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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Jennings
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
2/10/2005
HB
SHORT TITLE Civil Damages for Voluntary Services, CA
SB SJR13
ANALYST McSherry
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY06
FY07
Minimal
Non-recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Office of the Attorney General (AGO)
Regulation and Licensing Department (RLD)
New Mexico Medical Practice Board.(NMMPB)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
Senate Joint Resolution 13, “Civil Damages for Voluntary Services” proposes a constitutional
amendment to allow for licensed individuals providing services voluntarily and without compen-
sation not to be held liable for any civil damages as a result of providing those services.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The resolution would not have any direct financial implication other than the inclusion of the
proposed amendment on ballots and the determination of vote on the amendment.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
According to RLD, if the proposed amendments became part of the constitution, any licensed
practitioner could avoid liability for malpractice simply by providing the service for free. This
could mean that a practitioner could avoid malpractice actions by simply failing to bill a patient
that had been harmed.
pg_0002
Senate Joint Resolution 13 – Page
2
RLD contends that, although a practitioner could avoid civil liability, it is not clear whether a
board could take disciplinary action against a licensee if this becomes law.
NM Medical Board cites New Mexico law (24-10-3 NMSA) as already providing protection
from civil damages for persons who come to the aid or rescue of another person during an emer-
gency. The Board contends that the proposed Constitutional Amendment would broaden this
protection to a dangerous degree because immunity from civil suit would be extended to all li-
censed professionals simply because they are providing their services for free.
According to the NM Medical Board, for the medical profession, the amendment proposed by
SJR 13 would mean that any physician, physician assistant, nurse or other health care practitio-
ner who provided services without cost, under any circumstances, could not be held civilly ac-
countable for even the worst possible outcome for the patient.
The Board contends that, just because the care rendered is provided for free and “in good faith”
does not mean that it will be quality care, or that it might not have a seriously harmful impact on
the health of the patient.
The Board further contends that:
Some low-income New Mexicans may ask for or receive medical care free of
charge – their indigent status should not make them any more vulnerable to poor
medical care than a paying patient.
Physicians and other individuals who come to the aid of a fellow citizen in an
emergency deserve the protection of the Good Samaritan law, and possibly of a
Good Samaritan Constitutional Amendment. In situations that are not emergen-
cies, however, the potential risks to the health and safety of New Mexicans are too
great to provide immunity simply because services are provided without cost.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
The Attorney General’s Office asserts that, unlike “Good Samaritan” statutes that aim at
relieving individuals who come to the aid/assistance of injured individuals from civil liabilities,
this amendment focuses only on licensed individuals who volunteer services within the scope of
their license.
AGO further reports that:
Several states have enacted legislation protecting certain licensed individuals
from liability while volunteering during emergency responses. For example,
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Kansas, Kentucky, Mary-
land, Missouri, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee,
Utah, Virginia and Washington have a good Samaritan statute protecting archi-
tects, and sometimes engineers, during disaster responses; the Volunteer Protec-
tion Act of 1997 (42 USC §14501), as the name implies, protects all volunteers
from liability with certain exceptions.)
In New Mexico, there are three statutes dealing with good Samaritans:
o
The statute for professional engineers or professional surveyors addresses
that issue in NMSA 1978, section 61-23-31.1;
o
The Energy Emergency Powers Act addresses the issue in section 12-12-
28, for volunteers mitigating or attempting to mitigate the effects hazard-
ous material releases; and
pg_0003
Senate Joint Resolution 13 – Page
3
o
The Health and Safety Act in section 24-10-3 relieves from liability per-
sons coming to the aid and rescue of other persons at the scene of an
emergency.
This proposed amendment to the New Mexico Constitution (SJR 13) would only
addresses licensed volunteers and shield them from liability in the exercise of the
licensed activity.
ALTERNATIVES
The New Mexico Medical Board suggests carving out physicians and other health care providers
from the proposed amendment, or including them only with language that matches 24-10-3.
WHAT WILL BE THE CONSEQUENCES OF NOT ENACTING THIS BILL
Licensed professionals who provide free but flawed services may be faced with civil suits.
EM/mt