Lead Opinion
Jimmie Cooper sued Dr. Louis Binion and Tanner Medical Center (the “hospital”) for medical malpractice arising out of Dr. Binion’s treatment of Cooper in the hospital’s emergency room. The trial court granted summary judgment to the hospital on the ground that Dr. Binion was an independent contractor. Cooper appeals, arguing that some evidence showed that Dr. Binion was in fact a hospital employee and also that under the doctrine of apparent authority, the hospital held Dr. Binion out as its employee. We agree and therefore reverse the grant of summary judgment to the hospital.
“Summary judgment is proper when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. OCGA § 9-11-56 (c).” Matjoulis v. Integon Gen. Ins. Corp.,
Construed in favor of Cooper, the evidence showed that when Cooper lost feeling in his left hand, his wife drove him to the hospital’s emergency room for treatment. She chose this hospital because her son had previously taken his children there, and they had received good treatment. Dr. Binion saw Cooper and determined that Cooper may have had a transient ischemic attack. Although Dr. Binion now admits that he should have prescribed a blood thinner such as aspirin, he failed to do so and sent Cooper home without any recommendations for medication. Consequently, Cooper suffered a stroke the next day, which has left him incapacitated in various respects.
Cooper sued Dr. Binion and the hospital for medical malpractice. The hospital moved for summary judgment, arguing it was not responsible for Dr. Binion’s actions. The hospital submitted Dr. Binion’s testimony and contract, which indicated that Dr. Binion was an independent contractor. Agreeing that Dr. Binion was an independent contractor, the trial court entered summary judgment in favor of the hospital. Cooper appeals, arguing that some evidence showed that Dr. Binion was either an actual employee or was at least represented as an apparent employee, upon which representation Cooper relied.
1. The first question is whether some evidence showed that Dr. Binion was an actual employee of the hospital. A hospital is liable for the actions of its employees acting within the scope of their employment and for the negligence of a contractor if the hospital retains the right to direct or control the time and manner of executing the work (which basically converts the contractor to an employee for liability purposes). See OCGA §§ 51-2-2; 51-2-5 (5). Thus,
[t]he rule is that for the hospital to be held liable it must be shown that the doctor was an employee of the hospital and not an independent contractor. The true test of whether the relationship is one of employer-employee or employer-independent contractor is whether the employer, under the contract either oral or written, assumes the right to control the time, manner and method of executing the work, as distinguished from the right merely to require certain definite results in conformity to the contract.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.) Allrid v. Emory Univ.,
In making this determination in the case at bar, we note two principles at the outset. First, merely being on the staff of a hospital does not ordinarily make a physician an employee of the hospital. Clary v. Hosp. Auth. of the City of Marietta,
Lee, supra,
(a) The right to direct the physician’s work step-by-step. The contract between Dr. Binion and the hospital is clear that the hospital has no right to direct his work step-by-step. The hospital “shall not exercise any control over the Physician in the practice of medicine____ The parties hereto recognize that the Physicians providing medical and clinical services hereunder shall be independent contractors insofar as they practice medicine and the Hospital will not interfere therewith.” Further, “in no way shall [the] Hospital be considered deemed to be engaged in the practice of medicine. Hospital should not exercise control of any nature, kind or description relating to the manner or means in which the Physician performs his duties and provides the emergency department coverage.” Although Dr. Binion initially testified that he was supervised by a medical director at the hospital, the evidence showed this was merely a consultation relationship. Thus, the undisputed evidence on this factor would indicate that Dr. Binion was an independent contractor.
(b) Contracts to perform a service rather than accomplish a task. “ ‘The latter are indicative of an independent contractor relationship, the former of an employee-employer relationship.’ [Cit.]” Lee, supra,
(c) The right of the hospital to inspect the physician’s work. “Since there is no evidence of record that the hospital had such authority, we find that Dr. [Binion] would be classified as an independent contractor under this factor.” Lee, supra,
(d) The supplier of the equipment. Although the evidence here does not address this matter directly, the hospital apparently provided the facility and equipment with which Dr. Binion performed his job. This would suggest that Dr. Binion was an employee. Lee, supra,
(e) The nature or skill of the physician’s work. “ ‘The more skilled the employee, the more likely he is an independent contractor.’ [Cit.]” Lee, supra,
(f) The hospital’s right to control the physician’s time. “The right to control the time means the employer has assumed the right to control the person’s actual hours of work.” (Footnote omitted.) Williamson v. Coastal Physician Svcs. of the Southeast,
The exception to this principle is where the physician has the right to designate what hours he is willing to work before the hospital makes up its schedule, which designation the hospital must respect. See Williamson, supra,
Significantly, if the hospital simply retains the right to control the physician’s hours (without actually exercising that right), such is sufficient to show control over the physician’s time. See Hodges, supra,
Here the contract between Dr. Binion and the hospital expressly provided that “[i]n entering into this contract both parties acknowledge that the Hospital shall control, through its Physician, the hours of work but it shall not exercise any control over the Physician in the practice of medicine.” Thus, while the hospital here may have intended to avoid exercising control over the method Dr. Binion followed to practice medicine, it apparently retained the right to control his hours of work, with no contractual provision that he had the power to designate his hours of availability in advance or that the hospital was to respect such a designation. Dr. Binion testified that he was required to work 12-hour shifts from 7:00 to 7:00 and that he understood the hospital controlled his hours. Contrary evidence indicating that Dr. Binion controlled his hours simply makes this an issue of fact for the jury.
(g) The method of payment. “If an employee is paid for the entire task performed, this evidences an independent contractor relationship. If, however, the employee is paid by the hour, that exemplifies an employee-employer relationship.” (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Lee, supra,
(h) Right to choose which patients to treat. Bonner, supra,
(i) Physician spends all working hours at hospital. A physician who spends all his working hours at the hospital and maintains no separate practice more likely appears to be an employee of the hospital.
(j) The method of billing the patients. Where the hospital handles and collects all of the patient billings through its system and does so in its name, with power to approve the physician rates charged, such would appear to be an employee-employer relationship. Bonner, supra,
(k) Payments for medical malpractice insurance. A hospital that pays the physician’s medical malpractice insurance is more likely the physician’s employer. Goins, supra,
Based on the above discussion, especially concerning the hospital’s retaining control over Dr. Binion’s time, we hold that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the hospital on the issue of whether Dr. Binion was an actual employee of the hospital.
2. The trial court also erred in granting summary judgment to the hospital on the issue of whether Dr. Binion was an apparent employee of the hospital. The doctrine of apparent or ostensible agency provides: “ ‘One who represents that another is his servant or other agent and thereby causes a third person justifiably to rely upon the care or skill of such apparent agent is subject to liability to the third person for harm caused by the lack of care or skill of the one appearing to be a servant or other agent as if he were such.’ ” Richmond County Hosp. Auth. v. Brown,
Here Cooper and his wife testified that they understood from the circumstances that the emergency room physician provided by the hospital was a hospital employee, particularly since Dr. Binion told the wife that he could not be their private doctor inasmuch as he had no private practice and did not see patients outside of the hospital’s emergency room. The wife further testified that they relied on this understanding and on the hospital’s good reputation in accepting medical care from Dr. Binion. See Abdul-Majeed v. Emory Univ. Hosp.,
The hospital counters that it explicitly informed Cooper and his wife that Dr. Binion was not a hospital employee by posting a sign in the admissions area to this effect and by including a paragraph in the admitting documents (signed by the wife) reiterating this. Generally, posting a conspicuous sign in the admissions area that the emergency room physicians are not hospital employees and having the patient sign an acknowledgment to this effect would preclude a claim of apparent authority. Holmes v. Univ. Health Svc.,
Accordingly, the trial court also erred in granting the hospital summary judgment on the issue of apparent or ostensible authority.
Judgment reversed.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially.
I concur fully with Division 1 and with the result reached in Division 2.1 write separately because I do not agree with all that is said in Division 2.
The hospital submitted positive evidence that a sign was posted in the admissions area reciting that doctors were independent contractors. In concluding that factual issues exist as to whether a sign was indeed posted, the majority relies on the testimony of one witness that he did not recall seeing such a sign, in addition to the fact that “there was no testimony that either Cooper or his wife saw” a sign. This circumstantial evidence has no probative value against the positive, uncontradicted evidence presented by the hospital concerning the existence of a sign. See, e.g., Cannon v. Jeffries,
I am authorized to state that Presiding Judge Ruffin joins in this special concurrence.
