
792 S.W.2d 869 (1990)
303 Ark. 45
MEDI-STAT, INC. and Dr. Michael Eades, Appellants,
v.
Gail KUSTURIN, Individually and as Administratrix of the Estate of Tim Cowan and Dennis Cowan, Appellees.
No. 89-238.
Supreme Court of Arkansas.
July 9, 1990.
*870 C. Tab Turner, Little Rock, for appellants.
Charles Hicks, Little Rock, for appellees.
SAM ED GIBSON, Special Justice.
Timothy Cowan went to a Medi-Stat, Inc. clinic for a prescription and a medical clearance to participate in a court-ordered alcohol rehabilitation program using the drug Antabuse. Cowan began Antabuse therapy on December 12, 1985. On February 12, 1986, he was admitted to a hospital where he died twelve days later of hepatitic (liver) failure resulting from his use of Antabuse.
Appellees sued Medi-Stat, Inc. (Medi-Stat) and Dr. Michael Eades on the basis of negligence in prescribing Antabuse and in following Cowan's course with the drug. The trial court denied appellant's motion for directed verdict and judgment NOV. From a verdict in favor of the appellees, the appellants appeal and contend that Medi-Stat was not responsible for the negligence of the physicians who personally treated Cowan and that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. We disagree and affirm.
Appellants initially argue that medical doctors cannot as a matter of law be servants or employees in the sense required by the doctrine of respondeat superior and rely on Runyan v. Goodrum, 147 *871 Ark. 481, 228 S.W. 397 (1921), and Arkansas Midland R.R. Co. v. Pearson, 98 Ark. 399, 135 S.W. 917 (1908).
Runyan v. Goodrum, supra, was decided at a time when x-ray technology was first being accepted as part of the practice of medicine. That decision holds that the relationship of master and servant cannot exist between physicians and surgeons, who are not x-ray specialists themselves, and the x-ray technicians whom they employ to assist them in the treatment and diagnosis of diseases. The Runyan decision relies on Arkansas Midland R.R. Co. v. Pearson, supra, but Pearson was decided on a different issue: namely, given the facts presented, whether the railroad's providing medical care was an eleemosynary activity and thus protected from tort liability.
In Pearson, the plaintiff's decedent was injured on the job and was treated by the employer's physicians and in medical facilities provided by the employer. The decedent's estate alleged that negligent medical treatment caused the death of the decedent. In considering whether the railroad corporation could be held responsible for the negligence of its physician employees, we said:
This question is for the first time before our court, and it has been decided differently by courts of other jurisdictions. A physician cannot be regarded as an agent or servant in the usual sense of the term, since he is not and necessarily cannot be directed in the diagnosing of diseases and injuries and prescribing treatment therefor; his office being to exercise his best skill and judgment in such matters, without control from those by whom he is called or his fees are paid. It is generally held that hospitals conducted for charity are not responsible for the negligence or malpractice of their physicians, and that persons and hospitals who treat patients for hire, with the expectation and hope of securing therefrom gain and profit, are liable for such negligence and malpractice on their part.
We examined the activity of the railroad in providing medical care facilities and physicians for railroad employees and concluded that, at most, the railroad corporation could only be considered a trustee for the proper administration and expenditure of money devoted to that purpose and should be held only to ordinary care in the selection of competent and skilled physicians to administer relief and provide attention to sick and injured employees.
We further noted:
If the railroad company did in fact realize a profit from the total deductions from the wages of its employees for the hospital fund after paying for the support and maintenance thereof and the employment of physicians, ... the rule might be different.
Two additional decisions aid in understanding the Runyan decision in its proper perspective in the present case: Gray v. McLaughlin, 207 Ark. 191, 179 S.W.2d 686 (1944), involved a claim for damages arising from x-ray burns. We noted factual similarities between Runyan and Gray and observed:
But in the Runyan case the court stressed the fact that Doctors Runyan, Kirby and Sheppard were not x-ray specialists and had no training in Roentgenology.
The court then concluded that while the relationship of master and servant could not exist between physicians and surgeons, who were not themselves x-ray specialists, and an x-ray specialist whom they employ to assist them in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases, the relationship of master and servant could exist between a physician who was an x-ray specialist and a technician employed by him to operate an x-ray machine in his office.
In Chicago, Rock Island and Pac. R.R. Co. v. Britt, 189 Ark. 571, 74 S.W.2d 398 (1934), the question of whether a for-profit business corporation, in that case a railroad company, could be vicariously liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior for the medical negligence of a physician employed by it was squarely decided in the affirmative. Ironically, the physician involved was the same Dr. J.P. Runyan who had been a successful appellant in Runyan. After *872 discussing the evidence of negligent conduct by Dr. Runyan and the facts concerning his employment by the railroad, we held:
This is simply a question of master and servant and of liability of the master for the wrongful conduct of the servant, and as we have said, we think that whether the servant was guilty of negligence was a question of fact and the finding of the jury is conclusive here.
Three members of the court joined in a dissenting opinion by Justice McHaney. The dissent vigorously argued that Pearson and Runyan controlled the outcome of the decision and mandated a holding that the railroad corporation could not be liable for the injuries caused by Dr. Runyan's medical negligence. From the arguments in the dissenting opinion it is apparent that the majority considered and rejected the proposition that Runyan precluded application of the doctrine of respondeat superior to a situation where a business corporation employs a physician to deliver medical services.
In light of our conclusion that a business corporation such as Medi-Stat can be liable for the medical negligence of its physician employees we must consider the appellants' second point of error, in which they contend that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict.
At trial, the decedent's mother testified that all of Cowan's appointments were scheduled with Medi-Stat and not with a particular physician. She testified that Cowan was treated by the physician present at the clinic at the time of his appointment. Numerous medical records from the Medi-Stat clinic were also introduced at the trial. These records all bear the notation Medi-Stat, Inc. and do not contain any name other than Medi-Stat. None of the records contain any sort of disclaimer or other indication that Medi-Stat is not the medical care provider or that its physicians are not employees of Medi-Stat. All of the billing for the medical services was done by Medi-Stat on Medi-Stat stationery that directed payment of the bill to Medi-Stat. In sum, the treatment took place in a Medi-Stat clinic, the clinic chose the physicians, and the clinic billed on its stationery for the physicians' charges. The verdict was supported by substantial evidence.
The appellants contend that there was no substantial evidence to support an award of pecuniary damage resulting from Cowan's death. A parent may recover pecuniary damages for the death of an adult child if there is a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit from the continued life of the child. Fordyce v. McCants, 51 Ark. 509, 11 S.W. 694 (1889). The evidence in this case shows that the decedent had contributed a significant amount of his past earnings to his mother and sisters. He had assisted his mother with the care of his sister, who suffers from cerebral palsy, which enabled the mother to keep that child in the home instead of an institution. When the mother enrolled in college, she and her son agreed that he would work to contribute to the family income to enable her to finish her education. There was substantial evidence from which the jury could have found a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit from the continued life of the adult child.
Appellants also complain that the trial court took judicial notice of the life expectancy of the mother based on the tables set out in the Arkansas Code. After the completion of testimony, and while the trial court and attorneys were discussing the jury instructions to be given, appellees requested that the court state the mother's life expectancy to the jury. The trial court did so over the appellants' objection. We find no error in that procedure.
Finally, the appellants assert that the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict as to Dr. Eades. Seven qualified expert witnesses testified in the case. Each of the experts called to testify by the appellees went through all of the contacts by the decedent with the Medi-Stat clinic, including each of the contacts (by telephone and in person) between the decedent and Dr. Eades. In regard to each contact, those experts expressed opinions (which *873 were sharply disputed by the opinion testimony of the experts presented by appellants) that the care rendered to Cowan failed to meet the standard expected of a physician practicing in Little Rock at the time in question. Two physicians stated their opinions that the substandard care, including that rendered by Dr. Eades, was the cause of Cowan's death. The evidence to support the verdict against Dr. Eades was substantial.
For the reasons stated above, we affirm the decision of the trial court.
Affirmed.
DUDLEY, NEWBERN and GLAZE, JJ., would affirm in part and reverse in part.
TURNER, J., not participating.
GLAZE, Justice, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I agree with the majority that sufficient evidence was presented to support the verdict against Dr. Eades. My disagreement with the majority concerns its affirmance of the verdict against Medi-Stat, Inc. On that point, I would reverse.
The part of the majority's holding with which I make exception is the conclusion that Medi-Stat is vicariously liable for the negligence of Dr. Eades. In this context, the doctrine of vicarious liability is also known as respondeat superior. See H. Ward Classen, Hospital Liability for Independent Contractors: Where Do We Go From Here?, 40 Ark.L.Rev. 469 (1987). Oftentimes this vicarious liability question surrounding a physician's negligence arises in cases involving hospitals. However, in Norton v. Hefner, 132 Ark. 18, 198 S.W. 97 (1917), the issue arose when Dr. Norton requested another physician to take charge of Norton's patients, and after doing so the evidence reflects the other physician negligently treated the patient. Although Norton was shown not negligent in the treatment of the patient or selection of the physician, the question posited was whether he was vicariously liable for the other physician's negligence. The Norton court said the following:
[A] party employing a person who follows a distinct and independent occupation of his own, is not responsible for the negligent or improper acts of the other.
The Norton court further stated that the doctrine of respondeat superior applies only in case of the negligence of a servant who acts under the directions and control of the master and does not apply to a physician or other professional man who, when employed, acts upon his own initiative and without direction from others.
In other pertinent holdings, the court, consistent with the rules noted in Norton, stated as follows:
A physician can not be regarded as an agent or servant in the usual sense of the term, since he is not and necessarily can not be directed in the diagnosing of diseases and injuries and prescribing treatment therefor, his office being to exercise his best skill and judgment in such matters, without control from those by whom he is called or his fees paid.
Runyan v. Goodrum, 147 Ark. 481, 228 S.W. 397 (1921); Arkansas Midland Railroad Co. v. Pearson, 98 Ark. 399, 135 S.W. 917 (1911).
When applying the rules announced in the cases above, the Arkansas law seems settled that a hospital or other entity, requiring the services of a physician, is not the employer of an independent contractor physician, and therefore, is not liable for a physician's torts, which arise from his or her negligence or malpractice. See id. And, while this appears to be the general rule, it has also been said that if there is a bona fide ongoing employer-employee relationship between the hospital and the physician, the hospital will be held vicariously liable for the tortious actions of the physician that occurs within the scope of his employment. See 40 Ark.L.Rev. at 479.
In Chicago, Rock Island & Pac. R.R. Co. v. Britt, 189 Ark. 571, 74 S.W.2d 398 (1934), a case relied upon by the majority, the Chicago Rock Island railway company contracted with Drs. J.P. Runyan, W.S. Britt, and other doctors (collectively known as St. Luke's Hospital Clinic) for the clinic *874 to provide surgical and medical attention to the company's employees. While assisting Dr. Runyan during a surgery, Britt sustained an injury to her eye as a result of Runyan's negligence. Britt sued both Runyan and Chicago Rock Island, and the jury returned a verdict against both Runyan and the railway company. In affirming the vicarious liability award against the company, this court set out the details of the parties' contract and their relationship. The Britt court concluded the jury was warranted in finding that the railway company was in complete control of the hospital and Dr. Runyan. In this connection, I need not relate all the evidence discussed by the court but I would point out that, under the contract, the railway company's chief surgeon, S.C. Plummer, had the authority to order, direct and regulate Dr. Runyan.
The majority opinion, by citing the dissent in the Britt case, seems to infer that that holding reversed Runyan. I thoroughly disagree. While the Britt decision is quite detailed and, perhaps convoluted, at times, the court clearly stated that the evidence provided a fact question that a master-servant relationship existed between the parties, and that, based upon the control the railway company exercised over Dr. Runyan and the hospital, Britt's vicarious liability award against the company was proper.
In the present case, appellees failed to show that an employee/employer relationship existed between Dr. Eades and Medi-Stat. The burden, in this respect, was appellees', see AMI 207, and appellees offered no evidence whatsoever on this issue.
The majority opinion does recite evidence the appellees presented below, but none of it pertains to proving an employer/employee relationship. Instead, it seems directed more at showing Medi-Stat was liable based upon an "ostensible agency" or "apparent authority" theory. In this regard, the majority relates that the decedent's mother scheduled appointments with Medi-Stat (and not a particular doctor) and that the treating doctor was merely the one present at the time of the appointment. It also notes that the clinic's records and billings bore the name of Medi-Stat with no mention of a physician. Again, none of these factors bear on whether Dr. Eades was an employee of Medi-Stat. If the majority recites these matters to support Medi-Stat's liability under some other theory, such as apparent authority, it fails to say so.
In any event, I believe Arkansas law, as noted above, is quite clear as it bears on whether Medi-Stat should be liable for Dr. Eades' negligence under the circumstances and evidence presented in this case. In my view, the law requires the judgment against Medi-Stat to be reversed.
DUDLEY and NEWBERN, JJ., join this opinion.
