The question on this appeal is whether it was error for the superior court to allow the defendant’s motion to dismiss pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 1A-1, Rule 12(b)(6). We hold it was error and affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals.
In the Court of Appeals the focus of the parties’ briefs and the court’s opinion was on whether
Bost v. Riley,
In this Court the appellant argues in addition to its argument on the retroactive application of
Bost
that the complaint fails to allеge corporate negligence. The term “corporate negligence” has been used in discussing the liability of hospitals to patients.
See Darling v. Hospital,
The courts have sometimes said that there is a difference between a hospital’s liability based on respondeat superior аnd liability based on cprporate negligence. We believe that the use of these two labels is unfortunate when analyzing the liability of hospitals. Respondeat supеrior is a doctrine which makes a principal liable for the acts of an agent within the scope of the agent’s
*375
authority.
See Rogers v. Black Mountain,
In determining whether the plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts to withstand a motion to dismiss we are guided by the standard of the reasonable man of ordinary prudence. “Actionable negligence is the failure of one owing a duty to another to do what a reasonable and prudent man would ordinarily have done, or doing whаt such a person would not have done, which omission or commission is the proximate cause of injury to another.” S. Speiser, C. Krause and A. Gans, The American Law of Torts § 9.1 p. 995 (1983). The liability of the defendant to the plaintiff depends on whether the defendant owed a duty of care to the plaintiff, which duty was violated, proximately causing injury to the plaintiff.
We have recоgnized that hospitals in this state owe a duty of care to patients.
Rabon v. Hospital,
The plaintiff has alleged the defendant granted clinical privileges to a doctor to perform operations without ascertaining whether the doctor was qualified to perform them. Hoke holds that a hospital is liable for negligence in the selection of its agents. The doctor in this case is not an agent of the hospital but *376 we believe the principle of Hoke should apply and a hospital should be liable for negligence in allowing an unqualified doctor to perform operations in the hospital. Dusznyski recognized this duty while holding that the action against the hospital should have been dismissed. We hold that a reasonable man of ordinary prudence in the position of the hospital owes а duty of care to its patients to ascertain that a doctor is qualified to perform an operation before granting him the privilege to do so.
The plaintiff has also alleged that the defendant failed to enforce the standards of the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Hospitals. In
Wilson v. Hardware, Inc.,
The plaintiff has alleged furthеr that the defendant permitted its agents to follow instructions of the physician which were dangerous to the plaintiff. In
Byrd v. Hospital,
The plaintiff has alleged that the defendant hospital failed to monitоr and oversee the treatment and care of the plaintiff by the physician on its premises. The plaintiff in her brief says that *377 she will prove pursuant to this allegation that the defendant failed to monitor and supervise the doctor’s overall performance in the hospital on an ongoing basis. We believe evidence of a failure to monitor and supervise on an ongoing basis would be relevant under this allegation. We hold that pursuant to the reasonable man standard the defendant had a duty to monitor оn an ongoing basis the performance of physicians on its staff and this allegation states a claim.
The plaintiff has also alleged that the defendant hospital pеrmitted the doctor “to perform a series of surgeries ... for which she was not properly qualified without requiring that she be supervised or assisted by a properly qualified member of its medical staff.” We hold that this states a claim. Under ordinary circumstances a hospital is not required to supervise a surgeon in the performance of an operation.
See Cox,
The plaintiff has also alleged thаt the defendant allowed the physician to perform an operation on its premises which was not medically required. The doctor was not the agent of the defendant hospital. The hospital did not control the doctor’s decision to perform the operation and is not liable for it except as indicated in other pаrts of this opinion.
In light of the position we have taken in this opinion that the case is governed by common law principles of negligence and that what has previously bеen called corporate negligence is nothing more than an application of negligence principles, the question of retroactiveness does not arise.
*378 The decision of the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
