OPINION
{1} In this medical negligence case we are asked to clarify the state of the law in New Mexico regarding a party’s entitlement to a jury trial in a case that involves both legal and equitable claims. The following question was certified to us by the Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 12-606 NMRA 2005 and NMSA 1978, Section 34-5-14(0) (1972): “Whether a party is entitled to a jury trial where proper and timely demand has been made in a matter that involves mixed claims of law and equity, and where a decision on the equitable claims will dispose of the legal claim?” This question was certified because of the apparent discord between New Mexico cases concerning whether, in cases involving mixed claims of equity and law, the equitable or legal claim must be heard first. In Evans Fin. Corp. v. Strasser,
DISCUSSION
{2} Plaintiff Stella Blea brought a medical negligence action in June 1997 against Defendant Dr. Roderick Fields, a Rheumatologist. Plaintiff alleges she had an allergic reaction to the pain reliever Naprosyn, which Defendant prescribed to her in February 1995, although Defendant had been informed that Plaintiff had experienced asthma-related reactions to aspirin and knew that Naprosyn is contraindicated in such individuals. Plaintiff alleged that Defendant’s negligence resulted in her hospitalization in March 1995. Defendant moved to dismiss the complaint, or alternatively for summary judgment, arguing that at all times relevant to the complaint, he was an employee of Memorial Medical Center (MMC), a City/County Hospital; and therefore the action was barred by the two-year statute of limitations in the New Mexico Tort Claims Act. NMSA 1978, § 41-4-15 (1977). In response, Plaintiff disputed that Defendant was an employee of MMC, but asserted that even if Defendant was an employee of MMC, Defendant concealed his employee status as well as his potential negligence in prescribing the Naprosyn. Therefore, Plaintiff argued, Defendant should be equitably estopped from asserting a statute of limitations defense or, alternatively, the statutory period should be tolled under the theory of fraudulent concealment. We refer to these two claims collectively as “equitable claims.”
{3} The parties filed, and the trial judge denied, numerous motions and cross-motions for summary judgment on Defendant’s statute of limitations defense and Plaintiffs equitable claims. The trial judge, however, granted Defendant’s motion for an evidentiary hearing on the equitable claims and agreed to try the equitable claims before the medical negligence claim was submitted to a jury. Plaintiff agreed that the equitable claims should be bifurcated from the legal claim but objected to having the equitable claims tried first, asserting that to do so would deprive her of her right to a jury trial on the common issues of fact underlying both her medical negligence claim and equitable claims.
{4} Before the evidentiary hearing on the equitable claims, the trial court revived Defendant’s earlier summary judgment motion as to whether Defendant was a public employee. After full briefing, the court found that Defendant was a public employee at the relevant time and entered a partial summary judgment in Defendant’s favor. The court subsequently held the evidentiary hearing on the equitable claims and entered findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court rejected Plaintiffs theories of equitable estoppel and fraudulent concealment and dismissed Plaintiffs medical negligence claim as barred by the two-year statute of limitations. Plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals, which in turn certified the above question. We affirm.
I. New Mexico Follows the Beacon Theatres Approach
{5} In New Mexico, as under the federal constitution, there is a constitutional right to trial by jury where the remedy sought is legal, rather than equitable. N.M. Const. art. II, § 12; Strasser,
{6} New Mexico appellate courts have recognized that a party’s right to a jury trial under the state constitution could be infringed if, in a case involving both equitable and legal claims, the equitable claims are decided before the legal claims. Scott v. Woods,
{7} However, in McAdams, decided just four months after Woods, this Court held that “when legal and equitable issues are joined in a lawsuit the trial court should first decide the equitable issues, and then if any independent legal issues remain, those issues may be tried to a jury upon appropriate request.”
{8} The case before us is illustrative. Once Plaintiff raised her two equitable claims as a means of foreclosing Defendant’s statute of limitations defense, the trial court had to first determine whether either equitable claim required resolution of disputed facts that were material to the medical negligence claim. If it was possible to dispose of the equitable claims without resolving disputed issues of fact common to both claims, the court properly exercised its discretion in hearing the equitable claims, even though doing so resulted in a dismissal of Plaintiff’s legal claim. As discussed below, Plaintiffs equitable estoppel claim did not raise factual issues in common with the legal claim; therefore, the trial court did not err in exercising its discretion to decide the equitable estoppel claim. While the fraudulent concealment claim did raise some factual issues in common with the legal claim, the trial court properly exercised its discretion in deciding the fraudulent concealment claim because the common fact issues were not material to whether Plaintiff knew of her cause of action or could have discovered it by exercising reasonable diligence during the statutory limitations period.
{9} As a preliminary matter, however, we must address Plaintiffs argument that in addition to infringing on her jury trial rights by hearing the equitable claims first, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to Defendant on his claim that he was a public employee at all times relevant to Plaintiffs claim of medical negligence. If Defendant was not a public employee, and therefore not covered by the two-year statute of limitations, Plaintiffs equitable claims would, of course, be irrelevant.
II. Defendant Was a Public Employee as a Matter of Law
{10} We review de novo the granting of summary judgment, construing reasonable inferences from the record in favor of the party that opposed the motion. Celaya v. Hall,
{11} Plaintiff argues summary judgment was inappropriate because genuine issues of material fact existed regarding Defendant’s employee status in February 1995, when she alleges Defendant negligently prescribed medication that resulted in her hospitalization and damages. Plaintiff first argues that Defendant had three different contracts with MMC, each of which separately defined Defendant as an employee or independent contractor, and that none of these contracts can be seen as legally controlling for determining whether Defendant was a public employee at the relevant time-under NMSA 1978, Section 41-4-3(f) (2003) (defining “public employee”), and Section 41-4-15 (statute of limitations for government entities and public employees). However, by its terms the latest contract, titled “Employment and Non-Competition Agreement” (December Agreement), dated December 1,1994, superceded any pri- or contracts between Defendant and MMC. This contract, which defined Defendant as an employee of MMC, a public hospital, controlled in February 1995, the time Defendant committed the alleged negligence.
{12} How an employment contract defines the status of an individual, while relevant and material, does not answer whether an individual is a public employee or an independent contractor. We must also consider the extent to which the employer has, in the broadest sense, the right to control the individual. See Celaya,
{13} Plaintiff argues she raised genuine issues of material fact regarding at least some of the Houghland factors that should have precluded summary judgment. The facts to which Plaintiff points, however, are either irrelevant to Defendant’s employee status or otherwise insufficient to bring into question whether MMC had the manner and means to control Defendant’s performance, directly compensated Defendant, furnished his equipment or had the power to terminate Defendant at will.
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In particular, Plaintiff claims MMC did not have the right to control Defendant as illustrated by a provision of the December Agreement that precluded MMC from interfering with Defendant’s exercise of his own professional judgment in his practice. This provision, however, is neither dispositive nor particularly material to whether Defendant was an employee of MMC under the Tort Claims Act. See Celaya,
{14} We must, then, analyze the material facts regarding Defendant’s working relationship with MMC, over which there does not seem to exist much dispute between the parties. The December Agreement precluded Defendant from engaging in the practice of medicine except as an employee of MMC. It allowed MMC to fire Defendant with or without cause and comprehensively dictated the terms of his service. Cf. Yerbich v. Heald,
{15} In light of these facts, Plaintiff failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact regarding Defendant’s employee status under the Houghland and Celaya factors. Cf. Houghland,
III. The Trial Judge Correctly Ruled on the Equitable Estoppel and Fraudulent Concealment Claims Because Neither Shared Common, Dispositive Issues of Fact with the Legal Claim
{16} Once the court determined the two-year statute of limitations applied because Defendant was a public employee as a matter of law, Plaintiff invoked the equitable powers of the trial court to consider whether Defendant should be equitably estopped from asserting the statute of limitations defense, or whether Defendant’s alleged fraudulent concealment tolled its application. The parties do not dispute that the doctrine of equitable estoppel, and the related concept of fraudulent concealment for tolling a statute of limitations, are equitable in nature, see Tomlinson v. George, 2005-NMSC-20, ¶¶ 13-14, 25,
{17} Plaintiff argues her claims of equitable estoppel and fraudulent concealment contained factual issues that were material to Plaintiffs legal claims and that under the rule of Beacon Theatres, these factual issues should have been decided by a jury before the trial court decided the equitable claims.
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Ordinarily it is within the judge’s discretion whether to decide equitable claims, so long as the equitable claims do not raise factual issues that are material to Plaintiffs underlying legal claim. See Woods,
{18} Whether the trial court abused its discretion in deciding the equitable claims before submitting the medical negligence claim to a jury initially turns on whether the equitable claims raised material issues of fact that were also material to the medical negligence claim. See Romero v. Bank of the Southwest,
{19} Plaintiff initially asserts that the February 2002 hearing on the equitable claims was really a summary judgment proceeding and that the judge erred in deciding there were no genuine issues of material fact regarding her equitable claims. We disagree with Plaintiffs characterization of the hearing. The trial judge clearly decided there were genuine issues of material fact regarding the equitable claims and that summary judgment was inappropriate as a matter of law, a conclusion neither party directly disputes. The trial judge conducted the hearing as a trial on the merits of the equitable claims, heard testimony and evidence, and issued findings of fact and conclusions of law following the hearing. Both parties indicated they understood the hearing was an evidentiary proceeding at the beginning and throughout the hearing. Thus, because there were material issues of fact raised by Plaintiffs equitable claims, we must determine whether there were common issues of fact that were material to disposing of both the equitable and legal claims.
A. The Trial Judge Properly Decided the Equitable Estoppel Claim, Which Did Not Share Any Factual Issues with Plaintiffs Medical Negligence Claim
{20} Under the doctrine of equitable estoppel, the party estopped from asserting a statute of limitations must have (1) made a statement or action that amounted to a false representation or concealment of material facts, or intended to convey facts that are inconsistent with those a party subsequently attempts to assert, with (2) the intent to deceive the other party, and (3) knowledge of the real facts other than conveyed. The party arguing estoppel must (1) not know the real facts, and (2) change his or her position in reliance on the estopped party’s representations. Lopez v. State,
{21} In deciding whether the equitable estoppel claim shared disputed factual issues with Plaintiffs legal claim, we look to the elements of the medical negligence claim. To prove her claim of medical negligence, Plaintiff had the burden of proving Defendant was negligent, that his negligence proximately caused Plaintiffs injuries, and the nature and extent of the damages. See Alberts v. Schultz,
{22} Plaintiff next argues that the trial judge improperly engaged in weighing the evidence. While her argument seems to be based on the erroneous belief that either the February 2002 hearing was on a summary judgment motion or that the issue of equitable estoppel necessarily should have gone to a jury, Plaintiff also seems to argue that the trial court accorded insufficient weight to her evidence in reaching its findings of fact and applied an improper standard in reaching its conclusions of law. Because Plaintiff did not properly attack specific findings with particularity, the findings will be deemed conclusive. See Rule 12-213(A)(4) NMRA 2005.
{23} The trial court made the following-factual findings relevant to Plaintiffs allegation that Defendant concealed his employee status: Beginning in February 1995, Plaintiff received co-payments indicating that Defendant was an employee of MMC, and that if she had read them, she would have known that payments were made to MMC for medical care provided by Defendant; and Plaintiff received “Explanation of Benefits” forms which would have alerted her of Defendant’s status by April 1995. Based on these findings, the trial court concluded that Defendant was not equitably estopped from asserting the statute of limitations because he did not make any statements or actions that amounted to a false representation or concealment of material facts, nor did he intend or expect for Plaintiff to rely on any false impressions, and that Plaintiff did not lack the truth or means to the truth concerning Defendant’s employee status. The trial court found that Plaintiff did not detrimentally rely on any act or omission of Defendant.
{24} Plaintiff offered no testimony or evidence to suggest that Defendant intentionally sought to conceal his employee status. Evidence showed that before and after April 1995, Plaintiff received (1) several Explanation of Benefits forms and billing statements from MMC for services rendered by Defendant, (2) health insurance claims for Defendant’s services indicating the physician’s billing name as MMC, and (3) co-payment receipts indicating that payments for Defendant’s services were being made to MMC. Although it is clear that Plaintiff originally engaged the services of Defendant while he was not affiliated with MMC, Plaintiff offered no evidence to suggest that Plaintiff relied on a belief that Defendant was a private employee when she delayed filing her lawsuit until April 1997.
{25} Based on the trial court’s findings, the court could properly refuse to estop Defendant from asserting the statute of limitations based on Defendant’s employee status. Courts have used equitable estoppel against the state when the state has chosen to engage in conduct that conveys an undisputable impression that it is doing business as an entity other than the state. E.g., Lopez,
{26} Likewise, the Court of Appeals upheld an equitable estoppel finding against the state in Hagen,
{27} Unlike Hagen, in this case, there was neither an act of concealment nor evidence' of intent to mislead potential claimants. Additionally, Plaintiff had a reasonable means to learn of Defendant’s status as a public employee by April 1995. MMC identified itself as Defendant’s employer in billing records, which Plaintiff acknowledges receiving. Further, unlike in Lopez, there is no evidence that MMC chose to hold Defendant out as a non-state employee, thereby concealing his employment status from potential claimants. We affirm the trial court’s findings and conclusions regarding Plaintiffs equitable estoppel claim.
B. The Trial Judge Properly Decided the Fraudulent Concealment Claim Because the Judge Could Decide the Claim Without Deciding a Fact Issue in Common with the Negligence Claim
{28} To toll the statute of limitations under the doctrine of fraudulent concealment, Plaintiff was required to prove (1) Defendant was aware of his alleged negligence and concealed it from Plaintiff, or failed to disclose medical information pertinent to Plaintiffs treatment, thereby breaching his fiduciary duty to Plaintiff; and (2) Plaintiff lacked knowledge of her cause of action and could not have discovered it by exercising reasonable diligence during the statutory period. See Tomlinson, 2005-NMSC-20, ¶¶ 11, 13, 25; Kern,
{29} The material facts on which the parties rely assist us in determining whether the judge could decide the fraudulent concealment claim without deciding a fact issue material to Plaintiffs medical negligence claim. Defendant essentially concedes he should not have prescribed Naprosyn for Plaintiff given her history of sensitivity to medications containing an aspirin-like substance. Defendant testified that when Plaintiff was hospitalized in March 1995, he told her that Naprosyn contains aspirin or an aspirin-like substance. The parties agree that Defendant told Plaintiff had he remembered Plaintiff had a sensitivity to aspirin, he would not have prescribed the Naprosyn. The evidence also showed Defendant told Plaintiff after her hospitalization she should no longer take Naprosyn. At a minimum, this evidence suggests Defendant may have been negligent in prescribing the Naprosyn and that he conveyed this information to Plaintiff.
{30} To determine whether Plaintiff raised an issue of material fact regarding Defendant’s alleged concealment, therefore, we focus on the issue of whether Defendant withheld information from Plaintiff suggesting that his potentially negligent act may have proximately caused Plaintiff’s hospitalization and resulting damages. Plaintiff contends Defendant misled her when he attributed Plaintiffs hospitalization to an adverse reaction to chemotherapy rather than as a result of aggravated asthma symptoms resulting from Defendant’s negligent prescription of Naprosyn. Defendant argues that indeed Plaintiffs hospitalization was due not to the Naprosyn, but to the pulmonary emboli which resulted from her chemotherapy treatments.
{31} To support his position, Defendant points to evidence showing that while Plaintiff was initially admitted to the hospital for asthma and excessive wheezing, the attending physician and radiologists diagnosed her with pulmonary emboli because her reaction to testing and medications, and her worsening condition subsequent to being admitted, suggested she was suffering from pulmonary emboli rather than asthma, though her wheezing was symptomatic of both conditions. Defendant testified that the pulmonary emboli, which can mimic the symptoms of asthma, were caused by Plaintiffs cancer and subsequent chemotherapy, and claims that while he told her the Naprosyn may have contributed to her wheezing and exacerbation of her asthma, the Naprosyn could not have caused or contributed to the pulmonary emboli.
{32} This evidence could be interpreted as consistent with Defendant’s claim that he alerted Plaintiff he may have acted negligently in prescribing Naprosyn, but that his negligence did not in any way cause her hospitalization and damages. Plaintiff, however, presented from her hospital medical record a consultation report by Dr. Webb, Plaintiffs attending physician, which describes the pulmonary emboli as the cause of her hospitalization, but notes that “[a]lmost surely” the asthma contributed to Plaintiffs hospitalization and the need to intubate. According to Plaintiff, this report suggested that Defendant failed to disclose medical information pertinent to Plaintiffs treatment, thereby breaching his fiduciary duty to Plaintiff.
{33} Plaintiffs argument with regard to Defendant’s alleged concealment of a causal relationship between the Naprosyn and Plaintiffs hospitalization certainly could have been much stronger, both at summary judgment and at the evidentiary hearing. For instance, Plaintiff might have submitted an affidavit from an expert stating that Defendant’s negligent prescription of Naprosyn proximately caused Plaintiffs hospitalization. Nonetheless, even without such evidence, in denying summary judgment the judge must have been persuaded by Dr.. Webb’s report that there was a material issue regarding whether Defendant fraudulently represented to Plaintiff that the Naprosyn did not cause her hospitalization, though it may have exacerbated her wheezing. The propriety of this ruling on summary judgment is not before us. Plaintiff created a fact issue regarding the first prong of the fraudulent concealment claim that was also material to the issue of proximate cause in the medical negligence claim. If a jury were to conclude that Defendant was negligent in prescribing Naprosyn, and that this negligent act proximately caused Plaintiffs hospitalization and damages, such a finding would be material to whether Defendant fraudulently concealed his negligence. See Keithley,
{34} However, because the test for tolling a statute of limitations due to fraudulent concealment has two prongs, both of which must be satisfied, we must determine whether evidence of a negligent act and its proximate causation of a plaintiffs injuries is also material to whether Plaintiff lacked knowledge of her cause of action and could not have discovered it with reasonable diligence during the statutory period. Although there may be times when evidence of negligence or proximate cause could be material to whether the plaintiff knew of his or her potential cause of action, in this case such evidence would not have made a difference with regard to the trial court’s finding that Plaintiff was or should have been aware of her potential cause of action against Defendant.
{35} As previously noted, Defendant as much as conceded during Plaintiffs hospitalization that he should not have prescribed Naprosyn in light of the Plaintiffs history. At a minimum, this should have alerted Plaintiff to Defendant’s potential negligence. The evidence also showed that sometime before April 10, 1995, Plaintiff told Defendant’s staff she believed the mistaken prescription had almost killed her, and that she suspected the Naprosyn at least contributed to her condition after talking with Defendant at the hospital in March 1995. In addition, with regard to the report by Dr. Webb on which Plaintiff relied to create an issue of fact regarding Defendant’s alleged concealment of what caused her hospitalization, the -district court found that Plaintiff “reviewed Dr. Webb’s report approximately two months after her March 1995 Memorial Medical Center hospitalization.” Plaintiff does not challenge this finding on appeal. Under the facts developed here, we conclude that the factual issues material to the second prong of Plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim were independent of those relevant to her medical negligence claim.
{36} Thus, while the first prong of Plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim itself raised an issue of fact that was material to Plaintiffs medical negligence claim, the uncontested finding that Plaintiff nevertheless knew of her cause of action, or could have discovered it by exercising reasonable diligence during the statutory period, rendered the issue of Defendant’s actual concealment immaterial to her equitable claim. In other words, the trial court could properly dispose of Plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim regardless of any finding of actual concealment; this factual issue would not have made a difference to the court’s resolution of the equitable claim. Because there were not common issues of fact material to both the fraudulent concealment and negligence claims, there was no infringement on Plaintiffs right to have the facts underlying her legal claim determined by a jury.
IV. Conclusion
{37} We affirm the trial court’s resolution of the equitable estoppel and fraudulent concealment claims. If there are disputed facts material to the disposition of both equitable and legal claims, the court’s discretion to hear the equitable issues first must be narrowly exercised to preserve a jury trial on the disputed facts relevant to the legal issues. Here, we uphold the trial judge’s decision to hear the equitable issues and to allow Defendant to assert the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense. Regarding.Plaintiffs estoppel claim, substantial evidence supported the judge’s findings and his conclusions were based on the proper legal standard. Likewise, we uphold the trial court’s decision on Plaintiffs fraudulent concealment claim because there were no common issues of fact that were material to both the negligence claim and the fraudulent concealment claim. We affirm the district court.
{38} IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Plaintiff argues numerous facts concerning her lack of knowledge that Defendant was a public employee. These facts are relevant to Plaintiff's equitable estoppel claim, as discussed infra, in Section 111(A). However, Plaintiff's belief that Defendant was a private practitioner does not mean Defendant could not be a public employee.
. Defendant argues that Plaintiff failed to preserve her right to have a jury decide issues of material fact relevant to her legal claims by submitting to the evidentiary hearing. However, Plaintiff properly preserved the issue by requesting a jury trial at the outset of the litigation and objecting to the court hearing the equitable issues before the jury heard the legal issues.
. Because the parties litigated this issue as one of fraudulent concealment, we do not address the issue of when a cause of action accrues under the Tort Claims Act.
