The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Chief Clerk of the Supreme Court. Once an opinion is selected
for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Chief Clerk for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA,
authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion.
1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
2 Opinion Number: _____________
3 Filing Date: August 17, 2023
4 No. A-1-CA-39697
5 LIANA TRUJILLO, individually and as the
6 Personal Representative of the Wrongful
7 Death Estate of SEVERO ORTEGA,
8 Plaintiff-Appellant,
9 v.
10 PRESBYTERIAN HEALTHCARE SERVICES,
11 INC. d/b/a PRESBYTERIAN ESPAÑOLA
12 HOSPITAL; JAMES J. MONTESINOS, M.D.;
13 and SAMUEL SOUTHAM, M.D.,
14 Defendants-Appellees,
15 and
16 PATRICK R. MONTOYA, M.D.; VICTOR L.
17 SHERMAN, M.D.; WILLIAM MURRY RYAN,
18 M.D.; MELISSA SUGAR, M.D.; SALVEDEESWA
19 LAKSHMI-NARAYANAN, M.D.; and EUGENIO
20 RIVERA, JR., M.D.,
21 Defendants.
22 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
23 Francis J. Mathew, District Court Judge
1 Law Office of James H. Wood PC
2 Arslan S. Umarov
3 Zacary E. Wilson-Fetrow
4 Albuquerque, NM
5 for Appellant
6 Rodey, Dickason, Sloan, Akin & Robb, P.A.
7 Edward Ricco
8 Brenda M. Saiz
9 Angelica Lopez
10 Albuquerque, NM
11 for Appellee Presbyterian Healthcare Services
12 Butt Thornton & Baehr P.C.
13 W. Ann Maggiore
14 Albuquerque, NM
15 Hinkle Shanor LLP
16 Dana S. Hardy
17 Jeremy Ian Martin
18 Santa Fe, NM
19 for Appellees James J. Montesinos, M.D. and Samuel Southam, M.D.
1 OPINION
2 BUSTAMANTE, Judge, retired, sitting by designation.
3 {1} This medical negligence case presents itself with an atypical procedural
4 history that influences the outcome of our opinion. We consider two issues. First,
5 did the district court err in granting Defendant Presbyterian Healthcare Services,
6 Inc.’s (Presbyterian) motion for summary judgment on the vicarious liability claim
7 against it for the actions of a nonemployee radiologist who had been previously
8 excused from the case via a stipulated order of dismissal? We conclude that the
9 district court correctly applied this Court’s ruling in Valdez v. R-Way, LLC, 2010-
10 NMCA-068, 148 N.M. 477, 237 P.3d 1289. And, second, did the district court err in
11 denying Plaintiff’s Rule 1-060(B) NMRA motion for reconsideration asking the
12 district court to revisit the judgment dismissing the radiologist, its order denying
13 Plaintiff’s partial motion seeking summary judgment as to Presbyterian’s vicarious
14 liability, and the summary judgment in favor of Presbyterian? [BIC 26-37] We hold
15 that the district court did not err in denying the Rule 1-060(B) motion because the
16 challenged orders were not final. We affirm.
17 BACKGROUND
18 {2} Plaintiff Liana Trujillo, individually and as personal representative of the
19 estate of Severo Ortega (Decedent), filed a wrongful death and personal injury
20 action. The complaint alleged that Decedent, who was seventy-one years old, went
1 to Presbyterian Española Hospital Emergency Room with complaints of generalized
2 weakness, chest pain, and fatigue. Doctors in the emergency room diagnosed
3 Decedent with joint pain associated with arthritis and discharged him. The complaint
4 alleged that Decedent was misdiagnosed and that he was suffering from pneumonia.
5 Decedent was readmitted to the hospital two days later. He died later that day.
6 Throughout the litigation, Plaintiff alleged that Dr. James Montesinos 1 was the
7 radiologist who reviewed x-rays of Decedent’s chest during his first trip to
8 Presbyterian and inaccurately determined they were clear when, in fact, they showed
9 Decedent had pneumonia.
10 {3} Plaintiff’s complaint, in relevant part, named Presbyterian and ten doctors
11 identified as “medical doctors and/or providers who were employees, agents, and/or
12 apparent agents of Presbyterian acting in the course and scope of their employment”
13 as defendants. The doctors included Dr. Montesinos.
1
The briefing makes allegations against both Dr. Montesinos and Dr. Samuel
Southam. The evidence presented demonstrates that Dr. Montesinos was the
radiologist who reviewed Decedent’s x-rays during his first hospitalization, though
we have no evidence of Dr. Southam’s role in this case. Plaintiff did not refer to Dr.
Southam as a radiologist who reviewed Decedent’s x-ray until her motion for
reconsideration and that allegation was not supported by evidence. The parties do
not address this lack of evidence or allegation in their briefing and the briefing
summarily refers to both doctors as the radiologists who provided services to
Decedent. Based on our holding, we need not address this lack of evidence but we
note it for accuracy.
2
1 {4} Within a month after the complaint was filed, Dr. Montesinos and two other
2 doctors filed a motion seeking dismissal of the case, or in the alternative, a stay of
3 “the case in its entirety” until the New Mexico Medical Review Commission (the
4 Commission) was completed. Plaintiff had filed an application with the Commission
5 a week before the complaint was filed but the Commission had not acted on it when
6 the complaint was filed. The district court filed a stipulated order staying the case
7 “until thirty (30) days after the . . . Commission panel renders its decision in
8 accordance with [NMSA 1978, Section] 41-5-22 [(1976)].”
9 {5} The next substantive pleading in the record proper—filed March 6, 2019, just
10 under three months after the stay—was a stipulated order dismissing Dr. Montesinos
11 and two other doctors from the action with prejudice. Though the order recites that
12 the district court “reviewed the parties’ stipulation,” the record proper does not
13 include the stipulation or reveal any of the details.
14 {6} As part of Plaintiff’s response to Presbyterian’s motion for summary
15 judgment filed some fifteen months after entry of the stipulated dismissal, Plaintiff
16 asserted in an affidavit that her attorney had not sought her approval to dismiss the
17 doctors nor had he informed her about the dismissal. She averred that she only found
18 out about the dismissal after she retained new counsel. Plaintiff’s current counsel
19 entered their appearance approximately five months after the stipulated dismissal
3
1 was entered. Plaintiff’s prior counsel formally withdrew from the case two months
2 thereafter.
3 {7} Soon after the substitution of counsel, Plaintiff filed a motion for partial
4 summary judgment arguing that Presbyterian was vicariously liable for the conduct
5 of Dr. Montesinos based on apparent agency because he was held out to the public
6 as one of the hospital’s agents. She also argued that dismissal of Dr. Montesinos had
7 no effect on her vicarious liability claim against Presbyterian. Presbyterian
8 responded, arguing Plaintiff’s claim of negligence by vicarious liability against it
9 was extinguished when Plaintiff voluntarily dismissed Dr. Montesinos from the
10 litigation with prejudice. After a hearing, the district court denied Plaintiff’s motion,
11 concluding “that there are genuine issues of fact and that the [m]otion is not well
12 taken.” At the hearing, the district court explained that Plaintiff did not meet her
13 burden to establish apparent agency as a matter of law and that it was “not finding,
14 as a matter of law, that Presbyterian . . . would be liable just based upon vicarious
15 liability as [Plaintiff] requested.”
16 {8} Four months after Plaintiff’s motion was denied, Presbyterian filed its own
17 motion for summary judgment, arguing again that Plaintiff had no remedy against
18 Presbyterian for vicarious liability claims because, by voluntarily dismissing Dr.
19 Montesinos, the agent, she extinguished any basis for imputing liability against
20 Presbyterian, the principal. Plaintiff responded by first arguing that the district court
4
1 “suggested this issue [was] properly reserved for the jurors.” She then argued that
2 because Plaintiff’s previous counsel dismissed Dr. Montesinos without her
3 permission, Dr. Montesinos was not released from liability, so her vicarious liability
4 claims remained. After a hearing, the district court granted Presbyterian’s motion
5 “because Plaintiff dismissed the radiology defendants from this case with prejudice
6 on March 6, 2019, and therefore, vicarious liability claims against [Presbyterian] for
7 the radiologists’ negligence premised on an agency theory were extinguished as a
8 matter of law.”
9 {9} Plaintiff then moved to reconsider three orders: the stipulated dismissal with
10 prejudice of Dr. Montesinos, the denial of her motion for summary judgment, and
11 the grant of Presbyterian’s motion for summary judgment. In the alternative, she
12 requested that the district court certify the stipulated dismissal for interlocutory
13 appeal. Though Plaintiff did not identify the motion as being pursuant to Rule 1-
14 060(B), her arguments referenced the rule and advanced arguments concerning
15 timeliness that echo Rule 1-060(B)’s requirements. Plaintiff argued that a new case,
16 Rogers v. Board of County Commissioners of Torrance County, 2020-NMCA-002,
17 ¶ 13, 455 P.3d 871,2 supported reversing the stipulated dismissal of the doctors. She
2
We note that Rogers was published on August 22, 2019, after the stipulated
dismissal, but before either of the motions for summary judgment were filed, despite
Plaintiff’s contention that it was not published while the parties briefed Plaintiff’s
motion for summary judgment.
5
1 also renewed her argument that she relied on the district court’s comments
2 suggesting the vicarious liability claims were “preserved.” Presbyterian responded
3 that Plaintiff’s Rule 1-060(B) motion was untimely because it was made more than
4 a year after the stipulated dismissal, and that the decision to dismiss Dr. Montesinos
5 was an authorized litigation strategy.
6 {10} The district court denied Plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration without a
7 hearing. The district court’s order detailed the timing and sequence of events
8 summarized above and noted that in its view, “Plaintiff took no action to set aside
9 the [stipulated order of dismissal],” until she filed her motion to reconsider—the
10 motion it was deciding. As such, the district court ruled that the motion for
11 reconsideration was “untimely pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(6).” The district court also
12 ruled that Rogers did not and could not overrule or modify New Mexico Supreme
13 Court precedent stating that litigation strategy is not a mistake. Thus, the district
14 court denied Plaintiff’s motion to reconsider on procedural and substantive grounds.
15 {11} At that point, Plaintiff still had active claims against seven doctors and
16 Presbyterian. Plaintiff proceeded to dismiss her remaining claims without prejudice.
17 She then appealed four orders: the dismissal with prejudice of Dr. Montesinos, the
18 two orders on summary judgment, and the order denying her motion for
19 reconsideration.
6
1 DISCUSSION
2 I. Vicarious Liability
3 {12} We start with the district court’s grant of Presbyterian’s motion for summary
4 judgment based on vicarious liability. Plaintiff argues that because Dr. Montesinos
5 acted as an apparent agent of Presbyterian, Presbyterian is vicariously liable for his
6 actions. Presbyterian argues, as the district court determined, that because Plaintiff
7 dismissed Dr. Montesinos with prejudice, all claims of vicarious liability against
8 Presbyterian based on his actions were extinguished. We agree with Presbyterian
9 and explain.
10 {13} “Summary judgment is reviewed on appeal de novo.” Juneau v. Intel Corp.,
11 2006-NMSC-002, ¶ 8, 139 N.M. 12, 127 P.3d 548. “Summary judgment is
12 appropriate where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is
13 entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 1998-
14 NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 126 N.M. 396, 970 P.2d 582. We review the evidence “in the light
15 most favorable to the party opposing summary judgment.” City of Albuquerque v.
16 BPLW Architects & Eng’rs, Inc., 2009-NMCA-081, ¶ 7, 146 N.M. 717, 213 P.3d
17 1146.
18 {14} We accept for purposes of our analysis Plaintiff’s contention that Dr.
19 Montesinos was acting as an agent of Presbyterian. This Court determined in 2010
20 that “a release of the agent extinguishes the derivative claim against the principal
7
1 since an agent and a principal are not joint tortfeasors.” Valdez, 2010-NMCA-068,
2 ¶ 14 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A release of a claim is
3 “abandonment, relinquishment or giving up of a right or claim to the person against
4 whom it might have been demanded or enforced and its effect is to extinguish the
5 cause of action.” Id. (omission, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted).
6 {15} Valdez squarely supports the district court’s decision that once Plaintiff
7 voluntarily dismissed her claim with prejudice against Dr. Montesinos, her claim
8 against Presbyterian was extinguished. A dismissal with prejudice is a permanent
9 bar from filing suit again on the same claim or claims. See Q Link Wireless LLC v.
10 N.M. Pub. Regul. Comm’n, ___-NMSC-___, ¶¶ 8, 10, ___ P.3d ___ (S-1-SC-38812,
11 May 22, 2023) (noting a dismissal with prejudice is a permanent bar of a party from
12 the proceedings); Dismissal, Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (defining
13 “dismissal with prejudice” as “[a] dismissal, usu[ally] after an adjudication on the
14 merits, barring the plaintiff from prosecuting any later lawsuit on the same claim”).
15 By permanently barring any claim she might have against Dr. Montesinos, Plaintiff
16 not only relinquished her negligence cause of action against him but additionally
17 “extinguishe[d] the derivative claim against [Presbyterian].” See Valdez, 2010-
18 NMCA-068, ¶ 14 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also OR&L
19 Constr., L.P. v. Mountain States Mut. Cas. Co., 2022-NMCA-035, ¶¶ 6, 27, 514 P.3d
20 40 (determining that the employer could not be held liable for the acts of its
8
1 employee once the plaintiff settled with the employee, released all its claims against
2 him, and agreed not to pursue further legal action).
3 {16} Plaintiff makes several arguments attempting to avoid the holding in Valdez.
4 First, relying on Juarez v. Nelson, 2003-NMCA-011, ¶ 28, 133 N.M. 168, 61 P.3d
5 877, overruled on other grounds by Tomlinson v. George, 2005-NMSC-020, 138
6 N.M. 34, 116 P.3d 105, she argues that the order dismissing Dr. Montesinos did not
7 include a factual determination that he was not negligent, thus it cannot be used to
8 impute immunity in favor of Presbyterian. Valdez specifically addressed Juarez and
9 limited it to its facts. Valdez, 2010-NMCA-068, ¶¶ 11-13 (noting that Juarez refused
10 to allow a hospital to take advantage of a shorter statute of limitation available for a
11 doctor under the Medical Malpractice Act that was explicitly not applicable to the
12 hospital). Thus, per Valdez, a release of liability is determinative and factual
13 determination on the merits of the employee’s liability is not necessary. Id. ¶ 14.
14 {17} Second, Plaintiff relies on cases discussing the concept of claim preclusion.
15 Claim preclusion addresses limits on the relitigation of the same claim or issue by
16 the same parties in another case, which is distinct from vicarious liability, and, thus,
17 not controlling. Compare Bank of N.Y. v. Romero, 2016-NMCA-091, ¶ 15, 382 P.3d
18 991 (“The doctrine of claim preclusion, or res judicata, bars re[]litigation of the same
19 claim between the same parties or their privies when the first litigation resulted in a
20 final judgment on the merits.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)), with
9
1 Valdez, 2010-NMCA-068, ¶ 7 (describing vicarious liability as the fault one party
2 has based on the “legal imputation of responsibility for another’s tortious acts”
3 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
4 {18} Third, Plaintiff argues that a release of liability is void unless it is
5 acknowledged by a notary public, and “[w]ithout an operative release, there is no
6 accord, and without an accord, there is no defense to liability.” As Presbyterian
7 noted, Plaintiff relies on NMSA 1978, Sections 41-1-1 to -2 (1971), which apply
8 only to settlements and releases obtained from an injured person who is hospitalized
9 or receiving care for the injury suffered. Thus, the statutes do not apply to the
10 circumstances of this case and do not control our inquiry.
11 {19} We affirm the district court’s grant of Presbyterian’s motion for summary
12 judgment.
13 II. Motion for Reconsideration
14 {20} We next address Plaintiff’s argument that it was error to deny her Rule 1-
15 060(B) motion to reconsider requesting the district court set aside her voluntary
16 dismissal of Dr. Montesinos and the court’s summary judgment rulings regarding
17 Presbyterian’s vicarious liability. We review the district court’s ruling on motions
18 for relief from final judgment under Rule 1-060(B) for abuse of discretion. See Resol.
19 Tr. Corp. v. Ferri, 1995-NMSC-055, ¶ 5, 120 N.M. 320, 901 P.2d 738. “An abuse
20 of discretion occurs when a ruling is clearly contrary to the logical conclusions
10
1 demanded by the facts and circumstances of the case.” Benz v. Town Ctr. Land, LLC,
2 2013-NMCA-111, ¶ 11, 314 P.3d 688 (internal quotation marks and citation
3 omitted). In determining if an abuse of discretion occurred, we review de novo the
4 application of the law to the facts. See Gandara v. Gandara, 2003-NMCA-036, ¶ 9,
5 133 N.M. 329, 62 P.3d 1211.
6 {21} Before we launch into our analysis of the issue, we deem it appropriate to
7 discuss the difficulties created by the procedural posture of the case. We start with
8 the inexplicable voluntary dismissal with prejudice of the radiologist. As explained
9 above, that decision carried the obvious and fatal consequence for Plaintiff’s
10 vicarious liability case against Presbyterian. We do not—and cannot—know
11 whether Plaintiff’s original counsel appreciated the risk. We can be confident that
12 Plaintiff’s current counsel did, given the arguments made in the motion seeking
13 summary judgment in Plaintiff’s favor that Presbyterian continued to face vicarious
14 liability despite the dismissal of the radiologist. Plaintiff’s decision to pursue
15 summary judgment was dubious given the existence of authorities such as Rogers
16 and Downer v. Southern Union Gas Co., 1949-NMSC-045, ¶¶ 7, 8, 53 N.M. 354,
17 208 P.2d 815 (holding that the plaintiff could challenge the validity of a release of
18 the defendant and the employer without joining the employee in the action).
19 {22} Plaintiff’s choice of Rule 1-060(B) as the vehicle for her motion to reconsider
20 was, as we will discuss, problematic if only because none of the orders challenged
11
1 were in any sense final. Plaintiff has not acknowledged that Rule 1-060(B) was the
2 wrong rule to rely on and continues to rely on it in her argument to this Court. Thus,
3 we analyze the district court’s order on the motion for reconsideration in light of the
4 arguments made to it. See Haden v. Eaves, 1950-NMSC-050, ¶ 12, 55 N.M. 40, 226
5 P.2d 457; see also Cubra v. State ex rel. Child., Youth & Fams. Dep’t, 1996-NMCA-
6 035, ¶ 13, 121 N.M. 465, 913 P.2d 272 (“[W]e review the case litigated below, not
7 the case that is fleshed out for the first time on appeal.”).3
8 {23} Rule 1-060(B) does not apply in this instance because the order from which
9 Plaintiff requests relief is not a final order. Rule 1-060(B) applies only where relief
10 is sought from a final order. See Rule 1-060(B) (“On motion and on such terms as
11 are just, the court may relieve a party or the party’s legal representative from a final
12 judgment, order, or proceeding.”); see also Phelps Dodge Corp. v. Guerra, 1978-
13 NMSC-053, ¶ 14, 92 N.M. 47, 582 P.2d 819 (“Rule [1-0]60 . . . was created to
14 provide a simplified method for correcting errors in final judgments.”); id. ¶ 15
15 (“The intendment of Rule [1-0]60([B]) is to carefully balance the competing
16 principles of finality and relief from unjust judgments.”); Kinder Morgan CO2 Co.,
Our resolution of the appeal of the district court’s denial of the motion for
3
reconsideration makes it unnecessary for us to consider the merits of the district
court’s conclusion that Rogers could not be used or relied upon to challenge the
efficacy of the stipulated dismissal of the radiologist.
12
1 L.P. v. N.M. Tax’n & Revenue Dep’t, 2009-NMCA-019, ¶ 19, 145 N.M. 579, 203
2 P.3d 110 (same).
3 {24} Dismissal of a party with prejudice previously was considered a final order.
4 See Rule 1-054(B)(2) NMRA (2015) (stating in applicable part that “[w]hen multiple
5 parties are involved, judgment may be entered adjudicating all issues as to one or
6 more, but fewer than all parties. Such judgment shall be a final one unless the court,
7 in its discretion, expressly provides otherwise and a provision to that effect is
8 contained in the judgment”). The December 31, 2016, amendment to Rule 1-054
9 NMRA changed the final nature of such orders in cases where other parties remain
10 in the action. Rule 1-054(B) now states, “[A]ny order or other decision, however
11 designated, that adjudicates fewer than all the claims, or the rights and liabilities of
12 fewer than all the parties, does not end the action for any of the claims or parties,
13 and may be revised at any time before the entry of a judgment adjudicating all the
14 claims and all the parties’ rights and liabilities.” Given that the dismissal of the
15 radiologist left many claims and parties 4 in the pending action, the order dismissing
16 the radiologist was not final.
We note that Plaintiff made claims against “John Does 1-10[ and] Jane Does
4
1-10,” which were not dismissed until after the district court denied Plaintiff’s
motion for reconsideration and Plaintiff dismissed all her remaining claims without
prejudice. These John Doe and Jane Doe parties were never properly served and
never voluntarily appeared in the case. This Court recently determined that a district
court’s failure to dismiss an unserved defendant does not keep a case from being
13
1 {25} Plaintiff argues that the case was effectively final once the claims against the
2 radiologist and Presbyterian were dismissed. The crux of her assertion is that the
3 remaining claims included “only a minor portion of the damages that would be due
4 to [Plaintiff] for [Decedent’s] wrongful death . . . [a]nd in practice, [Plaintiff’s
5 remaining] claims were impracticable to be tried as stand-alone claims[,]” thus,
6 deeming the judgment final “would further promote the principles of finality against
7 piecemeal appeals.” Plaintiff’s argument is unavailing.
8 {26} Generally, “an order or judgment is not considered final unless all issues of
9 law and fact have been determined and the case [is] disposed of by the [district] court
10 to the fullest extent possible.” Kelly Inn No. 102, Inc. v. Kapnison, 1992-NMSC-
11 005, ¶ 14, 113 N.M. 231, 824 P.2d 1033 (internal quotation marks and citation
12 omitted). Kelly Inn’s admonition to give finality “a practical, rather than a technical,
13 construction” and looking “to its substance and not its form,” id. ¶ 15, cannot be
14 used to override the explicit language of Rule 1-054(B). As we noted above, after
15 the voluntary dismissal Plaintiff had active claims against seven doctors and
16 Presbyterian. After the order granting Presbyterian’s motion for summary judgment,
17 Plaintiff still had claims against four named doctors and Presbyterian. Even
18 assuming that the remaining claims represented a small percentage of the recovery,
final. Camarena, ex rel. Camarena v. Superior Contracting Corp., ___-NMCA-___,
¶ 14, ___ P.3d ___, (A-1-CA-39598, Feb. 23, 2023).
14
1 the stipulated order of dismissal was not practically or substantively final. Compare
2 Kelly Inn, 1992-NMSC-005, ¶ 21 (“Where a judgment declares the rights and
3 liabilities of the parties to the underlying controversy, a question remaining to be
4 decided thereafter will not prevent the judgment from being final if resolution of that
5 question will not alter the judgment or moot or revise decisions embodied therein.”),
6 with Trujillo v. Hilton of Santa Fe, 1993-NMSC-017, ¶ 3, 115 N.M. 397, 851 P.2d
7 1064 (noting the exception to the rule of finality for “the disposition and distribution
8 of assets in accordance with an adjudication, ancillary writs to enforce a judgment,
9 or the judicial sale of property following a decree of foreclosure on a mortgage”),
10 and Vill. of Los Ranchos Bd. of Trs. v. Sanchez, 2004-NMCA-128, ¶ 6, 136 N.M.
11 528, 101 P.3d 339 (“When the issue of damages remains, the order or judgment has
12 not practically disposed of the merits of the case.”).
13 {27} The district court’s order denying the motion for rehearing relied on the notion
14 that a motion for relief filed pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(1) “shall be made . . . not
15 more than one (1) year after the judgment, order, or proceeding was entered or
16 taken.” Rule 1-060(B)(6); see Rogers, 2020-NMCA-002, ¶ 9 (determining a Rule 1-
17 060(B)(1) motion was timely filed within a one year deadline required by Rule 1-
18 060(B)(6)). The stipulated dismissal was filed in March 2019 and the motion for
19 reconsideration was filed in December 2020. The motion was filed sixteen months—
20 well over a year—after the dismissal. Had the order dismissing the radiologist been
15
1 final, the motion for reconsideration would have been untimely pursuant to Rule 1-
2 060(B)(6). But, as we have concluded, the order was not final and Rule 1-060(B)
3 simply did not apply in these circumstances. We emphasize that interim orders such
4 as the ones under review in this case are interlocutory and generally subject to
5 modification during the pendency of an action—but not pursuant to Rule 1-060(B).
6 {28} Thus, Rule 1-060(B), the rule under which Plaintiff sought relief in district
7 court and advances her arguments on appeal, is inapplicable. See DeFillippo v. Neil,
8 2002-NMCA-085, ¶ 21, 132 N.M. 529, 51 P.3d 1183 (concluding that Rule 1-060(B)
9 did not apply to a motion for relief where the order in question was nonfinal). Based
10 on the foregoing, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Plaintiff’s
11 motion for reconsideration under Rule 1-060(B).
12 CONCLUSION
13 {29} We affirm.
14 {30} IT IS SO ORDERED.
15 __________________________________
16 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge,
17 retired, sitting by designation
16
1 WE CONCUR:
2 _________________________________
3 JENNIFER L. ATTREP, Chief Judge
4 _________________________________
5 JACQUELINE R. MEDINA, Judge
17
1 BUSTAMANTE, Judge, retired, sitting by designation (special concurrence).
2 {31} I write separately to note my longstanding concern that our case law regarding
3 the dismissal of an employee and its effect on a plaintiff’s vicarious liability claim
4 against the employee’s employer has strayed beyond its doctrinal roots, creating
5 illogical legal traps for the unwary that serve no purpose connected to the policies
6 underlying the theory of respondeat superior/vicarious liability. In my view, there is
7 no fundamental difference between (1) not naming an employee or agent in a suit,
8 (2) entering into a covenant not to sue an employee or agent, (3) dismissing an
9 employee or agent based on a defense personal to the employee, (4) releasing an
10 employee or agent, and (5) voluntarily dismissing a named employee or agent from
11 a suit before a determination of their culpability on the merits. None of these
12 “escapes” from personal liability are based on a finding that the employee/agent was
13 not negligent or otherwise not culpable. Yet the result in terms of the
14 employer/principle’s potential liability is dramatically different. The first three
15 scenarios do not affect the employer/principle’s exposure to vicarious liability. See
16 Juarez, 2003-NMCA-011, ¶ 28; Valdez, 2010-NMCA-068, ¶ 15. The latter two do.
17 {32} Were I writing on a clean slate, I would adopt the approach recently articulated
18 by the Arizona Supreme Court Laurence v. Salt River Project Agricultural
19 Improvement & Power District, 528 P.3d 139, 141 (Ariz. 2023). In Laurence, the
20 court undertook a comprehensive review of its employer/agent vicarious
18
1 jurisprudence and overruled DeGraff v. Smith, 157 P.2d 342 (Ariz. 1945) (cited with
2 approval in Valdez, 2010-NMCA-068, ¶ 8). Laurence, 528 P.3d at 141-51. The
3 Arizona court determined that “when tort claims against an employee are not
4 actually adjudicated, dismissal of the employee-claim does not summarily require
5 dismissal of the respondeat superior claim[,]” an approach that I would adopt in New
6 Mexico. Id. at 150.
7 ____________________________________
8 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge,
9 retired, sitting by designation
19