Banks v. Elks Club Pride of Tennessee 1102
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Full Opinion
OPINION
delivered the opinion of the court,
This appeal involves the continuing viability in Tennessee of the common-law principle that imputes liability to an original tortfeasor for enhanced physical harm caused by the normal efforts of third persons to render aid which an injured party reasonably requires. A guest at a private club was injured on the clubâs premises. The injuries to the guestâs back were compounded first by the conduct of her surgeon and second by the actions or inac-tions of a nursing home where the guest was a patient following her surgery. The guest filed separate lawsuits against the private club and her surgeon in the Circuit Court for Davidson County. After the cases were consolidated, the club and the surgeon moved to amend their answers to assert comparative fault claims against the nursing home. The trial court denied their motions but granted them permission to pursue an interlocutory appeal. After the Court of Appeals declined to consider the interlocutory appeal, the club and the surgeon sought this Courtâs permission for an interlocutory appeal. We granted their *216 application. We now hold that an original tortfeasor is not jointly and severally liable for the further aggravation of an original injury caused by a subsequent tortfeasorâs medically negligent treatment of the injury caused by the original tortfeasorâs negligence. Therefore, we have determined that the trial court erred by denying the motions of the club and the surgeon to amend their complaints to assert comparative fault claims against the nursing home.
I.
Alice J. Banks attended a social event at an Elks Lodge in Nashville on March 24, 2006. While she was there, the chair on which she was seated collapsed, causing serious injuries to Ms. Banksâs back. 1 Ms. Banks consulted with Dr. Robert H. Boyce, a physician affiliated with Premier Orthopaedics and Sports Medicine, P.C. (âPremier Orthopaedicsâ), who recommended lumbar surgery at the L3-L4 and L4-L5 levels. The procedure consisted of a decompression laminectomy and fusion. Ms. Banks agreed to have the procedure performed.
On May 16, 2006, Ms. Banks underwent surgery at Centennial Medical Center. While Dr. Boyceâs operative report indicates that he performed a lumbar laminec-tomy and fusion at the L3-L4 and L4-L5 vertebrae as intended, he actually performed the surgery upon the L2-L3 and L3-L4 vertebrae. It was only after the surgery was completed that Dr. Boyce realized he mistakenly performed the surgery at the L2-L3, rather than the L4-L5 vertebrae. As a result, Ms. Banks was required to undergo a second surgery on May 17, 2006.
Following Ms. Banksâs surgeries, she was transferred to Cumberland Manor Nursing Home (âCumberland Manorâ) for further recuperation and rehabilitation. While a patient at Cumberland Manor, Ms. Banks developed a serious staphylococcus infection that required additional surgeries and extensive care and treatment.
On March 23, 2007, Ms. Banks filed suit in the Circuit Court for Davidson County against the Elks Club Pride of Tennessee 1102, Pride of Tennessee Lodge of Elks No. 1102 Improved Benevolent, and Elks Lodge 1102 Pride of Tennessee 2 (âElks Lodge defendantsâ). She alleged that the negligence of the Elks Lodge defendants had caused her back injuries. The case was assigned to the Sixth Circuit Court.
On May 10, 2007, Ms. Banks filed a separate lawsuit against Dr. Boyce and Premier Orthopaedics (âDr.Boyeeâ) in the Circuit Court for Davidson County. She asserted claims of medical negligence and medical battery based on Dr. Boyceâs performance of an unauthorized procedure. This case was assigned to the Fifth Circuit Court.
Dr. Boyce later requested the Fifth Circuit Court to transfer Ms. Banksâs lawsuit against him to the Sixth Circuit Court where her lawsuit against the Elks Lodge defendants was pending. Ms. Banks agreed to the transfer, and on January 8, 2008, the Fifth Circuit Court filed an order transferring Ms. Banksâs case against Dr. *217 Boyce, to the Sixth Circuit Court. On January 16, 2008, the Sixth Circuit Court entered an order consolidating the two cases for management and discovery purposes.
On May 30, 2008, the Elks Lodge defendants filed a Tenn. R. Civ. P. 15.01 motion to amend their answer to assert a comparative fault defense against Cumberland Manor. They alleged that they had learned during the discovery process that Cumberland Manorâs improper care and treatment had contributed to Ms. Banksâs staphylococcus infection. They also asserted that this infection had aggravated Ms. Banksâs injuries and damages and that Ms. Banks was seeking to hold them responsible for these additional injuries and damages. The Elks Lodge defendants also reserved the right âto amend them comparative fault defense to allege fault of others throughout the course of discovery and trial.â On June 2, 2008, Dr. Boyce also sought to amend his answer to assert a comparative fault defense against Cumberland Manor, adopting the same language set forth in the Elks Lodge defendantsâ motion.
Ms. Banks opposed the defendantsâ motions to amend their answers to assert a comparative fault defense against Cumberland Manor. She argued that the defendantsâ efforts to assert a comparative fault defense âagainst a subsequent healthcare provider for alleged negligent medical treatment that was brought on by the injuries negligently caused by the named defendants is inappropriate.â In their trial court briefs, the parties argued vigorously over whether what they referred to as the âoriginal tortfeasor ruleâ or the âoriginal tortfeasor doctrineâ 3 survived this Courtâs decision in McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d 52 (Tenn.1992) and its progeny.
On August 15, 2008, the trial court entered an order denying the Elks Lodge defendantsâ and Dr. Boyceâs motion to amend them complaints to assert comparative fault claims against Cumberland Man- or. The court reasoned that âthe holdings in the cases of Transports, Inc. v. Perry, 220 Tenn. 57, 414 S.W.2d 1 (1967) and Atkinson v. Hemphill, 1994 WL 456349 (Tenn.Ct.App.1994), [are] still good law and the proposed amendments would be futile and therefore must be denied under Rule 15, Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure.â On its own motion, the court also suggested that pursuing a Tenn. RApp. P. 9 interlocutory appeal from its decision would be appropriate. The Elks Lodge defendants and Dr. Boyce pursued an interlocutory appeal; however, on September 10, 2008, the Court of Appeals denied them application for an interlocutory appeal without comment.
On October 9, 2008, the Elks Lodge defendants and Dr. Boyce filed a Tenn. RApp. P. 9 application for permission to appeal. We granted the application on December 15, 2008. Following our decision to grant permission to appeal, Ms. Banks, seeking to avoid potentially adverse statute of limitations impact should this *218 Court determine that the trial court erred in not permitting the Elks Lodge defendants or Dr. Boyce to amend their answers to assert an affirmative defense against Cumberland Manor, amended her complaint to name Cumberland Manor as a tortfeasor.
II.
Eighteen years ago, this Court produced a sea-change in Tennesseeâs tort law by replacing the common-law concept of contributory negligence with the concept of contributory fault. McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d at 56. We expressly recognized at that time that many of the issues arising from the transition to a comparative fault regime would be addressed in later cases. McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d at 57. Accordingly, it has come to pass that this Court has been presented with many opportunities since 1992 to revisit, refine, and clarify many of the central tenets of McIntyre v. Balentine and to address their impact on Tennessee tort law.
One of the central tenets of McIntyre v. Balentine is that the doctrine of joint and several liability was âobsoleteâ because it was inconsistent with the doctrine of comparative fault. McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d at 58. 4 We explained that the doctrine of comparative fault, which would more closely link liability and fault, could not be reconciled with joint and several liability which could âfortuitously impose a degree of liability that is out of all proportion to fault.â McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d at 58.
The announcement that the doctrine of joint and several liability was obsolete, while later characterized as dictum, 5 was not met with universal acceptance. Mr. McIntyre and one of the parties who filed an amicus curiae brief requested a rehearing to address âthe advisability of retaining joint and several liability in certain limited circumstances.â This Court declined to grant the petition for rehearing, stating that âsuch further guidance should await an appropriate controversy.â McIntyre v. Balentine, 833 S.W.2d at 60.
Thus, the McIntyre v. Balentine decision left behind some ambiguity regarding the continuing viability of any application of the doctrine of joint and several liability. On one hand, the Court had declared the doctrine âobsolete.â On the other hand, the Court had left open the possibility that it might retain the doctrine âin certain limited circumstancesâ in future cases. As a result, the practicing bar set out to create opportunities for the Court to decide in what circumstances, if any, the doctrine of joint and several liability could rise from the ashes of obsolescence.
In the first comparative fault cases considered by the Court, we reaffirmed that our decision in McIntyre v. Balentine âdid abolish the doctrine of joint and several liability to the extent that it allows a plaintiff to sue and obtain a full recovery against any one or more of several parties against whom liability could be established.â Bervoets v. Harde Ralls Pontiac-Olds, Inc., 891 S.W.2d 905, 907 (Tenn.1994). The following year, we repeated *219 that âone of the corollaries to the adoption of comparative fault ... was the abolition of the doctrine of joint and several liability,â and we âconfirm[ed] that the doctrine of joint and several liability was rendered obsolete by our decision in McIntyre v. Balentine.â Volz v. Ledes, 895 S.W.2d at 680. We made the same point in 1995. Whitehead v. Toyota Motor Corp., 897 5.W.2d 684, 686 (Tenn.1995).
Thus, during the three years immediately following McIntyre v. Balentine, the Court exhibited little inclination to return to the doctrine of joint and several liability, in any of its common-law applications, to useful service. The tide, however, began to turn in 1996. In the face of the broad obsolescence language in McIntyre v. Balentine, Bervoets v. Harde Ralls Pontiac-Olds, Inc., Volz v. Ledes, and Whitehead v. Toyota Motor Corp., the Court announced that it had ânot ... disapproved of the doctrine of joint and several liability in a general sense ... it [had] disapproved joint and several liability in a partimlar sense, that is, where the defendants were charged with separate, independent acts of negligence.â Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d 420, 431 n. 13 (Tenn.1996).
This change in direction prompted the author of McIntyre v. Balentine to point out in dissent that the Court was âresurrecting joint and several liability.â Owens v. Truckstops of Am., Inc., 915 S.W.2d at 437 (Drowota, J., dissenting in part). In response, the Court declared that â[j]oint and several liability need not be âresurrectedâ ... because it has continued to be an integral part of the law, except where specifically abrogated.â Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d at 431 n. 13. The Court then recalibrated the extent of the obsolescence of the doctrine of joint and several liability to circumstances âwhere the separate, independent negligent acts of more than one tortfeasor combine to cause a single, indivisible injury.â Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d at 430. In this circumstance, âeach tortfeasor will be liable only for that proportion of the damages attributable to its fault. As to those tortfeasors, liability is not joint and several but several only, even though two or more tortfeasors are joined in the same action.â Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d at 430.
During the past fourteen years, this Court has reaffirmed its holding that the doctrine of joint and several liability, as it existed prior to 1992, is obsolete. Ali v. Fisher, 145 S.W.3d 557, 561 (Tenn.2004); Carroll v. Whitney, 29 S.W.3d 14, 16 (Tenn.2000); Sherer v. Linginfelter, 29 S.W.3d 451, 455 (Tenn.2000). At the same time, however, we have determined that the doctrine remains viable in several well-defined circumstances. We approved joint and several liability for defendants in the chain of distribution of a product in a products liability action. Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d at 433. We determined that the doctrine of joint and several liability was not obsolete in cases involving injury caused by multiple defendants who have breached a common duty. Resolution Trust Corp. v. Block, 924 S.W.2d 354, 355, 357 (Tenn.1996). We have likewise approved the application of the doctrine in cases wherein the plaintiffs injury was caused by the concerted actions of the defendants. Gen. Elec. Co. v. Process Control Co., 969 S.W.2d 914, 916 (Tenn.1998).
To the extent that the doctrine of vicarious liability can be considered a species of joint and several liability, 6 we have held *220 that the adoption of comparative fault in McIntyre v. Balentine did not undermine the continuing viability of various vicarious liability doctrines, including the family purpose doctrine, Camper v. Minor, 915 S.W.2d 437, 447-48 (Tenn.1996), ârespon-deat superior, or similar circumstance where liability is vicarious due to an agency-type relationship between the active, or actual wrongdoer and the one who is vicariously responsible.â Browder v. Morris, 975 S.W.2d 308, 311-12 (Tenn.1998). Finally, we determined that tortfeasors who have a duty to protect others from the foreseeable intentional acts of third persons are jointly and severally liable with the third person for the injuries caused by the third personâs intentional acts. Limbaugh v. Coffee Med. Ctr., 59 S.W.3d 73, 87 (Tenn.2001); White v. Lawrence, 975 S.W.2d 525, 531 (Tenn.1998); Turner v. Jordan, 957 S.W.2d 815, 823 (Tenn.1997).
Ever since we handed down our decision in McIntyre v. Balentine, this Courtâs goal has been to assure that Tennesseeâs comparative fault regime strikes the proper balance between the plaintiffs interest in being made whole with the defendantâs interest in paying only those damages for which the defendant is responsible. Brown v. Wal-Mart Discount Cities, 12 S.W.3d 785, 787 (Tenn.2000). We have found this balance in proceedings that link liability to fault. Biscan v. Brown, 160 S.W.3d 462, 474 (Tenn.2005); Ali v. Fisher, 145 S.W.3d at 563-64; Carroll v. Whitney, 29 S.W.3d at 16-17, 21. Thus, we have embraced an approach in which a tortfeasor may seek to reduce its proportional share of the damages by successfully asserting as an affirmative defense that a portion of the fault for the plaintiffs damages should be allocated to another tort-feasor.
Throughout this period, we have repeatedly emphasized four core principles of the comparative fault regime that we ushered in when we decided McIntyre v. Balentine. These principles are: (1) that when âthe separate, independent negligent acts of more than one tortfeasor combine to cause a single, indivisible injury, all tortfeasors must be joined in the same action, unless joinder is specifically prohibited by lawâ; 7 (2) that when âthe separate, independent negligent acts of more than one tortfeasor combine to cause a single, indivisible injury, each tortfeasor will be liable only for that proportion of the damages attributed to its faultâ; 8 (3) that the goal of linking liability with fault is not furthered by a rule that allows a defendantâs liability to be determined by the happenstance of the financial wherewithall of the other defendants; 9 and (4) that the purpose of the comparative fault regime is to prevent fortuitously imposing a degree of liability that is out of all proportion to fault. 10
III.
This Court has not addressed the continuing viability of the original tortfeasor rule since deciding McIntyre v. Balentine in 1992. Despite the Court of Appealsâs belief to the contrary, we do not view McIntyre v. Balentine as being incompati *221 ble with the common-law rule permitting a tortfeasor to be found liable for subsequent negligent conduct of third parties that is a foreseeable result of the original tortfeasorâs negligence. Even though our decision in McIntyre v. Balentine altered the common-law rules for determining the apportionment of the liability among multiple tortfeasors, it did not alter the common-law rules for determining when tort-feasors are liable for the harm they cause.
A.
McIntyre v. Balentine did not require this Court to determine the role that the original tortfeasor rule would play following the advent of comparative fault. During the intervening years, the Court of Appeals has decided on three occasions that the original tortfeasor rule â embracing both the liability of the original tortfea-sor for subsequent negligent acts and the concept of joint and several liability â was not affected by our decision in McIntyre v. Balentine.
In the first case presented to the Court of Appeals, the court observed that âto allow a tortfeasor to reduce his damages by alleging the subsequent negligence of a medical provider would for all practical purposes abolish the common law rule.â Atkinson v. Hemphill, No. 01A01-9311-CV-00509, 1994 WL 456349 at *2 (Tenn.Ct.App. Aug.24, 1994) (No Tenn. R.App. P. 11 application filed). Believing that the abolition of the common-law original tort-feasor rule would âpenalize injured parties in several inequitable ways,â the court concluded, â[w]e do not believe that the Supreme Court intended this result.â Atkinson v. Hemphill, 1994 WL 456349, at *2.
The Court of Appeals followed the Atkinson v. Hemphill decision four years later. Troy v. Herndon, No. 03A01-9707-CV-00271, 1998 WL 820698, at *1-2 (Tenn.Ct.App. Nov.24, 1998) (No Tenn. R.App. P. 11 application filed). When the issue was next presented in 2003, the Court of Appeals again followed Atkinson v. Hemphill, but for the first time, the defendant requested this Court to review the decision. While we did not review the case, we designated the Court of Appealsâ decision âNot for Citation.â Jackson v. Hamilton, No. W2000-01992-COA-R3-CV, 2003 WL 22718386, at *5-6 (Tenn.Ct.App. Nov.4, 2003), perm. app. denied, designated not for citation (Tenn. May 10, 2004). This designation signified that the opinion could not be considered persuasive authority. Tenn. Sup.Ct. R. 4(G)(1). 11
We have concluded that the Court of Appeals analyses in the three cases it considered failed to differentiate between the two principles embodied in the original tortfeasor rule â the original tortfeasorâs liability for subsequent negligent acts of third parties and the original tortfeasorâs joint and several liability with the subsequent negligent actors. Accordingly, we now take this occasion to disapprove the holdings in Atkinson v. Hemphill, Troy v. Herndon, and Jackson v. Hamilton with regard to the original tortfeasor rule.
B.
The principles governing liability for successive injuries are settled. They rec *222 ognize that there are circumstances in which an earlier tortfeasor may be held liable not only for the injury caused by its own negligent conduct but also for later injury caused by the negligent conduct of another tortfeasor. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 483A, cmt. c (1965); Prosser and Keeton § 52, at 352. Liability in these circumstances arises when the subsequent negligent conduct is a foreseeable or natural consequence of the original tort-feasorâs negligence. 2 Jacob A. Stein, Stein on Personal Injury Damages § 11:7 (3d ed.2009) (hereinafter âSteinâ); see also McClenahan v. Cooley, 806 S.W.2d 767, 775 (Tenn.1991) (noting that â[a]n intervening act, which is a normal response created by negligence, is not a superseding, intervening cause so as to relieve the original wrongdoer of liability, provided the intervening act could have reasonably been foreseen and the conduct was a substantial factor in bringing about the harmâ).
Negligence in subsequent medical treatment of a tortiously caused injury is the most common invocation of this rule. Lee & Lindahl, at § 6:3; Prosser and Keeton § 52, at 352; 2 Stein, at § 11:7. The first two Restatements of Torts recognized this principle. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 457, at 496; Restatement of Torts § 457, at 1214 (1934). It has also been carried forward in the Proposed Final Draft of the Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Personal Injury in the following form:
An actor whose tortious conduct is a factual cause of physical harm to another is subject to liability for any enhanced harm the other suffers due to the efforts of third persons to render aid reasonably required by the otherâs injury, so long as the harm arises from a risk that inheres in the effort to render aid.
Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm § 35, at 693 (Proposed Final Draft No. 12005) (âRestatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harmâ).
Tennesseeâs courts have recognized and applied this principle for over one hundred years. This Court first alluded to it in Arkansas River Packet Co. v. Hobbs, 105 Tenn. 29, 44-46, 58 S.W. 278, 282 (1900). In 1931, we invoked it as an alternate basis for preventing an injured employee from filing a medical malpractice suit against an employer-provided physician after the employee obtained a judgment against the employer. Revell v. McCaughan, 162 Tenn. 532, 538, 39 S.W.2d 269, 271 (1931). In 1967, characterizing the principle as a âwell settled principle of law,â we employed it for the first time to decide a dispute that did not arise out of a workplace injury. Transports, Inc. v. Perry, 220 Tenn. at 64-65, 414 S.W.2d at 4-5. Ten years later in another case involving a workplace injury, we noted that this now well settled principle âapplies to the general field of tort law.â McAlister v. Methodist Hosp., 550 S.W.2d 240, 242 (Tenn.1977).
C.
McIntyre v. Balentine involved a straightforward intersection crash involving two intoxicated drivers. It did not raise an issue of liability for successive injuries, and thus, this Court had no occasion to determine how the new comparative fault regime would mesh with the principle that, in proper circumstances, an earlier tortfeasor could be liable for the later negligent acts of another tortfeasor. To understand the effect of McIntyre v. Balentine on the original tortfeasor rule, the two principles in that rule â the original tortfeasorâs liability for subsequent negligent acts of third parties and the original tortfeasorâs joint and several liability with the subsequent negligent actorsâ *223 must be unraveled and considered separately.
Today, we state unequivocally that our decision regarding joint and several liability in McIntyre v. Balentine did not alter Tennesseeâs common-law rules with regard to liability of tortfeasors for injuries caused by subsequent medical treatment for the injuries they cause. That rule is a rule that determines âwhen defendants are liable for the harm they caused.â Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Injury § 35, cmt. d, at 696-97. Thus, the rule in Tennessee is now, as it was before McIntyre v. Balentine was decided, that an actor whose tortious conduct causes physical harm to another is liable for any enhanced harm the other suffers due to the efforts of third persons to render aid reasonably required by the otherâs injury, as long as the enhanced harm arises from a risk that inheres in the effort to render aid. See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Injury § 35, at 693.
However, at the same time, we again reaffirm our earlier decisions holding that following McIntyre v. Balentine, the doctrine of joint and several liability no longer applies to circumstances in which separate, independent negligent acts of more than one tortfeasor combine to cause a single, indivisible injury. Sherer v. Linginfelter, 29 S.W.3d at 455; Samuelson v. McMurtry, 962 S.W.2d at 476; Owens v. Truckstops of Am., Inc., 915 S.W.2d at 430. This decision is not inconsistent with our decision to retain the rule imposing liability on tortfeasors for subsequent negligent medical care for the injuries caused by the original tortfeasor. As the drafters of the proposed Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Injury have explained:
Nor does modification of joint and several liability require or imply any change in the rule contained in ... Section [35]. Modern adoption of pure several liability limits the liability of each defendant liable for the same harm to that defendantâs comparative share of the harm. See Restatement Third, Torts: Apportionment of Liability § ll. 12 Several liability, however, does not provide rules about when defendants are liable for harm that they caused. When two or more defendants are liable for the enhanced harm suffered by a plaintiff, as may occur under this Section, and the governing law imposes several liability, each of the defendants is held liable for the amount of damages reflecting the enhanced harm discounted by the comparative share responsibility assigned by the factfinder to that defendant.
Restatement (Third) of Torts: Liability for Physical Harm § 35, cmt. d., at 697.
The Court of Appeals in Atkinson v. Hemphill overstated the effect of McIntyre v. Balentine when it observed that applying the decision in circumstances such as this one would âpenalize injured parties in several inequitable ways.â Atkinson v. Hemphill, 1994 WL 456349, at *3. To the contrary, as observed by the American Law Institute, â[c]omparative responsibility provides a different and easier method for apportioning liability among severally liable parties.â Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability § 11, at cmt. b., at 109. It spares injured plaintiffs, as well as the courts and other parties, the time and expense of *224 multiple trials. As we noted over ten years ago, Tennesseeâs comparative fault regime âretains the efficiency of joint liability and the fairness of comparative fault.â Samuelson v. McMurtry, 962 S.W.2d at 476.
Most of the states that have adopted the principles of comparative fault or comparative responsibility have done so by statute rather than by judicial decision. The substance of these statutes differs because states have balanced the rights and interests of the parties in different ways. Accordingly, decisions from other state courts construing their own comparative fault statute provide only limited guidance to us. However, we note that a significant number of state courts that have addressed the same question we address in this case have, like this Court, concluded that comparative fault does not prevent the continuing imposition of liability on an original tortfeasor for subsequent negligent medical care for the injuries caused by the original tortfeasor. See, e.g., Henry v. Superior Court, 160 Cal.App.4th 440, 72 Cal.Rptr.3d 808, 820 (2008); Assân for Retarded Citizens-Volusia, Inc. v. Fletcher, 741 So.2d 520, 524-25 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1999); Cramer v. Slater, 146 Idaho 868, 204 P.3d 508, 514 (2009); Edwards v. Sister, 691 N.E.2d 1252, 1254-55 (Ind.Ct.App.1998); Payne v. Hall, 139 N.M. 659, 137 P.3d 599, 610 (2006).
D.
Finally, Ms. Banks and the Tennessee Association for Justice assert that public policy dictates retaining joint and several liability in circumstances where an injured person suffers enhanced physical harm due to the efforts of third persons to render aid to the injured person for injuries caused by the defendantâs negligence. They assert that joint and severable liability is appropriate because (1) the original defendant is the proximate cause of the entire injury and (2) doing away with joint and several liability will require injured persons to make difficult choices with regard to filing suit against their treating physicians.
The proximate cause argument overlooks the fact that in cases of this sort, the original tortfeasorâs conduct is not the sole proximate cause of the plaintiffs indivisible injury. To the contrary, the independent tortious conduct of the original tort-feasor and one or more other parties are both proximate causes of the injury. The tortfeasors are not acting in concert, have not breached common duty, and do not have a relationship triggering the application of vicarious liability. Cf. Resolution Trust Corp. v. Block, 924 S.W.2d at 354-55, 357; Gen. Elec. Co. v. Process Control Co., 969 S.W.2d at 916; Camper v. Minor, 915 S.W.2d at 447-48. Therefore, this circumstance is governed by our consistent holding that joint and several liability is no longer applicable in circumstances âwhere the separate, independent negligent acts of more than one tortfeasor combine to cause a single, indivisible injury.â Sherer v. Linginfelter, 29 S.W.3d at 455; Owens v. Truckstops of Am., 915 S.W.2d at 430; see also Samuelson v. McMurtry, 962 S.W.2d at 475-76. As we noted more than one century ago, where âthere is no intent that the combined acts of all shall culminate in the injury resulting therefrom, ... it is just that each should only be held liable so far as his acts contribute to the injury.â Swain v. Tenn. Copper Co., 111 Tenn. 430, 439, 78 S.W. 93, 94 (1903).
Ms. Banks and the Tennessee Association for Justice also insist that not applying joint and several liability in circumstances like the one involved in this case will place plaintiffs in the difficult position of being forced to sue their treating physicians and, thereby, adding the complexity *225 of a medical negligence claim to an otherwise straightforward ordinary negligence case. The force of this argument is somewhat undermined by the fact that Ms. Banks is not being drawn into reluctantly suing her treating physician because she has already sued Dr. Boyce. In any event, we have concluded that these concerns are overstated.
When a defendant tortfeasor files an answer asserting the affirmative defense 13 that a nonparty healthcare provider is at fault for the plaintiffs injuries, the plaintiff has two options. First, it can decide not to name the healthcare provider as a defendant under Tenn.Code Ann. § 20-1-119(a) (2009) and run the risk of a diminished recovery if the defendant succeeds in convincing the trier of fact that the nonparty healthcare provider is partially or completely at fault. Second, the plaintiff can amend its complaint in accordance with Tenn.Code Ann. § 20-l-119(a) and thereby preserve its opportunity for an undiminished recovery.
When a plaintiff elects to amend its complaint to name as a defendant a healthcare provider whom the original defendant identified as liable for the plaintiffs injury, the burden of proof regarding the healthcare providerâs negligence does not shift entirely to the plaintiff. It remains with the original defendant who asserted the affiiâmative defense of comparative fault. Thus, the plaintiff is not required to shoulder the difficulty and expense of proving medical negligence unless, for some reason, it chooses to do so, just as Ms. Banks has already done in this case. That burden remains with the defendant who asserted the affirmative defense of comparative fault in the first place. 14
Leaving the burden of proof with the defendant asserting the comparative fault defense does not prejudice plaintiffs who elect to amend their complaint to name a healthcare provider as a defendant after the original defendant has asserted that the healthcare provider is comparatively at fault. If the original defendant is unable to prove that the healthcare provider is liable, the plaintiff may still obtain a complete recovery from the original defendant, just as it originally set out to do. If, however, the original defendant is successful in proving that the healthcare provider is liable, then the plaintiff may obtain a complete l-ecovery apportioned between the oxiginal defendant and the healthcare provider based on their fault.
Plaintiffs are not required to amend their complaints to add as defendants third parties whom a defendant identifies as a contributing tortfeasor. That decision remains entirely in their control. Amending a complaint to add as a defendant a third-party tortfeasor identified by the oiâiginal defendant also does not force the plaintiff to try a case it was not prepared to try. 15 *226 Therefore, amending a complaint pursuant to Tenn.Code Ann. § 20-l-119(a) to name as a defendant a third party named by a defendant as a contributing tortfeasor is neither burdensome nor costly.
IV.
In addition to their argument that they should have been permitted to assert a comparative fault defense against Cumberland Manor, the Elks Lodge defendants assert that the original tortfeasor principle is inconsistent with this Courtâs opinion in Mercer v. Vanderbilt University, Inc., 134 S.W.3d 121 (Tenn.2004). They argue that Mercer v. Vanderbilt University, Inc. stands for the proposition that a ânegligent actor should not be held responsible for the subsequent negligence of a healthcare provider under Tennesseeâs law of comparative fault.â The Elks Lodge defendants have placed more weight on the Mercer opinion than it can bear.
The principles that dictated the result in Mercer v. Vanderbilt University, Inc. do not apply to cases like this one for two reasons. First, unlike Mercer where we declined to extend comparative fault to patients wdio sue their physicians for negligence because doing so would prevent any recovery for injured patients who were found to be more than fifty percent at fault, applying comparative fault in this case will not prevent an injured plaintiff from recovering. See Mercer v. Vanderbilt Univ., Inc., 134 S.W.3d at 129-30. It will simply enable the trier of fact to apportion the fault between the defendants whose conduct caused or contributed to the plaintiffs injuries.
Second, holding that original tortfeasors will not be liable for the enhanced injuries caused from the efforts of physicians or other healthcare providers to render aid to an injured plaintiff would be contrary to the basic tenets of Tennessee tort law, more than one century of Tennessee common-law precedents, and the general principles of liability reflected in the Restatement of Torts. Negligence is conduct that violates a personâs obligation to exercise reasonable care to avoid engaging in behavior that creates an unreasonable danger to others. Satterfield v. Breeding Insulation Co., 266 S.W.3d 347, 363 (Tenn.2008). Persons who are negligent are liable for the natural and probable consequences of their conduct, Doe v. Linder Constr. Co., 845 S.W.2d 173, 181 (Tenn.1992), as long as their conduct was a substantial factor in bringing about the plaintiffs injury, the injury was reasonably foreseeable, and there is no statute or policy relieving them of liability. Naifeh v. Valley Forge L