Plaintiff argues that (I) the prior unpublished opinion of this Court dated 16 June 1998 was res judicata as to his vicarious liability claim against defendant hospital, and that (II) the dismissal of his claims against Dr. Byrd with prejudice and without payment was, in effect, a release given in good faith pursuant to the Uniform Contribution Among Tort-Feasors Act, so that defendant was not discharged from liability. We disagree with both contentions and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
I.
Plaintiff argues that this Court’s unpublished decision of 16 June 1998 established his right to a trial on the issue of defendant’s vicari *676 ous liability for the negligent acts of its alleged agent, Dr. Byrd; that the decision became the law of the case, and prevented the trial court from considering the “new” motion for summary judgment. We have carefully considered plaintiffs argument, but cannot agree. When this case was before us on plaintiffs prior appeal, we framed the issue as follows:
The question here is whether there is a genuine issue of material fact that Dr. Byrd was subject to regulation, interference or control by defendant hospital with respect to the manner or method of performing his duties as an emergency room physician. Plaintiff argues that there was some evidence that Dr. Byrd was acting as an agent of defendant hospital at the time he treated and discharged plaintiff and summary judgment was inappropriate. After careful review, we agree.
Given that there is evidence of several factors that support the contention that Dr. Byrd was an employee rather than an independent contractor, we hold that summary judgment was inappropriately granted. We therefore reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand for a new trial.
Both defendant and Dr. Byrd have contended throughout the course of this litigation that Dr. Byrd was an independent contractor, not an employee of Maria Parham Hospital. This Court found that there were several factors which supported the plaintiffs contention that Dr. Byrd was an employee of Maria Parham, and remanded the case for trial on that issue. We did not discuss in the opinion, nor did the parties argue in their briefs, the question of the effect of plaintiffs voluntary dismissal of his claims against Dr. Byrd with prejudice and “without payment.” Plaintiff strenuously contends, however, that because he included the 27 May 1997 voluntary dismissal with prejudice of his claims against Dr. Byrd in the record on appeal, the issue of its effect was properly before this Court and could have been asserted by the defendant. Plaintiff reasons that since defendant could have raised the issue of the voluntary dismissal’s effect during his prior appeal, our prior decision has res judicata implications, and bars the trial court from considering and granting the motion for summary judgment now before us.
Although plaintiff included the voluntary dismissal document in the prior record on appeal, we note that the voluntary dismissal of *677 Dr. Byrd with prejudice was entered on 27 May 1997, after the trial court had made its decision on the “new” motion for summary judgment, and four days after the trial court signed the order granting summary judgment. Plaintiff agrees that the order granting summary judgment was signed by the trial court on 23 May 1997, but contends the order was not “entered” pursuant to Rule 58 of the Rules of Civil Procedure until 28 May 1997, when it was filed in the office of the clerk of superior court. Although the date the order granting summary judgment was “entered” is important for some purposes, the 27 May 1997 voluntary dismissal with prejudice was simply not before the trial court when the trial court signed its order granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiff relies on numerous appellate decisions which stand for the proposition that, since he included the voluntary dismissal with prejudice of Dr. Byrd in the record filed in connection with his prior appeal, the issue could have been raised before this Court. Therefore, he argues, this Court’s unpublished decision of 16 June 1998 is necessarily res judicata as to all issues which could have been raised. We disagree.
The decisions plaintiff cites do not support his position. Instead, the decisions deal with the commonly occurring situation where a litigant seeks to pursue a previously denied motion on a new legal theory, even though there has been no change in the underlying facts of the case. For example, plaintiff relies on
Gibbs v. Higgins,
Plaintiff also relies on the decision of this Court in
Board of Education v. Construction Corp.,
Where a question before an appellate court has previously been answered on an earlier appeal in the same case, the answer to the question given in the former appeal becomes “the law of the case” for purposes of later appeals.
Construction Corp.,
In the case before us, however, the entry of a voluntary dismissal with prejudice as to Dr. Byrd materially changes the factual setting and raises an entirely new legal issue as to the effect of that voluntary dismissal on the liability of defendant. We did not answer that question in our decision of 16 June 1998 and our decision did not become the “law of the case” on the issue which is now before us. The trial court properly considered defendant’s “new” motion for summary judgment based on an event which occurred after the court granted the defendant’s earlier motion for summary judgment. This assignment of error is overruled.
*679 II.
Plaintiffs second argument raises a more difficult question: may an injured plaintiff proceed against an alleged employer on the theory of respondeat superior, after having dismissed with prejudice and without payment plaintiffs negligence claim against the alleged employee? We conclude that plaintiff is barred from proceeding against defendant, the alleged employer of Dr. Byrd.
At common law, the release of the servant released the master as well.
Smith v. R.R.,
In 1967, our General Assembly enacted the Uniform Contribution Among Tort-Feasors Act (the Uniform Act), codified as N.C. Gen. Stat. §§ IB-1 to IB-6. The Uniform Act provides in pertinent part that:
When a release or a covenant not to sue ... is given in good faith to one of two or more persons liable in tort for the same injury or the same wrongful death:
(1) It does not discharge any of the other tort-feasors from liability for the injury or wrongful death unless its terms so provide^]
N.C. Gen. Stat. § IB-4 (1983).
Initially, it did not appear that the Uniform Act made any change in the established law of master and servant since the two were not considered to be joint tort-feasors. However, in
Yates v. New South Pizza, Ltd.,
In
Harris v. Miller,
In the present case, however, the litigation against the alleged servant, Dr. Byrd, was not terminated by a release or covenant not to sue, but was terminated by a voluntary dismissal with prejudice and without payment. Even if the voluntary dismissal had not recited that it was “with prejudice,” it was the second dismissal of plaintiffs claims against Dr. Byrd and would have operated as an adjudication on the merits. “Such a dismissal is with prejudice, and it operates as a disposition on the merits and precludes subsequent litigation in the same manner as if the action had been prosecuted to a full adjudication against the plaintiff.”
Graham v. Hardee’s Food Systems,
In
Barnes,
decided after the enactment of the Uniform Act, the plaintiff contended that he was injured by the negligence of defendant McGee while McGee was acting as a servant of defendant YMCA. At trial, the trial court allowed the YMCA’s motion for a directed ver-
*681
diet, and dismissed with prejudice the action against McGee. On appeal, this Court held that a “ ‘[dismissal with prejudice, unless the court has made some other provision, is subject to the usual rules of res judicata and is effective
not only on the immediate parties but also on their privies.’”
Barnes,
This Court decided
Graham
following the Supreme Court decisions in
Yates
and
Harris.
In
Graham,
the female plaintiff sued Hardee’s and its employee Rogers, based on sexual advances allegedly made by Rogers. The plaintiff dismissed her original complaint without prejudice, and then refiled her claim. Hardee’s moved for summary judgment, following which the plaintiff again voluntarily dismissed her claim against Rogers. The trial court then granted Hardee’s motion for summary judgment, and the plaintiff appealed. This Court held that “each of these claims [against Hardee’s] as presented by plaintiff is dependant upon the alleged tortious conduct of Rogers. Since Rogers has been adjudicated not liable for the alleged conduct as a result of plaintiff’s second voluntary dismissal of her claims against him, the remaining claims against Hardee’s must also fail.”
Graham,
In the case before us, the dismissal against Dr. Byrd was a second dismissal of plaintiff’s claims against him and therefore operated as an adjudication on the merits under the express language of Rule 41 of the Rules of Civil Procedure and our holding in
Barnes.
Furthermore, the voluntary dismissal itself specifically stated that it was with prejudice. Under the reasoning of our Court in
Graham,
the dismissal with prejudice as to Dr. Byrd operated as a disposition on the merits, and “precludes subsequent litigation [against defendant Maria Parham Hospital, Inc.] in the same manner as if the action had been prosecuted to a full adjudication against the plaintiff.”
Id.
at 384,
Affirmed.
