but did not sign a general verdict. Based solely on the affirmative answer to the special interrogatory, judgment was entered for defendant. The Court of Appeals- reversed. In reversing the Court of Appeals and affirming the trial court, the Supreme Court said:\nThere is, in our judgment, no reasonable doubt as to the intent of the jurors in this case. They were clearly and adequately instructed and informed in plain language that neither plaintiff could recover if they found Billy Sangster failed to exercise ordinary care in a manner proximately contributing to his injury. They so found. The addition of \u201cyes\u201d before each of their names lends emphasis to that finding. ... In any event, we do not believe the failure to sign a general verdict form in this case casts any doubt upon the intent of the jurors. Since it is not contended their finding is unsupported by the evidence, we believe no useful purpose would be served by putting the defendant to the expense and inconvenience of a new trial. To hold otherwise, in our judgment, would truly exalt form over substance. [Id. 364 N.E.2d 82.]\nTo exalt substance over form, the same result is reached in the instant case. Following Wright, supra, the district court exercised its discretion in submitting special interrogatories sua sponte. They were answered absent a general verdict. Sangster converted Rule 49 into a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d rule. We can do the same.\nSaavedra cites a case directly in point under a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d rule which case was not in point in Saavedra. Cooper v. Evans, 1 Utah 2d 68, 262 P.2d 278 (1953) involved an action by a business-invitee who suffered injuries received in a fall over a portion of the merchandise platform. \u201cUpon trial, instead of submitting a general verdict, the trial court instructed the jury that it would only be required to find answers to certain questions of fact to which the court would then apply the law. . . . According to the answers given, the jury found the defendant guilty of negligence, but also found the plaintiff was contributorily [sic] negligent, upon the basis of which the trial court entered a judgment for the defendants.\u201d [Id. 279.] In affirming the \u2022judgment, the court said:\nIn the instruction the court correctly defined negligence and contributory negligence and therein set out the standard of care required of Mrs. Cooper: that which an ordinary, reasonable, and prudent person would use under the circumstances. The interrogatory was to be understood in the light of such instructions. Its effect therefore was to ask them whether she failed to meet the standard. Their affirmative answer precludes her recovery. Neither the fact that the jurors may have been disappointed with the result, nor that they may not have understood the full legal consequences of their findings, affect their validity. Under the procedure followed by the trial judge their function was but to make the finding of fact. [Id. 280-281.]\nBeing realistic, not technical, using common sense, not nonsense, Rule 49 and \u201cspecial verdict\u201d are identical because the general verdict is a useless appendage, to be later pointed out.\n5. The trial court did not err in the statement of issues to be decided.\nPlaintiffs\u2019 claim of error arises over the court\u2019s refusal to give its first requested instruction on the issues in which plaintiffs sought reimbursement by way of indemnity or alternatively for contribution. In other, words, the court\u2019s instructions left the jury in the dark as to the nature and elements of indemnity and contribution, the claims being tried. These omissions were not erroneous.\nThe crucial issues were those of negligence and proximate cause which was submitted to the jury by special interrogatories. If the answers were favorable to plaintiffs, the resolution of indemnity or contribution would have been a simple matter of accounting by the court. Bailey v. Jeffries-Eaves, Inc., 76 N.M. 278, 414 P.2d 503 (1966).\nPlaintiffs cite no authority to support the need for an instruction on contribution and indemnity.\nTo support their position, plaintiffs argue this way:\n[T]he jury might not appreciate that liability for the settlement could be shared between the nurse, hospital and doctor. The jury could well conclude that the doctor, if responsible at all, might be responsible for the entire settlement amount or reason that the hospital and nurse, if negligent, should not recover regardless of the doctor\u2019s conduct.. . . the jury was totally in the dark about the significance of answers to interrogatories. The extent to which this ignorance influenced the answers to interrogatories can never be known.\nThis argument is pure speculation. We cannot read the minds of the jury during deliberations. Additional unnecessary instructions are deemed to be harmful. Experience has proved that simplicity in instructions leads to a better knowledge of the law and its application to the facts. The omission of such instructions from UJI is the best teacher of that principle.\nIgnorance of the law of contribution and indemnity did not influence the answers to interrogatories. Prejudice has not been shown.\nThe trial court properly presented a statement of the issues to be decided by the jury.\n6. The instant case is one in which the \u201cspecial verdict\" is applicable, not Rule 49.\nThe trial court, sua sponte, submitted the following six interrogatories to the jury, five of which were answered so as to exonerate Dr. Malleis:\nINTERROGATORY NO. 1: Was Dr. Ronald J. Malleis negligent? Answer \u2014No.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 2: (Omitted)\nINTERROGATORY NO. 3: Was Glorious Bourque negligent? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 4 : If the answer to Interrogatory No. 3 is \u201cyes\u201d, was the negligence a proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer? Answer \u2014Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 5: If the answers to Interrogatories Nos. 3 and 4 are \u201cyes\u201d, was Memorial General Hospital negligent apart from the negligence of Glorious Bourque? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nINTERROGATORY NO. 6: If the answer to Interrogatory No. 5 is \u201cyes\u201d, was the hospital\u2019s negligence a proximate cause of the death of Wiley J. Dessauer? Answer \u2014 Yes.\nIn summary, the jury found that Dr. Malleis was not negligent. It also found that the hospital and nurse were each negligent and the negligence of each proximately caused the death of decedent.\nFrom the answers to these interrogatories, the trial court entered judgment for Dr. Malleis.\nThe question is: Did the answers to interrogatories constitute a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d? The answer is \u201cYes.\u201d\nNew Mexico has no statute, rule or decision which defines a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d or its method of use. This procedural rule must be judicially declared. In adopting Rule 49, the Supreme Court followed the statute enacted by the territorial legislature \u2014 Laws 1889, ch. 45, \u00a7 1. The \u201cspecial verdict\u201d was not included. The instant case appears to be the first that presents us with this verdict problem of ancient origin.\nIn the first instruction given all issues between the parties were set forth. Plaintiffs claimed that the proximate cause of the death of decedent was certain claims of negligence on the part of Dr. Malleis, the burden of proving such negligence being upon plaintiffs. Defendant denied plaintiffs\u2019 claims and asserted that plaintiffs were negligent and their negligence was the proximate cause of decedent\u2019s death, the burden of proving such negligence being on Dr. Malleis. General UJI instructions were given but the last instruction read as follows:\nUpon retiring to the jury room and before commencing your deliberations you will select one of your members as foreman.\nWhen as many as ten of you have agreed upon the answer to each interrogatory, your foreman must indicate the answer and sign the interrogatory.\nWhen you have agreed upon the answer to all interrogatories requiring an answer, you will all then return to open court.\nPlaintiffs did not object to the submission of interrogatories to the jury. They objected only to \u201cthe court\u2019s submission of interrogatories to the jury as being misleading.\u201d We should disagree. The interrogatories were clear in scope and covered all of the material facts and issues in this appeal.\nThe difference between a \u201cgeneral verdict\u201d and \u201cspecial verdict\u201d was stated in Walker v. New Mexico & S. P. R. Co., 165 U.S. 593, 17 S.Ct. 421, 41 L.Ed. 837 (1897) which case arose from the Territory of New Mexico. [7 N.M. 282, 34 P. 43.] In the Legislative Assembly of 1889, an Act in Relation to Trial by Jury was enacted (N.M. Laws 1889, ch. 45, p. 87) which today is Rule 49 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. In the course of its opinion the court said:\nNow a general verdict embodies both the law and the facts. The jury, taking the law as given by the court, apply that law to the facts as they find them to be and express their conclusions in the verdict. ... it was not infrequent to ask from the jury a special rather than a general verdict, that is, instead of a verdict for or against the plaintiff or defendant embodying in a single declaration the whole conclusion of the trial, one which found specially upon the various facts in issue, leaving to the court the subsequent duty of determining upon such facts the relief which the law awarded to the respective parties. [165 U.S. 596, 17 S.Ct. 422, 41 L.Ed. 841.]\nThe definition of a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d was quoted concisely in Roske v. Ilykanyics, 232 Minn. 383, 45 N.W.2d 769, 775 (1951):\n\u201cA special verdict is one by which a jury finds the facts only. It so presents the findings of fact as established by the evidence that nothing remains for the court to do but to draw therefrom conclusions of law.\u201d\nCook v. State, 506 S.W.2d 955, 959 (Tenn. Cr.App. 1973) stated the definition of \u201cspecial verdict\u201d in this fashion:\nA special verdict is one in which the jury reports to the court specific findings upon controlling issues of fact, usually submitted to the jury in the form of factual questions for consideration and determination from the evidence. A spe- . cial verdict thus returned must on its face embrace a finding of all the facts that may be required to warrant a judgment. . . .\nThe above are the common definitions of a \u201cspecial verdict,\u201d 39A Words and Phrases, Special Verdict, p. 389 (1953).\nThe distinction between a special verdict and special interrogatories with a general verdict was stated in Childress v. Lake Erie & W. R. Co., 182 Ind. 251, 105 N.E. 467 (1914). It makes this distinction:\nThere is, however\u2014\n\u201ca manifest difference between a special verdict and a finding of the facts in answer to interrogatories propounded to the jury. A special verdict is in lieu of a general verdict, and its design is to exhibit all the legitimate facts and leave the legal conclusions entirely to the court. Findings of fact in answer to interrogatories do not dispense with the general verdict. A special verdict covers all the issues in the case, while an answer to a special interrogatory may respond to but a single inquiry pertaining merely to one issue essential to the general verdict.\u201d Words and Phrases, vol. 7, p. 6596; Morbey v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 116 Iowa 84-89, 89 N.W. 105, 107.\nIf a jury finds on special questions of fact in answer to interrogatories, without a general verdict, the finding is of no force and the court cannot give to the special finding any weight unless they are sufficiently numerous and explicit to leave nothing for the court to do but to determine questions of law. If they affirmatively show the existence of every fact necessary to entitle plaintiff to a recovery and the nonexistence of every defense presented under the issues, or if they show as a matter of law that a valid defense has been established by the evidence, they may then constitute a special verdict.\nIn the instant case, the trial court submitted the case to the jury to obtain a \u201cspecial verdict.\u201d\nA \u201cspecial verdict\u201d is one used in lieu of a \u201cgeneral verdict.\u201d Walker held that a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d rather than a general verdict is appropriate, one that leaves \u201cto the trial court the duty of determining upon such facts the relief which the law awarded the respective parties.\u201d\nFrank, Courts on Trial, pp. 141-142 (1949) says:\n... a \u201cspecial verdict\u201d (or \u201cfact verdict\u201d) [is one in which]: the trial judge tells the jury to report its beliefs, its findings, about specified issues of fact raised at the trial. ... To those facts, thus \u201cfound\u201d by the jury, the trial judge applies the appropriate legal rule. . . . The special verdict is nothing new. It was used in England centuries ago, and was early imported into this country. ... A streamlined form of special verdict and of special interrogatories was authorized in the federal courts in 1938. In those courts, as in the courts of some states, it is optional with the trial judge in each civil jury case to employ either or neither of these methods, and the judges seldom use either of them. I think that one or the other should be compulsory in most civil suits.\nSunderland, Verdicts, General and Special, XXIX Yale L.J. 253, 262 (1920) says:\nThe real objection to the special verdict is that it is an honest portrayal of the truth, and the truth is too awkward a thing to fit the technical demands of the record. . . . [the general verdict] covers up all the shortcomings which frail human nature is unable to eliminate from the trial of a case. ... In short, the general verdict is valued for what it does, not for what it is. It serves as the great procedural opiate, which draws the curtain upon human errors and soothes us with the assurance that we have attained the unattainable.\nFor an excellent discussion of special verdicts, see Sahr v. Bierd, 354 Mich. 353, 92 N.W.2d 467 (1958); Skidmore v. Baltimore & O. R. Co., 167 F.2d 54 (2nd Cir. 1948); Lipscomb, Special Verdicts Under The Federal Rules, 25 Wash.U.L.Q. 185 (1940); Nylander v. Rogers, 41 N.J. 236, 196 A.2d 1 (1963); Sudia v. Hill Corp., 6 Ohio St.2d 160, 216 N.E.2d 882 (1966); Finz, Does the Trend in Our Substantive Law Dictate an Expended Use of the Special Verdict?, 37 Albany L.Rev. 229 (1973).\nIn essence, when rendered by way of a special verdict, the answers to interrogatories on essential issues pierce the conscience of the jury during deliberations. The answers make public that which is hidden. When rendered by way of a general verdict, the deliberations of the jury cannot be questioned. The truth revealed in \u201cspecial\u201d findings of fact, less in scope than a special verdict, overrides an inconsistent general verdict. Bryant v. H. B. Lynn Drilling Corporation, 65 N.M. 177, 334 P.2d 707 (1959); Upton v. Santa Rita Mining Co., 14 N.M. 96, 89 P. 275 (1907). In other words, a general verdict is a useless appendage where the truth is sought from the jury by way of answers to interrogatories. For this reason, rarely do either of the parties request a special verdict.\nIt is unquestionable that the answers to interrogatories were supported by substantial evidence and stand in the posture as that of unchallenged findings of fact. Lovato v. Hicks, 74 N.M. 733, 398 P.2d 59 (1965). Absent any reversible error on other grounds, defendant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.\nThe submission of interrogatories in the instant case, unaccompanied by a general verdict, was not erroneous. The matter was properly submitted to the jury as for a special verdict.\nB. The trial court properly instructed jury on borrowed servant doctrine.\nPlaintiffs tendered proposed Uniform Jury Instructions on malpractice based upon those in preparation by the Supreme Court\u2019s Advisory Committee on Uniform Jury Instructions. As now approved by the Supreme Court, they read:\nUJI 11.14, entitled Liability of Operating Surgeon \u2014 Agency (Captain of Ship Doctrine) :\n[A doctor] [An operating surgeon] who has the right to control and supervise the activity of assistants, nurses and others, is responsible for negligent acts or omissions of any such person during [an operation] [specific treatment] under the immediate and direct control and supervision of the doctor. [Emphasis added.]\nUJI 11.24, entitled Hospital Liability\u2014 Loan Servant Exception:\nA hospital is not responsible for acts or omissions of its employees where [a doctor] [an operating surgeon] has assumed the exclusive right to control and supervise the activity of_[hospital nurses, assistants, attendants, etc.] during the course of an operation [during specific treatment under the immediate and direct control and supervision of the doctor]. [Emphasis added.]\nUJI 11.14 is not a \u201cCaptain of Ship Doctrine\u201d instruction insofar as it includes \u201cspecific treatment\u201d by a surgeon. This doctrine first arose in McConnell v. Williams, 361 Pa. 355, 65 A.2d 243, 246 (1949), two justices dissenting. In the course of the majority opinion, the court said:\nAnd indeed it can readily be understood that in the course of an operation in the operating room of a hospital, and until the surgeon leaves that room at the conclusion of the operation ... he is in the same complete charge of those who are present and assisting him as is the captain of a ship over all on board .... [Emphasis added.]\nIt is obvious that this doctrine is not applicable to a doctor treating a patient in the hospital.\nPlaintiffs abandoned the \u201cCaptain of the Ship\u201d doctrine. They claim Dr. Malleis was liable under the \u201cBorrowed Servant\u201d doctrine. The essential elements are set forth in Ballard v. Leonard Brothers Transport Co., Inc., 506 S.W.2d 346, 350 (Mo.1974):\n. . . Essentially, they are: \u201c(a) consent on the part of the employee to work for the special employer; (b) actual entry by the employee upon the work of and for the special master pursuant to an express or implied contract so to do; and (c) power of the special employer to control the details of the work to be performed and to determine how the work shall be done and whether it shall stop or continue.\" [citations omitted.] . . . [Emphasis added.]\nThis rule applies in medical malpractice cases in which a hospital nurse is \u201cborrowed\u201d by a doctor. Elizondo v. Tavarez, 596 S.W.2d 667 (Tex.Civ.App.1980). The court said:\n.. . Under the borrowed servant doctrine in a suit for malpractice against a doctor, the controlling question is whether the doctor had the right to control the \u201cservant\u201d in the details of the specific act or omission raising the issue of liability. [Citation omitted.] . .. [Emphasis added.] [Id. 671.]\nUJI 11.14, stripped of excessive verbiage, and as tendered by plaintiffs, reads:\nA doctor who has the right to control and supervise the activity of assistants, nurses and others, is responsible for negligent acts or omissions of any such person during specific treatment under the immediate and direct control and supervision of the doctor.\nPlaintiffs claim the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on a doctor\u2019s right and duty to supervise the conduct of a nurse under his control.\nThe court instructed the jury as to the doctor\u2019s control and supervision of the nurse as follows:\n* * * * # *\n2. The Defendant [Dr. Malleis] had the right and duty to control and supervise the activity of Plaintiff, Glorious Bourque, during the entire treatment of Wiley J. Dessauer, deceased, from the time Dr. Malleis arrived to commence his treatment at the emergency room until the patient was transferred to the intensive care unit of Memorial General Hospital and that he was negligent in such control and supervision.\n3. That the Plaintiff Glorious Bourque, advised the Defendant, Ronald J. Malleis, that there was a problem in administering the medication to the patient and that the Defendant, Ronald J. Malleis, failed to use the care as a specialist in internal medicine in thereafter assuming direct control, treatment and earing for the patient. [Emphasis added.]\nTo summarize these instructions, Dr. Malleis had the right and duty to control and supervise the activity of Glorious Bourque, a nurse; that he was negligent in such control and supervision; that after Bourque advised him of the problem, Dr. Malleis failed to use the care as a specialist after \u201cassuming direct control, treatment and caring for the patient.\u201d\nThere is no realistic difference between these instructions and UJI 11.14 tendered by plaintiffs. In fact, the \u201ccontrol\u201d instruction given was more harmful to Dr. Malleis than UJI 11.14. The latter reads \u201ca doctor who has the right to control.\u201d .This is an issue of fact. The instruction given reads \u201cThe doctor had the right and duty to control and supervise.\u201d This is a statement of law. The duty to control and supervise the nurse was imposed on Dr. Malleis. This was more than compliance with the \u201cBorrowed Servant\u201d doctrine.\nPlaintiffs say they \u201ctendered these instructions on the theory of Dr. Malleis\u2019 vicarious liability and Dr. Malleis\u2019 own negligence in failing to discover and prevent the medication overdose.\u201d\n\u201cVicarious liability\u201d is defined in Nadeau v. Melin, 260 Minn. 369, 110 N.W.2d 29, 34 (1961) as follows:\nVicarious liability is based on a relationship between the parties, irrespective of participation, either by act or omission, of the one vicariously liable, under which it has been determined as a matter of policy that one person should be liable for the act of the other. Its true basis is largely one of public or social policy under which it has been determined that, irrespective of fault, a party should be held to respond for the acts of another.\n\u201cIn this sense the policy behind vicarious statutory liability is identical to the policy which holds a master vicariously liable, without personal participation, for the torts of his servants.\u201d LaBonte v. Federal Mutual Insurance Company, 159 Conn. 252, 268 A.2d 663, 666 (1970). Where, however, the master, or one who has the right to control another, is present, failure to exercise a control which he has, when it should have been exercised, may well constitute negligence of the one in control, as well as other affirmative acts or failure to act when reasonable prudence would require it. Nadeau, supra; Siburg v. Johnson, 249 Or. 556, 439 P.2d 865 (1968).\nPlaintiffs tendered these instructions on the theory that Dr. Malleis, who had the right and duty to control Bourque, the nurse, was liable for her negligent acts. UJI 11.24 was tendered and refused, properly so, for two reasons.\n(1) As heretofore shown, UJI 11.24 was given by the court. No error could arise by the court\u2019s refusal to give it.\n(2) Plaintiffs were not entitled to this instruction under the \u201cBorrowed Servant\u201d doctrine. It does not apply to the hospital-nurse-doctor relationship wherein a nurse, in the performance of the regular course of services furnished by the hospital, negligently administers treatment to a patient in a specific act that the doctor orders to be performed. The rule comes into play when the doctor orders \u201cthe details of the specific act or omission.\u201d In Elizondo, supra, a nurse on the order of a surgeon, inserted a Levin Tube to relieve the plaintiff. The court said:\nWhere an attempt is made to apply the borrowed servant doctrine to the field of medicine in a non-operating room situation, such as is the case here, absent any special circumstances, vicarious liability cannot be imposed upon the attending doctor for negligence in the treatment prescribed by him, but administered by a floor nurse employed by the hospital in the regular course of the services furnished by the hospital. . . . [Emphasis added.] [Id. 671-2.]\nThis rule was also applied where a nurse administered an injection of morphine and vistaril in the left buttock of a patient upon the order of the doctor. Su v. Perkins, 133 Ga.App. 474, 211 S.E.2d 421 (1974). Summary Judgment for the doctor was affirmed. The court quoted the following from a previous case:\n\u201cAccordingly, following the lead of the Minnesota Supreme Court, \u2018we adopt the rule that a hospital is liable for the negligence of its nurses in performing mere administrative or clerical acts, which acts, though constituting a part of a patient\u2019s prescribed medical treatment, do not require the application of the specialized technique or the understanding of a skilled physician or surgeon....\u2019\u201d [Id. 425.]\nBeaches Hospital v. Lee, 384 So.2d 234, 237 (Fla.App.1980), in which a hospital sought contribution from a physician, the court held that \u201cwhen the nurse\u2019s services are simply ministerial in character [mistake in sponge count], she is not regarded as the doctor\u2019s borrowed servant, but rather as the servant of the hospital, so that the latter may be vicariously liable to the patient.\u201d\nIn the instant case, Dr. Malleis did not exercise any right or duty to supervise and control Glorious Bourque. He did not engage her service, supervise the method and manner in which the medication should be administered, nor supervise the type of vial and syringe to use. The evidence showed that Bourque was seeking assistance from Dr. Malleis, and Dr. Malleis did not give any orders.\nThe philosophical basis of this rule was stated in Foster v. Englewood Hospital Association, 19 Ill.App.3d 1055, 313 N.E.2d 255, 259 (1974):\nWe are not persuaded of the fairness of a rule which would permit the invocation of the doctrine of respondeat superior for every act of negligence by an employee of the hospital simply because the employee came under the temporary supervision or control of the operating surgeon. As a practical matter, the personnel of the hospital and their abilities are often unknown to the surgeon. He may request the assignment of a particular person but usually has little voice in the selection of those who will assist him. The surgeon\u2019s own acts, which most directly affect the life and well being of a patient, charge him with his own awesome responsibility. He should not also be saddled with the role of guarantor of the patient\u2019s safety from the negligence of others.\nA judicial approach to the awesome responsibility of a doctor must recognize that the primary duty of a doctor in an emergency is to focus upon the serious medical problem from which a patient suffers. In such emergency, the primary duty of the hospital is to focus upon the competence of nurses to perform their duties. The doctor\u2019s and hospital\u2019s duties are independent primary duties, each of which should serve to seek the best possible recovery of the patient. To rule otherwise would divert the doctor from his primary duty. The duty of the hospital should not be shifted to a doctor by way of the \u201cBorrowed Servant\u201d doctrine unless the doctor selects the hospital nurse as an assistant due to his knowledge of her competence and exercises control and supervision over the details of her work, or, unless the doctor orders an assigned nurse to perform duties which the doctor knows are beyond her competence and the duties for which she was employed, thus exercising control and supervision. A doctor has the right to rely upon a hospital to furnish a nurse who is qualified, competent and trustworthy in the performance of her duties. Glorious Bourque, admittedly, was not.\nUJI 11.24, stripped of excessive verbiage and as tendered by plaintiffs, reads:\nA hospital is not responsible for acts or omissions of its employees where a doctor has assumed the exclusive right to control and supervise the activity of the nurse during specific treatment under the immediate and direct control and supervision of the doctor.\nFoster, supra, held that the hospital employee must become wholly subject to the control and direction of the doctor, and free from the control of the hospital during the temporary period. It said:\nIn order to create the [borrowed servant] relation, therefore, the original employer must resign full control of the employee for the time being, it not being sufficient that the employee is partially under the control of a third person. (I.L.P. Employment \u00a7 2, page 368.) It would thus appear under this doctrine that both the doctor and the hospital could not be liable for the same negligent act of the hospital\u2019s \u201cemployee.\u201d [Id. 313 N.E.2d 259.]\nPiehl v. Dalles General Hospital, 280 Or. 613, 571 P.2d 149 (1977) involved cross-claims filed by a surgeon and the hospital against each other. This was an operating room case in which the nurses were assigned to keep track of sponges which were used in the operation. The trial court directed a verdict erroneously by requiring the hospital to indemnify the doctor. In the course of its opinion, the court stated:\n. . . There is no doubt that the nurses were regular employees of the hospital and that they were negligent. The hospital contends, however, that at the time the sponges were counted the nurses were the loaned servants of the surgeon, who had the right to control their activities, and not the servants of the hospital; therefore, the surgeon had responsibility for their negligence.\nThe hospital can act only through its employees. It furnished services to plaintiff through the work of the nurses for which it was being paid by plaintiff. It owed a duty to plaintiff not to perform these services negligently. That duty was breached when the nurses miscounted the sponges. There was no disproportion in the character of the duty owed to plaintiff by each defendant. The gravity of the fault of the nurses was as great as any fault that could have been committed by the surgeon.... Regardless of whether or not the nurses were the loaned servants of the surgeon for some purposes, they remained servants of the hospital in carrying out the work for which it was being paid by plaintiff. [Emphasis added.] [Id. 152.]\nDr. Malleis did not \u201cassume the exclusive right to control and supervise the activity of Glorious Bourque during specific treatment\u201d as required under UJI 11.24. To have given this instruction would have been reversible error. Circumstances may arise under which a doctor might \u201cassume the exclusive right to control and supervise the activity of\u201d a nurse. No such event has yet been found in doctor-hospital-nurse relationships.\nThe trial court properly instructed the jury on the \u201cBorrowed Servant\u201d doctrine.\nD. Giving second paragraph of UJI 8.1 on Duty of Doctor was not erroneous.\nPlaintiffs claim the second paragraph of UJI 8.1 on \u201cDuty of Doctor\u201d given to the jury was erroneous. It reads:\nThe only way in which you may decide whether the defendant possessed and applied the knowledge and used the skill and care which the law required of him is from evidence presented in this trial by physicians testifying as exepert witnesses. In deciding this question you must not use any personal knowledge of any of the jurors. [Emphasis added.]\nUnder \u201cDirections for Use,\u201d it is stated: The second paragraph of this instruction will be used in most cases but occasionally the breach of duty complained of may be a matter of common knowledge and in such cases the second paragraph must be omitted. [Emphasis added.]\nPlaintiffs claim that expert testimony was not required to establish the violation of a standard of care of knowledge by Dr. Malleis. On the vial selected by nurse Bourque was a warning which read: \u201cFOR DILUTION ONLY. NOT FOR DIRECT INJECTION.\u201d Dr. Malleis failed to read this warning and the description of the medication which appeared on the vial and syringe used by Bourque. Dr. Malleis handled this vial and syringe himself two and perhaps three times immediately before the contents were injected into decedent.\nThere was expert testimony that failure to read the label did not fall below the standard of care. There was no lay testimony. Plaintiffs say that the jurors were in as good a position as the physicians to arrive at a final conclusion because it was a non-medical judgment.\nThe second paragraph of UJI 8.1 is a \u201ccommon knowledge\u201d exception to the rule requiring expert medical testimony in malpractice cases.\nWebb v. Lungstrum, 223 Kan. 487, 575 P.2d 22, 25 (1978) says:\n. . . This common knowledge exception applies if what is alleged to have occurred in the diagnosis, treatment, and care of a patient is so obviously lacking in reasonable care and the results are so bad that the lack of reasonable care would be apparent to and within the common knowledge and experience of mankind generally.\nWithout reference to \u201cDirection for Use,\u201d Pharmaseal Laboratories, Inc. v. Goffe, 90 N.M. 753, 758, 568 P.2d 589 (1977) says:\n[I]f negligence can be determined by resort to common knowledge ordinarily possessed by an average person, expert testimony as to standards of care is not essential. [citations omitted.] Such evidence includes lay testimony regarding nontechnical mechanical acts by the physician, as we have here. [Emphasis added.]\n\u201cNon-expert witnesses can testify as to external appearances and manifest conditions observable by anyone.\u201d Hiatt v. Groce, 215 Kan. 14, 523 P.2d 320, 325 (1974).\nPlaintiffs may have misconstrued the meaning of the second paragraph of UJI 8.1 and its relation to the \u201ccommon knowledge\u201d concept. The jury must listen only to the testimony of physicians in determining whether a doctor violated the standards of skill and care. It must not rely on its own personal knowledge. In the event the standard calls for a non-medical judgment, the jury can take into consideration the testimony of lay people with reference to the standard. In Webb, supra, the court said:\n. . . When, in a given case, the diagnosis, treatment or care of a patient brings such bad results that lack of reasonable care would be apparent, using the common everyday knowledge of persons generally, such facts may be testified to by persons other than physicians.... [575 P.2d 25.]\nThere was no such testimony by persons other than physicians.\nPlaintiffs\u2019 argument leads in the wrong direction. They state:\nThe very simple question for the jury, a question which juries are quite capable of determining, is whether, under all the circumstances, Dr. Malleis had sufficient information to cause him to read the warning on the instrument in his hand?\n******\nThe jurors were in as good a position as the physicians to arrive at the final conclusion. . . .\n******\nIt is the position of plaintiffs . .. that the jurors should not have been required to evaluate the reasonable prudence of Dr. Malleis\u2019 conduct solely \u201c. . . from evidence presented in this trial by physicians testifying as expert witnesses.\u201d UJI 8.1. Rigidly applying this rule, the jurors may have concluded that Dr. Malleis should prevail for the sole reason that two experts testified on his behalf and only one on behalf of plaintiffs.\nThis argument is far removed from the second paragraph of UJI 8.1 and \u201cDirections for Use.\u201d\nWhat the \u201ccommon knowledge\u201d concept means can be illustrated:\nPharmaseal involved the care exercised by a surgeon in the withdrawal of an intestinal tube which had been inserted through the nose down through the stomach. Expert testimony was unnecessary because any person watching the withdrawal could testify as to whether the surgeon pulled out the tube fast, jerked it several times and forcefully pulled on the tube as though it had been stuck, thereby extracting it.\nMascarenas v. Gonzales, 83 N.M. 749, 497 P.2d 751 (Ct.App.1972) involved a chiropractor who pressed down on plaintiff\u2019s body and fractured the patient\u2019s ribs. Expert testimony was unnecessary because any person observing the performance could testify as to the method and force used.\nWebb involved the failure of an orthopedic surgeon to take x-rays. The court said:\n... We feel there should be expert medical testimony to establish the standard of care in this and similar cases. [595 P.2d 26.]\nThe difference between the application of the \u201ccommon knowledge\u201d concept and the \u201cphysician-only\u201d concept in the above cases appears to be observation by a person of non-technical aspects of a doctor\u2019s work as stated in Hiatt, and the alleged failure of a doctor to perform a duty required in the practice of medicine. Following this theory, there should be expert medical testimony to establish the standard of care required in the reading of a description of the medication which appeared on the vial and syringe selected by a nurse and shown to the doctor.\nFor a review of cases which held that expert testimony is necessary and the exceptions and limitations, see Annot. Necessity of expert evidence to support an action for malpractice against a physician or surgeon, 81 A.L.R.2d 597 (1962) and Later Case Service supplementing this annotation.\nThe trial court did not err in giving the second paragraph of UJI 8.1 on Duty of Doctor.",
        "type": "concurrence",
        "author": "SUTIN, Judge."
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Jerald A. Valentine, Crouch, Valentine & Ramirez, P.C., Las Cruces, Bruce Hall, Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., Albuquerque, for defendant and third-party plaintiff-appellant Memorial General Hospital.",
      "William K. Stratvert, Alan Konrad, Miller, Stratvert, Torgerson & Brandt, P.A., Albuquerque, for third-party defendant-appellee.",
      "Montgomery & Andrews, P.A., Albuquerque, John E. Conway, Durrett, Conway & Jordon, P.C., Alamogordo, for defendant and third-party plaintiff-appellant Bourque.",
      "Howard F. Houk, Albuquerque, Jack M. Campbell, Bruce D. Black, Campbell & Black, P.A., Santa Fe, for amicus curiae The New Mexico Medical Society."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "628 P.2d 337\nIvy W. DESSAUER, Personal Representative, Plaintiff, v. MEMORIAL GENERAL HOSPITAL and Glorious Bourque, Defendants and Third-Party Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Ronald J. Malleis, Third-Party Defendant-Appellee.\nNo. 4637.\nCourt of Appeals of New Mexico.\nApril 16, 1981.\nJerald A. Valentine, Crouch, Valentine & Ramirez, P.C., Las Cruces, Bruce Hall, Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A., Albuquerque, for defendant and third-party plaintiff-appellant Memorial General Hospital.\nWilliam K. Stratvert, Alan Konrad, Miller, Stratvert, Torgerson & Brandt, P.A., Albuquerque, for third-party defendant-appellee.\nMontgomery & Andrews, P.A., Albuquerque, John E. Conway, Durrett, Conway & Jordon, P.C., Alamogordo, for defendant and third-party plaintiff-appellant Bourque.\nHoward F. Houk, Albuquerque, Jack M. Campbell, Bruce D. Black, Campbell & Black, P.A., Santa Fe, for amicus curiae The New Mexico Medical Society."
  },
  "file_name": "0092-01",
  "first_page_order": 120,
  "last_page_order": 140
}
