OPINION
This is an appeal from a defense verdict in a malpractice action. The determinative issue in this case is whether a physician who asks another physician “to cover” for him in his absence can be held liable for the other physician’s malpractice.
Dr. Gershweir was the plaintiff’s doctor. Due to a spontaneous miscarriage, Dr. Gershweir determined that a. dilation and curettage (D & C) was necessary. After this procedure, certain drugs were prescribed to control the pain and the bleeding and the plaintiff went home. She continued to suffer pain and bleeding and had a fever. She called the doctor twice after the operation. Nine days after the D & C she called the doctor a third time because of these problems. Dr. Gershweir's answering service had his backup, Dr. Damon Raphael, answer plaintiff’s call. Gershweir had made an arrangement with Drs. Raphael and Edelberg to have a rotating system to cover for each other when they were out of town. Raphael’s response to the plaintiff’s complaints was to refill her prescriptions.
As a result of the D & C, plaintiff had developed an infection and approximately six days after she spoke to Dr. Raphael, she was admitted to Tucson Medical Center and her entire reproductive system was removed because of the infection. There was expert testimony that if the plaintiff had been seen by a doctor and received proper treatment there would have been a 70 to 80 percent chance of a cure.
Plaintiff subsequently filed this lawsuit against Dr. Gershweir. One of her theories of negligence against Dr. Gershweir was based on his vicarious liability for the acts of Dr. Raphael. Her instruction on this theory was rejected by the trial court which, instead, instructed the jury that the referring physician is not liable for the negligent acts of the covering physician so long as the referring physician exercises reasonable care in selecting the covering physician. She contends that the rejection of her instruction and the giving of the instruction absolving Gershweir from any negligence on the part of Dr. Raphael constituted reversible error. 1 We do not agree and affirm.
The general rule is that a physician is not liable for a substitute’s negligence unless the substitute physician is in his employment or is his agent, partner, or unless due care is not exercised in making the substitution.
Johnston v. Ward,
An apparent or ostensible agent is one where the principal has intentionally or inadvertently induced third persons to believe that such a person was his agent although no actual or express authority was conferred on him as agent.
Gulf Insurance Company v. Grisham,
Covering arrangements are a common and accepted practice. As observed by the court in Kavanaugh by Gonzales:
while it is in the nature of the medical profession that a patient’s emergency can arise at any moment, surely no person expects that his or her regular physician will always be there to respond. If liability were now to be imposed vicariously on physicians for the independent negligence of their covering doctors, some would doubtless be discouraged from making arrangements for the continuous care of their patients, but those who chose to or had to — if they are now to be made insurers of their colleagues’ independent acts — would be compelled to insure themselves accordingly. In either event, the public interest would ultimately be disserved.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellant did not move for a new trial and is thus precluded from raising the failure to give her instruction which necessarily requires an examination of the sufficiency of the evidence. See
Lewis v. Southern Pacific Co.,
