Jacob Laurence v. Salt River Project ( 2023 )


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  •                                  IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ARIZONA
    JACOB LAURENCE,
    Plaintiff/Appellant,
    v.
    SALT RIVER PROJECT AGRICULTURAL IMPROVEMENT & POWER DISTRICT,
    Defendant/Appellee.
    No. CV-21-0292-PR
    Filed April 28, 2023
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    The Honorable David J. Palmer, Judge
    No. CV2018-093037
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Memorandum Decision of the Court of Appeals,
    Division One
    No. 1 CA-CV 21-0100
    Filed November 9, 2021
    VACATED
    COUNSEL:
    David L. Abney (argued), Ahwatukee Legal Office, P.C., Phoenix, and
    Maren Tobler Hanson, Nathan Tobler, Tobler Law, P.C., Mesa, Attorneys
    for Jacob Laurence
    Eric D. Gere (argued), Alexander J. Egbert, Jennings, Strouss & Salmon,
    P.L.C., Phoenix, Attorneys for Salt River Project Agricultural Improvement
    & Power District
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    Daniel Rubinov, Rafat H. Abdeljaber, RAJ Law PLLC, Phoenix, Attorneys
    for Amicus Curiae Arizona Association for Justice/Arizona Trial Lawyers
    Association
    Nancy L. Davidson, General Counsel, League of Arizona Cities and Towns,
    Phoenix, Attorneys for Amicus Curiae League of Arizona Cities and Towns,
    and Nicholas D. Acedo, Struck Love Bojanowski & Acedo, PLC, Chandler,
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Arizona Counties Insurance Pool, Arizona
    Municipal Risk Retention Pool and Arizona School Risk Retention Trust,
    Inc.
    VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER authored the Opinion of the Court, in
    which CHIEF JUSTICE BRUTINEL, JUSTICES MONTGOMERY and
    PELANDER (Ret.) * joined.   JUSTICE MONTGOMERY authored a
    concurring Opinion. JUSTICE LOPEZ authored a dissenting Opinion, in
    which JUSTICES BEENE and KING joined.
    VICE CHIEF JUSTICE TIMMER, Opinion of the Court:
    ¶1            After the superior court dismisses with prejudice a tort claim
    against an employee, must the court also dismiss a claim filed against the
    employer under the respondeat superior doctrine? It depends. If the
    claim against the employee was dismissed for lacking merit, the court must
    also dismiss the respondeat superior claim. But if the claim against the
    employee was dismissed for reasons unrelated to its merits, the respondeat
    superior claim remains viable. In arriving at this answer, we overrule in
    substantial part DeGraff v. Smith, 
    62 Ariz. 261
     (1945). 1
    *
    Justice Bolick is recused from this matter. Pursuant to article 6, section 3
    of the Arizona Constitution, Justice John Pelander (Ret.) of the Arizona
    Supreme Court was designated to sit in this matter.
    1
    The caption in this case spells the defendant’s name “De Graff” while the
    text uses “DeGraff.” For continuity’s sake, we refer to the case as
    “DeGraff.”
    2
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2           On January 4, 2017, Jacob Laurence and his minor son were
    injured when a truck owned by Salt River Project Agricultural
    Improvement & Power District (“SRP”) and driven by its employee, John
    Gabrielson, collided with Laurence’s vehicle.       Laurence alleges that
    Gabrielson’s negligent driving caused the accident and that he was driving
    the SRP truck during the course and scope of his employment.
    Consequently, Laurence claims SRP is vicariously liable for Gabrielson’s
    negligence under the respondeat superior doctrine.
    ¶3              Because SRP is a political subdivision of the State of Arizona,
    A.R.S. § 12-821.01 applies. See Hohokam Irrigation & Drainage Dist. v. Ariz.
    Pub. Serv. Co., 
    204 Ariz. 394
    , 397 ¶ 6 (2003). Under that provision, plaintiffs
    intending to sue a public entity or a public employee must first file a claim
    with that entity or person within 180 days after the cause of action accrues.
    § 12-821.01(A). Laurence filed a timely claim with SRP, but he was unable
    to file a claim with Gabrielson until nearly fifteen months after the accident.
    ¶4           On January 3, 2018, Laurence filed this action against SRP and
    Gabrielson.    Almost immediately, Gabrielson moved for summary
    judgment based on Laurence’s failure to timely comply with § 12-821.01(A).
    The superior court granted the motion as it pertained to Laurence’s claim
    but denied the motion as it pertained to the son’s claim. Because the son
    was a minor, he was not required to file a claim until 180 days after turning
    eighteen, making his claim timely. See § 12-821.01(D).
    ¶5            SRP then moved for partial summary judgment against
    Laurence on his respondeat superior claim. SRP argued that pursuant to
    DeGraff it could not be held vicariously liable for Gabrielson’s negligence
    because the court had granted summary judgment for Gabrielson on that
    claim. See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 270 (“[Servant] having been adjudged as not
    guilty of any negligence because of the dismissal with prejudice, we hold
    that the master DeGraff cannot be held liable.”). Laurence responded that
    because the court had granted summary judgment in favor of Gabrielson
    for reasons unrelated to the merits of the negligence claim, SRP could be
    found vicariously liable. The superior court agreed with SRP and granted
    its motion. After the parties settled the remaining claims, the court
    entered a final judgment, dismissing all claims against SRP and Gabrielson
    with prejudice. The court of appeals affirmed. Laurence v. Salt River
    3
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    Project Agric. Improvement & Power Dist., No. 1 CA-CV 21-0100, 
    2021 WL 5183957
    , at *2 ¶ 12 (Ariz. App. Nov. 9, 2021) (mem. decision).
    ¶6             We granted review of Laurence’s petition for review because
    it raises recurring issues of statewide importance. We have jurisdiction
    under article 6, section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    ¶7           The issue here is whether the superior court’s summary
    judgment dismissing with prejudice Laurence’s claim against Gabrielson
    required entry of summary judgment for SRP on Laurence’s respondeat
    superior claim. We review the summary judgment ruling de novo as a
    matter of law. See Dabush v. Seacret Direct LLC, 
    250 Ariz. 264
    , 267 ¶ 10
    (2021).
    II.
    A.
    ¶8             Our resolution of this dispute depends on the ongoing
    viability of DeGraff. As here, DeGraff arose from a traffic accident. The
    plaintiffs, Virgil and Elizabeth Smith, were injured after driving into the
    rear of a commercial truck owned by Mollie DeGraff that was stopped at
    night on the side of a highway without lights or emergency flares. DeGraff,
    62 Ariz. at 262. The Smiths sued DeGraff and her employee, Lloyd
    Mundee, who was driving the truck immediately before the accident
    occurred. Id.
    ¶9            At the close of evidence during the ensuing jury trial, and
    without explanation, the Smiths moved to voluntarily dismiss their
    complaint against Mundee. Id. at 263. When asked, they agreed the
    dismissal should be “with prejudice” because if they lost the case against
    DeGraff they could not sue Mundee as a joint tortfeasor, and if they
    prevailed they had no desire to sue him. Id. Thereafter, the jury returned
    a verdict against DeGraff awarding monetary damages to Elizabeth Smith.
    Id. DeGraff then moved for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict
    because the only claim against her was based on respondeat superior and
    Mundee’s dismissal therefore “operated as a bar to the verdict and is res
    4
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    judicata” as to the claim against her.     Id.   The court denied the motion.
    Id.
    ¶10            DeGraff appealed to this Court, which was then comprised of
    three justices. See id. The determinative issue was whether the dismissal
    with prejudice of the claim against Mundee barred recovery against
    DeGraff. See id. at 263–64. The two-justice majority first rejected the
    Smiths’ contention that DeGraff was independently liable as Mundee’s joint
    tortfeasor. See id. at 264. It concluded that DeGraff’s liability was
    predicated solely on Mundee’s negligent actions under the doctrine of
    respondeat superior. Id. at 268. The distinction was legally significant
    because when an employer and employee are sued for injuries caused by
    the employee, “a verdict which exonerates the employee from liability for
    injuries caused solely by the alleged negligence or misfeasance of the
    employee requires also the exoneration of the employer.” Id. (quoting 35
    Am. Jur. § 534); accord id. (“[T]he acquittal of the employee of wrongdoing
    conclusively negatives liability of the employer.”).
    ¶11           The majority next addressed the consequence of dismissing
    “with prejudice” a complaint against an employee, as occurred there. Id.
    at 269. Without elaboration, the majority stated “[a] dismissal with
    prejudice is an adjudication on the merits of the case.” Id. (quoting 27
    C.J.S. Dismissal and Nonsuit § 73, at 255 n.89). As additional support, the
    majority cited Union Indemnity Co. v. Benton County Lumber Co., 
    18 S.W.2d 327
    , 330 (Ark. 1929), and Hargis v. Robinson, 
    79 P. 119
    , 121 (Kan. 1905), each
    of which concluded that an order dismissing a case against a defendant
    with prejudice constituted a final disposition of the dispute and barred
    future action against that defendant. See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 269.
    ¶12           The majority then quoted Dare v. Boss, 
    224 P. 646
     (Or. 1924), at
    some length. DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 269–70. The plaintiff in Dare sued to
    recover damages for injuries incurred after a car, owned by Boss
    Automobile Company and driven by a prospective buyer with an
    employee-passenger’s permission, collided with plaintiff’s car. Dare,
    224 P. at 646. The jury returned a verdict against Boss Automobile
    Company’s partners and the employee-passenger, but jurors erased the
    prospective buyer’s name from the pre-printed verdict form. Id. at 647. As
    quoted in DeGraff, the Oregon Supreme Court reversed, reasoning:
    But there is one proposition that makes it necessary to reverse
    this case, and that is the fact that the jury, in effect, has found
    5
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    [the prospective buyer], who was driving the car by
    permission of [the employee], not guilty of negligence in
    crashing into plaintiff’s car, or at least has failed to find on
    that subject. There could be no negligence except that
    imputed from the relationship of the parties, and, unless [the
    prospective buyer] was negligent, no negligence could, under
    any circumstances, be imputed to the defendant company.
    That is to say, if the collision was without negligence on the
    part of the driver of the car, it could not be negligence on the
    part of any one else. To say that [the prospective buyer] was
    not negligent is to say that nobody in charge of the car was
    negligent, because it was his hand steering the car, and
    whatever injury occurred, if any, for which anybody was
    liable, must have been through his agency, and this is
    sustained by all of the authorities. Childress v. Lake Erie, etc., R.
    Co., 
    182 Ind. 251
    , 
    105 N.E. 467
    ; Webster v. Chicago, St. P. M. &
    O. Ry. Co., 
    119 Minn. 72
    , 
    137 N.W. 168
    ; Rathjen v. Chicago, B. &
    Q. R. Co., 
    85 Neb. 808
    , 
    124 N.W. 473
    ; Loveman v. Bayless, 
    128 Tenn. 307
    , 
    160 S.W. 841
    , Ann. Cas. 1915C, 187; Emmons v.
    Southern Pacific Co., 
    97 Or. 263
    , 298, 
    191 P. 333
    .
    DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 269–70 (quoting Dare, 224 P. at 648). As in Dare, the
    employee’s liability in each case cited in the above quote was adjudicated
    on the merits by a jury.
    ¶13           Even though (1) Union Indemnity Co. and Hargis concluded
    that a dismissal with prejudice precludes future actions against the
    dismissed defendants and did not address the impact on claims against
    other defendants, and (2) Dare and the cases it relied on involved the
    exoneration of an employee on the merits of a claim, the DeGraff majority
    relied on these authorities as meaning the dismissal with prejudice in that
    case was a merits adjudication that adjudicated Mundee “not guilty of any
    negligence.” Id. at 269–70. Consequently, it held DeGraff could not be
    adjudicated vicariously liable. Id. at 270.
    ¶14           The dissenting justice disagreed, faulting the majority’s
    “premise that the dismissal of Mundee amounted to an adjudication that he
    was not guilty of any negligence.” Id. at 270–71 (Morgan, J., dissenting).
    He cited the dismissal rule then in effect, now codified as Arizona Rule of
    Civil Procedure 41(a), which permitted a plaintiff to voluntarily dismiss a
    claim only by court order and with any conditions the court deemed proper.
    6
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    Id. at 271. According to the dissent, the trial judge clearly conditioned the
    dismissal on permitting the Smiths to proceed against DeGraff and prove
    Mundee’s negligence.      Id.   Otherwise, the judge would have also
    dismissed the case against DeGraff, and he would not have instructed the
    jury that DeGraff could only be liable if Mundee acted negligently. Id
    at 271–72.
    ¶15             In sum, the DeGraff majority concluded that dismissing a
    claim against an employee with prejudice for any reason serves to exonerate
    that employee from negligence and thus simultaneously adjudicates a
    respondeat superior claim against the employer. Notably, this conclusion
    rested on neither claim preclusion (res judicata) nor issue preclusion
    (collateral estoppel). Those doctrines apply only after entry of a final
    judgment on the merits of all claims, and DeGraff addressed the effect of a
    dismissal with prejudice on a respondeat superior claim pending in the
    same lawsuit. See Banner Univ. Med. Ctr. Tucson Campus, LLC v. Gordon,
    
    252 Ariz. 264
    , 266–67 ¶¶ 10–11 (2022); Chaney Bldg. Co. v. City of Tucson,
    
    148 Ariz. 571
    , 573 (1986). Issue preclusion also could not apply because
    whether Mundee was negligent was not litigated. See Chaney Bldg. Co.,
    
    148 Ariz. at 573
     (“Collateral estoppel or issue preclusion is applicable when
    the issue or fact to be litigated was actually litigated in a previous suit, a
    final judgment was entered, and the party against whom the doctrine is to
    be invoked had a full opportunity to litigate the matter and actually did
    litigate it, provided such issue or fact was essential to the prior judgment.”).
    Instead, DeGraff created a new doctrine, unique to respondeat superior
    claims.
    B.
    ¶16           If we follow DeGraff, we must conclude the superior court
    correctly entered summary judgment for SRP on Laurence’s respondeat
    superior claim because the court dismissed his claim against Gabrielson
    with prejudice. See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 270. Laurence, however, asks that
    we overrule that case and instead decide that dismissal of a claim against
    an employee for reasons unrelated to a claim’s merits does not foreclose a
    respondeat superior claim against the employer. SRP urges us to continue
    to recognize and apply DeGraff because courts have done so repeatedly
    since 1945, the reasons underlying its rationale still exist, and stare decisis
    militates against overruling it.
    7
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    1.
    ¶17            We begin with stare decisis because it provides the
    framework for deciding the parties’ arguments. The stare decisis doctrine
    cautions courts against overruling a prior opinion unless the reasons
    underlying it no longer exist or the opinion was “clearly erroneous or
    manifestly wrong.” State v. Agueda, 
    253 Ariz. 388
    , 391–92 ¶ 20 (2022)
    (quoting Lowing v. Allstate Ins., 
    176 Ariz. 101
    , 107 (1993)). The doctrine is
    rooted in the public policy that people should be able to rely on judicial
    precedent to know their rights and order their conduct accordingly. See
    Derendal v. Griffith, 
    209 Ariz. 416
    , 424 ¶ 33 (2005); see also Knick v. Twp. of
    Scott, Pa., 
    139 S. Ct. 2162
    , 2177 (2019) (“The doctrine of stare decisis reflects
    a judgment that in most matters it is more important that the applicable rule
    of law be settled than that it be settled right.” (cleaned up) (quoting Agostini
    v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 235 (1997))); State ex rel. Brnovich v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents,
    
    250 Ariz. 127
    , 132 ¶ 17 (2020) (“The doctrine of stare decisis is based upon
    the value to the rule of consistency, continuity, and predictability.”);
    Galloway v. Vanderpool, 
    205 Ariz. 252
    , 256 ¶ 16 (2003) (stating stare decisis
    “seeks to promote reliability so that parties can plan activities knowing
    what the law is”).
    ¶18           We have recognized that stare decisis “should not require
    [unbending] adherence to authority.” Derendal, 
    209 Ariz. at
    424 ¶ 33
    (quoting Goldman v. Kautz, 
    111 Ariz. 431
    , 432 (1975)); see also State v.
    Hickman, 
    205 Ariz. 192
    , 200 ¶ 37 (2003) (“Stare decisis is a doctrine of
    persuasion, not a rigid requirement . . . .” (emphasis omitted)); White v.
    Bateman, 
    89 Ariz. 110
    , 113 (1961) (to same effect).           Regardless, any
    departure from stare decisis “demands special justification.” Hickman,
    
    205 Ariz. at
    200 ¶ 37 (quoting Arizona v. Rumsey, 
    467 U.S. 203
    , 212 (1984));
    see also Young v. Beck, 
    227 Ariz. 1
    , 6 ¶ 22 (2011) (stating the Court will not
    overturn prior case law for “mere disagreement” but “will overturn long-
    standing precedent only for a compelling reason” (quoting State v. McGill,
    
    213 Ariz. 147
    , 159 ¶ 52 (2006))).
    ¶19             The strength with which courts apply stare decisis varies by
    case type. Courts most strongly defer to precedent that construed an
    existing statute because the legislature had the opportunity to change that
    statute if it disagreed with the judicial interpretation. See Brnovich,
    250 Ariz. at 132 ¶ 17; Hickman, 
    205 Ariz. at
    201 ¶ 38. Similarly, stare
    decisis is “at its zenith” when the precedent established “important settled
    expectations—especially those relating to property and contract rights.”
    8
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    Bryan A. Garner et al., The Law of Judicial Precedent 370 (2016) [hereinafter
    Garner]. Conversely, courts are less likely to invoke stare decisis to
    preserve precedent concerning court-created procedural rules.               See
    Hickman, 
    205 Ariz. at
    201 ¶ 38; Garner at 370. This is so because people
    expect court rules “to change with the times” and are unlikely to rely on
    court procedures in ordering their personal affairs. See Hickman, 
    205 Ariz. at
    201 ¶ 38; see also Garner at 370 (“After all, procedural rules don’t usually
    dictate the parties’ real-world actions or upset their expectations.”).
    2.
    ¶20          Several compelling reasons persuade us to overrule DeGraff
    and its progeny to the extent these cases conclude that dismissing a claim
    against an employee for reasons that did not exonerate the employee from
    wrongdoing requires the court to also dismiss a claim against the employer
    under the doctrine of respondeat superior.
    (a)
    ¶21            First, DeGraff is “clearly erroneous or manifestly wrong.”
    See Agueda, 253 Ariz. at 391–92 ¶ 20 (quoting Lowing, 
    176 Ariz. at 107
    ). The
    trial court in DeGraff dismissed the Smiths’ (plaintiffs) claim against
    Mundee (employee) pursuant to what is now Rule 41(a), which permitted
    the court to place conditions on the dismissal. By immediately submitting
    the respondeat superior claim to the jury, instructing it must find Mundee
    negligent to enter a verdict against DeGraff (employer), and denying
    DeGraff’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the court
    clearly conditioned Mundee’s dismissal on the Smiths’ continuing
    adjudication of their claim against DeGraff. See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 263; id.
    at 271 (Morgan, J., dissenting).
    ¶22           More significantly, DeGraff’s legal reasoning is both
    conclusory and faulty—a circumstance our dissenting colleagues do not
    even attempt to defend. The DeGraff majority correctly treated employee
    Mundee’s dismissal “with prejudice” as “an adjudication on the merits” of
    the claim against Mundee. See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 269. But it failed to
    explain why that circumstance meant he had “been adjudged as not guilty
    of any negligence” so as to preclude pursuit of the separate respondeat
    superior claim against DeGraff. See id. at 270.
    9
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶23           The authorities relied on by the DeGraff majority did not
    support its conclusion. The C.J.S. section characterized a dismissal “with
    prejudice” as concluding the rights of parties to the dismissed claim “as
    though suit had been prosecuted to a final prosecution adverse to the
    complainant.” See 27 C.J.S. Dismissal and Nonsuit § 73, at 474 n.89 (1959). 2
    It did not address the effect on a separate respondeat superior claim, which
    involves different parties. See id. Similarly, Union Indemnity Co., 
    18 S.W.2d at 330
    , and Hargis, 79 P. at 121, did not involve respondeat superior
    claims. Those cases concluded that an order dismissing a case against a
    defendant with prejudice constitutes a final disposition of the dispute and
    bars future action against that defendant (claim preclusion). See Union
    Indemnity Co., 
    18 S.W.2d at 330
    ; Hargis, 79 P. at 121. Dare and the cases it
    cited precluded respondeat superior claims against employers based on
    dismissals with prejudice of claims against employees. See Dare, 224 P.
    at 646. But the dismissals in those cases occurred because the underlying
    negligence claims against the employees lacked merit, making the cases
    distinguishable from DeGraff. See id. at 648.
    ¶24           Contrary to DeGraff’s reasoning, dismissing a claim “with
    prejudice” against an employee for reasons unrelated to the merits of that
    claim does not preclude adjudication of a separate respondeat superior
    claim against the employer. Although DeGraff involved a voluntary
    dismissal, because the dismissal was “with prejudice” and therefore
    operated as “an adjudication on the merits,” the dismissal’s import is
    grounded in Rule 41(b), which applies to involuntary dismissals.
    Rule 41(b), which was codified as 21-916, A.C.A. (1939) when DeGraff was
    decided but was not cited by the majority, provides that “[u]nless the
    dismissal order states otherwise, a dismissal under this Rule 41(b) and any
    dismissal not under this rule—except one for lack of jurisdiction, improper
    venue, or failure to join a party under Rule 19—operates as an adjudication
    on the merits.” Interpreting the federal version of Rule 41(b), which is
    identical to Arizona’s version, the United States Supreme Court concluded
    that an “adjudication upon the merits” is simply the opposite of a
    “dismissal without prejudice” under Rule 41(a).        Semtek Int’l Inc. v.
    Lockheed Martin Corp., 
    531 U.S. 497
    , 505 (2001). The Court noted that the
    2 The C.J.S. version cited by the DeGraff majority is no longer accessible.
    See DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 268. Because the 1959 version reflects that DeGraff
    cited the same provision and footnote, it follows that the substance of this
    provision had not changed since DeGraff. See 27 C.J.S. Dismissal and
    Nonsuit § 73, at 474 n.89 (1959).
    10
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    term “with prejudice” is shorthand for “an adjudication upon the merits.”
    Id. (quoting 9 Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper,
    Federal Practice and Procedure § 2373, at 396 n.4 (1981)). Because a dismissal
    “without prejudice” permits the plaintiff to refile the same claim, the Court
    concluded that a dismissal “with prejudice” merely “bar[s] refiling of the
    same claim in the [same court].” Id. at 506; see also Magellan Health, Inc. v.
    Duncan ex rel. Maricopa, 
    252 Ariz. 400
    , 403 ¶ 11, 404 ¶ 14 (App. 2021) (citing
    Semtek to conclude that the district court’s dismissal of a claim “with
    prejudice” for lack of standing and jurisdiction did not preclude plaintiff’s
    state-court action based on the same claims).
    ¶25            Following our general inclination to interpret Arizona’s
    procedural rules consistently with their federal counterparts, Flynn v.
    Campbell, 
    243 Ariz. 76
    , 80 ¶ 9 (2017), we agree with Semtek that a dismissal
    “with prejudice” does no more than bar refiling the same claim in the same
    court. Both the C.J.S. provision cited by DeGraff and our cases before
    DeGraff align with this view. See 27 C.J.S. Dismissal and Nonsuit § 73, at 474
    n.89 (1959) (“[A] dismissal with prejudice has a well-recognized legal
    import; it is converse of [the] term ‘without prejudice.’”); Tootle-Campbell
    Dry Goods Co. v. Knott, 
    43 Ariz. 210
    , 213 (1934) (concluding that a dismissal
    with prejudice of a case against defendants in their individual capacity
    barred a future suit on that theory but did not bar suit against them in their
    representative capacity); Berman v. Thomas, 
    41 Ariz. 457
    , 464 (1933)
    (acknowledging that a dismissal “with prejudice” served “as a bar to
    another action between the same parties over the same subject-matter”);
    Roden v. Roden, 
    29 Ariz. 549
    , 553 (1926) (“A judgment of dismissal ‘with
    prejudice’ is the same as a judgment for defendant upon the merits, and, of
    course, is res judicata as to every matter litigated.” (citation omitted)).
    ¶26           Contrary to SRP’s argument, with which our dissenting
    colleagues agree, see infra ¶¶ 60–61, following Semtek’s interpretation of
    Rule 41(b) is not inconsistent with this Court’s decision in Anguiano v.
    Transcontinental Bus System, Inc., 
    76 Ariz. 246
     (1953). In Anguiano, the
    superior court dismissed a personal injury lawsuit because the plaintiff had
    failed to comply with an order requiring him to post security for costs. 
    Id. at 246
    . The plaintiff filed a new but identical lawsuit, and the court
    entered summary judgment because dismissal of the first lawsuit operated
    as an adjudication on the merits under Rule 41(b). 
    Id.
     at 246–47.
    11
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶27            This Court affirmed, rejecting the plaintiff’s argument that
    Rule 41(b) applies only to involuntary dismissals based on a claim’s merits.
    
    Id. at 247
    . The Court reasoned in part that examining the reasons for
    involuntarily dismissing a case to determine Rule 41(b)’s application would
    “conjure up a hydra-headed monster in the field of procedure.” 
    Id. at 250
    .
    Anguiano is consistent with our view that a dismissal “with prejudice”
    merely bars refiling the same claim in the same court, no matter the basis
    for the dismissal.      See Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at 506
    ; Magellan Health, Inc.,
    252 Ariz. at 403 ¶ 11, 404 ¶ 14. It did not expand the dismissal’s impact to
    bar a separate claim against another party. Consequently, our decision
    today does not conjure up Anguiano’s mythological monster because, like
    that Court, we do not examine the reasons for a dismissal with prejudice to
    bar refiling the same claim in the same court.
    ¶28            The dissent also incorrectly argues we should assign a
    different meaning to our version of Rule 41(b) because Semtek’s
    interpretation did not involve respondeat superior and was “informed by
    uniquely federal concerns.” See infra ¶ 62. But nothing in Rule 41(b)’s
    language suggests its meaning changes depending on the type of claim at
    issue. And although the Supreme Court discussed the ramifications of a
    contrary interpretation on the relationship between federal and state courts,
    its interpretive analysis did not turn on any uniquely federal concern. See
    Semtek, 
    531 U.S. at 505
    .       Instead, the Court viewed Rule 41(b) in
    juxtaposition to Rule 41(a) and relied on a California Supreme Court
    decision and secondary authorities in reaching its conclusion. See 
    id.
    ¶29            For these reasons, DeGraff was clearly wrong in concluding
    that dismissing a tort claim against an employee with prejudice for reasons
    unrelated to the merits and that did not exonerate the employee from
    wrongdoing required the court to dismiss the respondeat superior claim
    against the employer.
    (b)
    ¶30           Second, this Court has already abrogated DeGraff in part for
    reasons severely undercutting the efficacy of the remainder. Plaintiffs in
    Kopp v. Physician Group of Arizona, Inc., 
    244 Ariz. 439
     (2018), filed medical
    malpractice claims against an agent-doctor and a principal-hospital. 
    Id.
    at 440 ¶ 2. Plaintiffs settled with the doctor, resulting in a dismissal with
    prejudice of claims against him and Plaintiffs’ agreement not to pursue
    claims against the hospital based on a theory of respondeat superior or
    vicarious liability. Id. ¶ 3. Plaintiffs’ independent claims against the
    12
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    hospital for negligent credentialing, hiring, and supervision were
    unaffected by the settlement. See id. at 442 ¶ 12.
    ¶31            To prevail on their remaining claims against the hospital,
    Plaintiffs were required to prove the doctor was negligent. See id. ¶ 13.
    The issue before this Court was whether issue preclusion applied to prevent
    Plaintiffs from doing so in light of DeGraff’s pronouncement that “[a]
    dismissal with prejudice is an adjudication on the merits.” Id. (alteration
    in original) (quoting DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 269). Ultimately, we concluded
    that applying DeGraff to preclude Plaintiffs from proving the doctor’s
    negligence would conflict with our jurisprudence applying issue preclusion
    only when an issue “was actually litigated,” which did not occur there or
    in DeGraff. Id. at 442–43 ¶ 15. We noted that our decision in Chaney
    Building Co. abrogated DeGraff and its progeny “to the extent those cases
    suggest that a stipulated dismissal with prejudice is a judgment on the
    merits for purposes of issue preclusion.” Id. at 442 ¶ 14. Thus, we
    “disavow[ed] our holding in DeGraff insofar as that case and its progeny
    conclude that a stipulated dismissal with prejudice operates as an
    adjudication that the dismissed party was not negligent in the treatment of
    the plaintiff.” Id. at 440 ¶ 1 (cleaned up).
    ¶32            Our dissenting colleagues nevertheless view Kopp as
    implicitly endorsing what remained of DeGraff because Kopp acknowledged
    that “a judgment can be ‘on the merits’ for purposes of claim preclusion
    even if it results from the parties’ stipulation or certain pre-trial rulings by
    the court.” See id. at 442 ¶ 14 (quoting 4501 Northpoint LP v. Maricopa
    Cnty., 
    212 Ariz. 98
    , 102 ¶ 26 (2006)); infra ¶ 64. But this acknowledgment,
    with which we agree, merely states that a dismissal with prejudice, for any
    reason, precludes refiling a subsequent lawsuit asserting the same claim
    against the same party in the same court. See Chaney Bldg. Co., 
    148 Ariz. at 573
    . That was not the circumstance in DeGraff and is not the situation
    here. And nothing in Kopp endorses DeGraff’s conclusion that a dismissal
    with prejudice of an employee-claim for reasons different from the claim’s
    merits exonerates the employee from wrongdoing and therefore requires
    dismissal of a respondeat superior claim.
    ¶33          Continuing to apply DeGraff to respondeat superior claims
    while carving out a different meaning for issue preclusion purposes would
    be confusing and unnecessary. Specifically, an “adjudication on the
    merits” would mean a tort claim was actually adjudicated to exonerate an
    employee from wrongdoing for purposes of vicarious liability (the DeGraff
    13
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    circumstance) but the seminal issue underlying that tort claim—whether the
    employee engaged in wrongdoing—was not for purposes of issue
    preclusion (the Kopp circumstance). Overruling DeGraff in substantial part
    avoids that peculiarity.
    (c)
    ¶34            Third, DeGraff conflicts with our cases and an Arizona statute
    recognizing that under the doctrine of respondeat superior, an employer is
    vicariously liable for its employee’s tortious acts, not the employee’s
    adjudicated liability. See Kopp, 244 Ariz. at 441 ¶ 9 (“Under the doctrine of
    respondeat superior, an employer is vicariously liable for ‘the negligent
    work-related actions of its employees.’” (quoting Engler v. Gulf Eng’g, Inc.,
    
    230 Ariz. 55
    , 57 ¶ 9 (2012))); Tarron v. Bowen Mach. & Fabricating, Inc.,
    
    225 Ariz. 147
    , 150 ¶ 9 (2010) (same); A.R.S. § 12-2506(D)(2) (“[A] party is
    responsible for the fault of another person . . . if . . . [t]he other person was
    acting as an agent or servant of the party.”); § 12-2506(F)(2) (defining “fault”
    as “an actionable breach of legal duty, act or omission” that causes injury
    or damages); see also Fields v. Synthetic Ropes, Inc., 
    215 A.2d. 427
    , 432–33 (Del.
    1965) (recognizing that “the imputation of negligence rests squarely upon,
    and is justified by, the culpability of the employee, not upon the
    circumstance of whether or not the employee may, himself, be held liable
    for his act”); Restatement (Second) of Agency § 219(1) (Am. L. Inst. 1958)
    (“A master is subject to liability for the torts of his servants committed while
    acting in the scope of their employment.”).
    ¶35            Indeed, a plaintiff is not required to sue the employee to
    pursue a respondeat superior claim against the employer. See Wiggs v.
    City of Phx., 
    198 Ariz. 367
    , 371 ¶¶ 14–16 (2000); see also § 12-821.01(A)
    (recognizing that claims against public employers and their employees are
    distinct by requiring service of separate notices of claim on each). And this
    Court has held that a plaintiff could pursue a respondeat superior claim
    against a principal even after a claim against its agent was dismissed
    without prejudice, but the applicable statute of limitations precluded
    refiling the claim. See Hovatter v. Shell Oil Co., 
    111 Ariz. 325
    , 326 (1974).
    ¶36           By requiring dismissal of a respondeat superior claim when
    the employee-claim is dismissed for reasons unrelated to the claim’s merits,
    DeGraff incorrectly hitches the respondeat superior doctrine to the
    employee’s liability rather than the employee’s tortious acts. Overruling
    DeGraff in substantial part eliminates this misstep.
    14
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶37            The dissent asserts that two Restatement provisions
    undermine our conclusion that DeGraff conflicts with our respondeat
    superior jurisprudence. See infra ¶ 65. Not so. Restatement (Second) of
    Agency § 217B cmt. c, cited in Kopp, 244 Ariz. at 441 ¶ 9, provides that “in
    an action against two persons, judgment [cannot] properly be rendered
    against one and for the other, if the liability of the one [cannot] exist without
    the liability of the other.” Viewed in context, this comment does not
    suggest that a judgment must be entered against an agent-employee
    individually before the principal-employer can be found vicariously liable,
    as the dissent suggests. This comment supplements § 217B(2), which
    forbids “judgments on the merits for the agent and against the principal,” a
    rule with which we agree. DeGraff’s conflict arises from its treatment of a
    judgment for the agent not on the merits, making the comment inapplicable.
    ¶38            Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability § 13
    cmt. e (Am. L. Inst. 2000), which has never been adopted or even cited by
    an Arizona court, likewise does not affect our analysis. That comment
    observes that “[t]he vicariously liable party is liable only for the share of
    plaintiff’s damages for which the tortious actor is held liable pursuant to
    this Section.” Section 13 provides that the vicariously liable defendant can
    only be “liable for the entire share of comparative responsibility assigned
    to [the agent-employee].” Nothing in § 13 or the comment suggests that
    an agent-employee is only “held liable” if named as a defendant and
    adjudicated personally liable. Indeed, comment c recognizes that the
    basis for a vicariously liable party’s liability is “legal imputation of
    responsibility for another’s tortious acts,” not responsibility for a judgment
    against the agent personally. And any different view of § 13 comment e
    would conflict with this Court’s view that an agent-employee does not have
    to be sued or even capable of being sued for a plaintiff to pursue a
    respondeat superior claim. See Wiggs, 
    198 Ariz. at
    371 ¶¶ 14–16; Hovatter,
    
    111 Ariz. at 326
    .
    (d)
    ¶39          Fourth, DeGraff is in tension with our courts’ recognition that
    employers sued under respondeat superior cannot assert defenses personal
    to their employees. See Brumbaugh v. Pet Inc., 
    129 Ariz. 12
    , 13 (App. 1981)
    (adopting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 217(B) to conclude that an
    employer cannot avoid vicarious liability for its employee’s tortious actions
    merely because the employee has interspousal-immunity from liability); see
    also Clem v. Pinal Cnty., 
    251 Ariz. 349
    , 354–55 (App. 2021) (adopting
    Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 51(1)(b) to bar application of claim
    15
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    preclusion in favor of a principal sued under respondeat superior when the
    earlier judgment in favor of the agent was based on a defense personal to
    that agent). In other words, and contrary to SRP and the dissent’s
    position, a respondeat superior claim is freestanding, and an employee and
    employer therefore do not always occupy the “same shoes.” See infra ¶ 67.
    When a plaintiff violates an employee’s procedural rights it raises a defense
    personal to the employee. Applying DeGraff to dismiss a respondeat
    superior claim because the court dismissed an employee-claim for
    procedural reasons—as occurred here because Laurence did not timely
    comply with § 12-821.01—would effectively permit the employer to assert
    a defense personal to the employee. Overruling DeGraff in substantial part
    prevents this conflicting result.
    (e)
    ¶40           Fifth, public policy does not support upholding DeGraff.
    Whether to dismiss a vicarious liability claim after dismissal of an
    employee-claim with prejudice is a matter of court procedure. See State v.
    Reed, 
    248 Ariz. 72
    , 76 ¶ 13 (2020) (describing procedural law as pertaining
    to and prescribing “the practice, method, procedure or legal machinery by
    which the substantive law is enforced or made effective” (quoting State v.
    Birmingham, 
    96 Ariz. 109
    , 110 (1964))). We recognize that several cases
    have favorably cited DeGraff when employee-claims were dismissed for
    reasons unrelated to the claims’ merits. See, e.g., Law v. Verde Valley Med.
    Ctr., 
    217 Ariz. 92
    , 96 ¶ 12 (App. 2007); Torres v. Kennecott Copper Corp.,
    
    15 Ariz. App. 272
    , 274 (1971), abrogated in part as described in Kopp, 244 Ariz.
    at 442 ¶ 14. But because persons and entities do not rely on procedural
    rules to know their substantive rights and order their affairs accordingly,
    overruling DeGraff and its progeny will not disrupt any ongoing or future
    private or governmental affairs. Thus, we are inclined to take that path
    rather than continuing to rigidly follow a deeply flawed case. See
    Derendal, 
    209 Ariz. at
    424 ¶ 33; Hickman, 
    205 Ariz. at
    201 ¶ 38; Garner at 370.
    ¶41            SRP argues that DeGraff “advances fundamental principles of
    fairness” because it would be unfair to permit a respondeat superior claim
    against the employer when the employee who committed the tort is
    relieved of liability. We are unconvinced that this result would be unjust
    when the employee-claim is dismissed for reasons unrelated to the claim’s
    merits. As previously explained, the doctrine of respondeat superior
    imputes the employee’s tortious acts to the employer, not the employee’s
    liability. Thus, unless and until the court or a jury finds that the employee
    did not commit a tort, or possibly that the plaintiff released the employee
    16
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    from liability, which did not occur in DeGraff or here, 3 it is fair to permit
    the respondeat superior claim to continue. See Wiper v. Downtown Dev.
    Corp. of Tucson, 
    152 Ariz. 309
    , 311 (1987) (stating it would be unjust to
    exonerate an employee from paying punitive damages while imposing
    punitive damages on the employer under respondeat superior).
    ¶42           We are also unpersuaded by SRP’s two-pronged argument
    that DeGraff “is necessary to meaningfully vindicate agent-defendants’
    violated rights.” SRP initially asserts that unless the respondeat superior
    claim is dismissed when the employee-claim is dismissed for procedural
    reasons, plaintiffs would not be deterred from violating an employee’s
    procedural rights. The consequence of dismissal itself, however, deters
    plaintiffs from violating procedural rights. SRP then contends that
    dismissing an employee-claim would be meaningless if an employer could
    be found vicariously liable and then seek indemnity from the employee.
    But this could happen if the employee was never a party to the lawsuit that
    resulted in the vicarious liability judgment. See Wiggs, 
    198 Ariz. at
    371
    ¶¶ 14–16 (explaining both that the agent does not have to be sued to impose
    vicarious liability on the principal and that the principal can sue the agent
    for indemnity). SRP does not suggest why an employee should be
    relieved from indemnifying the employer for a vicarious-liability judgment
    stemming solely from the employee’s tortious acts simply because the
    injured plaintiff could not pursue a claim against the employee for
    procedural reasons. The employee’s procedural rights are sufficiently
    vindicated by dismissal of the employee-claim.
    (f)
    ¶43           For these reasons, we overrule DeGraff and its progeny to the
    extent these cases suggest that dismissing a claim with prejudice against an
    employee for reasons unrelated to the merits of that claim requires the court
    to also dismiss a respondeat superior claim against the employer.
    Although courts in other jurisdictions are split on this issue, for the reasons
    explained, we agree with the courts that decided that when tort claims
    against an employee are not actually adjudicated, dismissal of the
    employee-claim does not summarily require dismissal of the respondeat
    3When a plaintiff executes a covenant not to sue an employee-agent, the
    employer-principal is not released from liability. See Hovatter, 
    111 Ariz. at 327
    . But we have not yet addressed whether a release of the employee-
    agent releases the employer-principal, and we need not do so here.
    17
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    superior claim. See, e.g., Cameron v. Osler, 
    930 N.W.2d 661
    , 664–67 ¶¶ 7–18
    (S.D. 2019) (collecting cases).
    ¶44            To be clear, to the extent DeGraff states that exonerating or
    acquitting an employee of tortious acts must exonerate or acquit the
    employer from vicarious liability, we agree. Dismissing a tort claim
    against an employee because the claim lacks merit requires the court to also
    dismiss a claim against an employer under the doctrine of respondeat
    superior. See Hovatter, 
    111 Ariz. at 327
     (“Where the master’s liability rests
    solely on respondeat superior, if the servant is exonerated by trial on the
    merits, then, of course, the master cannot be held liable . . . .” (quoting
    Holcomb v. Flaving, 
    210 N.E.2d 565
    , 567 (Ill. App. (1965))); Kennecott Copper
    Corp. v. McDowell, 
    100 Ariz. 276
    , 281–82 (1966) (recognizing that a directed
    verdict in favor of an agent who purportedly committed a tort “necessarily
    releases the principal”); Restatement (Second) of Torts § 883 (Am. L. Inst.
    1979) (“If two defendants are joined in an action for the same harm,
    judgment can properly be entered against one and in favor of the other,
    except when the judgment is entered after trial on the merits and the
    liability of one cannot exist without the liability of the other.”).
    ¶45           Requiring courts to determine whether a dismissal of a claim
    against an employee was on the merits, thereby exonerating that employee
    from wrongdoing and, in turn, precluding a respondeat superior claim,
    does not conjure up a “monster,” as the dissent imagines. See infra ¶¶ 68–
    69. This is not an onerous task. As in this case, claims against employees
    and employers are frequently brought simultaneously, and the judge
    knows precisely why the employee-claim was dismissed. In successive
    lawsuits, a judge can examine both the reasons given by the moving party
    for dismissing the employee-claim in the prior case and any reasoning
    provided in the court’s dismissal order. Judges routinely examine prior
    judgments to identify their underlying bases. For example, they do so to
    decide whether an issue was actually litigated for purposes of issue
    preclusion. See In re Gen. Adjudication of All Rts. to Use Water in Gila River
    Sys. & Source, 
    212 Ariz. 64
    , 70 ¶ 14 n.8 (2006) (stating that issue preclusion
    “attaches only when an issue of fact or law is actually litigated and
    determined by a valid and final judgment, and the determination is
    essential to the judgment” and noting that in “a judgment entered by
    confession, consent, or default, none of the issues is actually litigated”
    (quoting Arizona v. California, 
    530 U.S. 392
    , 414 (2000))). We are confident
    judges are up to the task.
    18
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶46            We do not overrule DeGraff lightly, as the dissent suggests
    with notable bluster. See infra ¶ 56. Nor are we dispensing with a case
    that has flawlessly guided courts for nearly eighty years, as our colleagues
    also imply. See 
    id.
     DeGraff was incorrectly decided from the outset,
    forcing courts to wrestle with its illogic for decades and prompting this
    Court to chip away parts. See Kopp, 244 Ariz. at 440 ¶ 1; Chaney Building
    Co., 
    148 Ariz. at 573
    .
    ¶47           DeGraff has also injected confusion into our jurisprudence.
    In Cochise Hotels, Inc. v. Douglas Hotel Operating Co., 
    83 Ariz. 40
     (1957), for
    example, this Court cited DeGraff for the principle that a dismissal with
    prejudice is a “final determination” that “has the same effect as an
    adjudication on the merits of the case.” 
    Id.
     at 47–48. But in the same
    paragraph, the Court stated that a dismissal “with prejudice” is not a “final
    determination” if based “upon some ground which does not go to the merits,”
    a conclusion squarely at odds with DeGraff. 
    Id.
     (emphasis added); see also
    Knick, 
    139 S. Ct. at 2178
     (stating that a prior case’s “consistency with other
    related decisions” is a factor in deciding whether to overrule that case
    (citation omitted)).
    ¶48            Also, federal courts considering the same issue as the one here
    have applied Arizona law to arrive at decisions both at odds with DeGraff
    and consistent with it. Compare Crick v. City of Globe, 
    606 F. Supp. 3d 912
    ,
    918–19 (D. Ariz. 2022) (“Although a dismissal due to a failure to comply
    with the notice of claim statute is a dismissal ‘with prejudice,’ dismissal on
    this ground is not an adjudication on the merits.”), and Strickler v. Arpaio,
    No. CV-12-00344-PHX-GMS, 
    2012 WL 6200612
    , at *3 (D. Ariz. Dec. 12, 2012)
    (stating that a dismissal based on the notice of claim statute “is not a
    determination on the merits for purposes of respondeat superior”), with
    Ferreira v. Arpaio, No. CV-15-01845-PHX-JAT, 
    2016 WL 3970224
    , at *10 (D.
    Ariz. July 25, 2016) (reaching the opposite conclusion).
    ¶49          After carefully applying stare decisis, we eliminate all
    confusion by shaking free of DeGraff’s incorrect reasoning.
    C.
    ¶50          Turning to this case, we conclude the superior court
    incorrectly entered summary judgment in favor of SRP. The court
    dismissed the claim with prejudice against Gabrielson solely because
    Laurence had failed to timely comply with § 12-821.01(A), which is
    19
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    Opinion of the Court
    analogous to a statute of limitations. See Pritchard v. State, 
    163 Ariz. 427
    ,
    430–31 (1990) (addressing the predecessor to § 12-821.01(A)). It did not
    exonerate Gabrielson from the claim that he had negligently operated the
    SRP truck. Thus, Laurence’s claim that SRP is vicariously liable to him
    remains viable.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶51          We vacate the court of appeals’ decision, reverse the partial
    summary judgment entered in favor of SRP and against Laurence, and
    remand to the superior court for further proceedings.
    20
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE MONTGOMERY, Concurring
    MONTGOMERY, J., Concurring:
    ¶52           I write separately to note that this is a case of first impression
    for this Court regarding the application of DeGraff v. Smith, 
    62 Ariz. 261
    (1945), in the context of a public employer and a public employee and to
    highlight the effect of DeGraff’s holding.
    ¶53            What SRP seeks to do in dismissing the plaintiff’s claim is to
    essentially use the notice of claim requirement under A.R.S. § 12-821.01 as
    both a sword and shield. A sword to deny Laurence the ability to bring
    his claim and a shield against liability for one of its employees. SRP is not
    unjustified in this effort because a public employer’s liability is governed
    by Arizona law, which includes our statutes and the holding of DeGraff.
    See 1984 Ariz. Sess. Laws ch. 285, § 1 (2d Reg. Sess.) (providing that “it is
    hereby declared to be the public policy of this state that public entities are
    liable for acts and omissions of employees in accordance with the statutes
    and common law of this state”). Yet, the plaintiff in this case properly
    served the public employer and § 12-821.01 does not require a plaintiff to
    serve a notice of claim on an employee in order to file a claim against a
    public employer. Additionally, there has been no determination on the
    merits regarding the employee’s liability.
    ¶54           The upshot of DeGraff then is that it results in a de facto
    requirement that a plaintiff must properly serve a public employee in order
    to maintain a claim against a public employer under circumstances as we
    have in this case. Yet, that is not required by the plain text of § 12-821.01.
    See James v. City of Peoria, 
    253 Ariz. 301
    , 305 ¶ 21 (2022) (“We will not
    construe the notice of claim statute, under which the claimant satisfies the
    relevant requirements but adds a condition of no legal consequence, in a
    way that defeats the clear text of the statute.”).
    ¶55            Therefore, for this additional reason, I concur fully in my
    colleagues’ analysis and conclusion regarding the need to overturn DeGraff,
    as well as the interpretation of Rule 41(b).
    21
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    LOPEZ, J., joined by BEENE, J. and KING, J. Dissenting:
    ¶56        The majority dispenses with stare decisis to upend nearly eighty
    years of respondeat superior jurisprudence—and potentially unsettle the
    law on Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 41 and claim preclusion—on the
    ground that DeGraff v. Smith, 
    62 Ariz. 261
     (1945), is clearly erroneous or
    manifestly wrong. The majority embarks upon this precarious road
    despite the debatable nature of the issue—a reason upon which we recently
    declined to overrule precedent interpreting a constitutional provision in
    Arizona Free Enterprise Club v. Hobbs, 
    253 Ariz. 478
    , 484 ¶ 17 (2022). The
    DeGraff dissent does not undercut the case’s legal reasoning and the
    majority here (1) erroneously relies on an interpretation and application of
    Rule 41’s ambiguous text by importing federal courts’ interpretation of the
    corresponding federal rule, which is based, in part, on uniquely federal
    concerns, and is contrary to eighty years of Arizona jurisprudence; (2)
    overstates DeGraff’s conflict with our jurisprudence; and (3) creates more
    confusion in the procedural realm than it purports to clarify. For these
    reasons, we respectfully dissent.
    I.
    ¶57           “Generally, the doctrine of stare decisis cautions us against
    overruling former decisions.” State v. Agueda, 
    253 Ariz. 388
    , 391 ¶ 20
    (2022) (quoting E.H. v. Slayton, 
    249 Ariz. 248
    , 254 ¶ 13 (2020)). “[S]tare
    decisis commands that ‘precedents of the court should not lightly be
    overruled,’ and mere disagreement with those who preceded us is not
    enough.” Young v. Beck, 
    227 Ariz. 1
    , 6 ¶ 22 (2011) (quoting State v. Salazar,
    
    173 Ariz. 399
    , 416 (1992)). We must have a compelling reason to overturn
    long-standing precedent. 
    Id.
     The majority asserts that DeGraff is clearly
    erroneous or manifestly wrong. Supra ¶ 21. We disagree.
    ¶58           The majority concedes that “courts in other jurisdictions are
    split on [the issue before us],” supra ¶ 43, and that Arizona courts have
    “favorably cited DeGraff when employee-claims were dismissed for reasons
    unrelated to the claims’ merits,” supra ¶¶ 40, 48. Although a split in other
    jurisdictions on an issue and adherence by our own courts do not
    necessarily foreclose a conclusion that a case is clearly erroneous or
    manifestly wrong, it strongly suggests that the issue is debatable and
    militates against overturning precedent.        In fact, we have recently
    employed precisely this reticence in electing to follow stare decisis. See
    22
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    Hobbs, 253 Ariz. at 484 ¶ 17 (following stare decisis in concluding that
    Garvey is not clearly erroneous because it was “debatable whether Warner
    or Garvey offer[ed] the best interpretation” of a constitutional provision).
    This principle is particularly applicable where, as here, the majority’s
    decision to override stare decisis relies on mere “agreement” with other
    jurisdictions’ conclusions contrary to our jurisprudence, supra ¶ 43, rather
    than the absence of any supporting legal authority or reasoning. See
    Young, 
    227 Ariz. at 6
    .
    II.
    ¶59            The presence of a dissent in DeGraff does not undermine its
    legal reasoning. The DeGraff dissent implicitly adopted the majority’s
    premise that even a voluntary dismissal with prejudice against the
    employee forecloses a respondeat superior claim against the employer.
    DeGraff, 62 Ariz. at 271 (Morgan, J., dissenting). The DeGraff dissent
    instead contended that the majority erroneously affirmed the trial court’s
    dismissal of the action against the employee with prejudice—with its
    attendant legal consequence for the respondeat superior claim—because
    the dismissal with prejudice was inconsistent with the plaintiff and trial
    court’s intent to enter a conditional dismissal that permitted the case to
    proceed against the employer. Id. at 270–71 (“I cannot agree with the
    majority members of the court. Their decision is based on the premise that
    the dismissal of [the employee] amounted to an adjudication that he was
    not guilty of any negligence. A reading of the record discloses that the
    dismissal was conditional. There appears to have been no intent upon the
    part of the attorneys for the plaintiff to dismiss with prejudice.”). In fact,
    the dissent merely urged the majority “to limit the effect of the dismissal in
    accordance with the intention of the plaintiff and the court.” Id. at 272.
    Thus, the DeGraff dissent’s criticism of the majority’s opinion centered on
    its interpretation of the record rather than on its legal reasoning concerning
    the preclusive effect of the precursor to Rule 41(a) on the respondeat
    superior claim. Consequently, it offers no support for the majority’s
    assertion here that DeGraff was clearly erroneous or manifestly wrong.
    III.
    ¶60          The majority relies on our oft-repeated “general inclination to
    interpret Arizona’s procedural rules consistently with their federal
    counterparts” to justify following the interpretation of Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 41 as set forth in Semtek International Inc. v. Lockheed Martin Corp.,
    
    531 U.S. 497
     (2001). Supra ¶ 25. The majority, citing Semtek, contends
    23
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    that “adjudication on the merits” is “simply the opposite of a ‘dismissal
    without prejudice’ under Rule 41(a)” and, thus, “the term ‘with prejudice’
    is shorthand for ‘an adjudication upon the merits.’” Supra ¶ 24. This
    interpretation, although reasonable, is not unassailable because it is
    incomplete. To confine the meaning of “adjudication upon the merits” to
    “with prejudice” artificially limits its scope and ignores the rule’s inherent
    distinction embodied in its use of the two phrases. Compare Rule 41(a)
    (stating that voluntary dismissals, unless the notice or order states
    otherwise, are “without prejudice”), with Rule 41(b) (stating that “[u]nless
    the dismissal states otherwise, a dismissal under Rule 41(b) and any
    dismissal not under this rule,” except for three specified exceptions,
    “operates as an adjudication on the merits”).
    ¶61           Rule 41(b)’s text certainly signals a preclusive purpose, but it
    is arguably ambiguous because it is silent on the scope of the preclusive
    effect of “an adjudication on the merits” ruling. This ambiguity invites
    and supports different interpretations of the phrase’s meaning and, thus,
    does not foreclose a broader preclusive effect consistent with DeGraff. We
    should adhere to our own long-standing interpretation of the rule. See
    Anguiano v. Transcon. Bus Sys., 
    76 Ariz. 246
    , 250 (1953) (“Rule 41(b) used
    plain, clear, simple, unequivocal language, and says an involuntary
    dismissal other than for lack of jurisdiction or for improper venue operates
    as an adjudication upon the merits unless the court otherwise directs.”).
    ¶62           Putting aside the interpretative merits of Semtek, more
    compelling reasons militate against the majority’s reliance on Semtek to
    guide interpretation of our Rule 41. First, Semtek did not involve the claim
    preclusive effect of a Rule 41(b) dismissal in the respondeat superior
    context; instead, Semtek examined a complex diversity jurisdiction issue
    concerning whether a federal court’s dismissal of a plaintiff’s claim on state-
    statute-of-limitations grounds precluded the plaintiff’s suit in another state.
    
    531 U.S. at
    499–500. It offers little insight into the question before us—one
    purely of state law and concern involving respondeat superior in the
    context of a state tort claim arising from a vehicle accident. Second,
    Semtek’s interpretation of the federal rule was informed by uniquely federal
    concerns, absent here, such as “the jurisdictional limitation of the Rules
    Enabling Act” and federalism principles. 
    Id.
     at 503–04; see also 
    id. at 503
    (“[I]t would be peculiar to find a rule governing the effect that must be
    accorded federal judgments by other [state] courts ensconced in rules
    governing the internal procedures of the rendering court . . . .”). Plainly,
    24
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    the effect of the rule rather than its text compelled Semtek’s interpretation of
    the federal rule. 
    Id.
    ¶63            We dispense with the “general inclination to interpret
    Arizona’s procedural rules consistently with their federal counterparts,”
    supra ¶ 25, if the federal interpretation is in tension with Arizona policy,
    practice, or case law. Ritchie v. Grand Canyon Scenic Rides, 
    165 Ariz. 460
    ,
    464 (1990) (“[B]lind devotion to federal interpretation is not required; we
    need not follow the federal cases if we believe Arizona policy, practice, or
    case law requires a different result.”); see also Orme School v. Reeves, 
    166 Ariz. 301
    , 304 (1990). This is precisely the circumstance here. Conformity with
    the federal rule does not merely generate tension with our policy, practice,
    and case law, it requires discarding nearly eighty years of jurisprudence
    concerning state procedural rules involving state tort claims. We should,
    as we have done before, reject the federal interpretation of its analog rule as
    wholly inconsistent with our law. See, e.g., State v. Ariz. Bd. of Regents,
    
    253 Ariz. 6
    , 14 ¶¶ 33–34 (2022) (“Although we recognize the persuasive
    value of federal courts’ interpretation of a federal procedural rule, it is ‘not
    binding in the construction of our rule.’” (quoting Flynn v. Campbell, 
    243 Ariz. 76
    , 80 ¶ 9 (2017))); Ritchie, 
    165 Ariz. at 467
     (rejecting the U.S. Supreme
    Court’s interpretation of the federal analog of Arizona Rule of
    Procedure 15(c), in part, because “[i]t conflict[ed] with established Arizona
    law”).
    IV.
    ¶64            The majority’s opinion also overstates DeGraff’s conflict with
    our law. First, the assertion that this Court’s partial abrogation of DeGraff
    “severely [undercuts] the efficacy of the remainder” is incorrect. See supra
    ¶ 30. In Kopp v. Physician Group of Arizona, Inc., 
    244 Ariz. 439
     (2018), we
    merely abrogated DeGraff and its progeny “to the extent those cases suggest
    that a stipulated dismissal with prejudice is a judgment on the merits for
    purposes of issue preclusion.” 
    Id.
     at 442 ¶ 14. Although DeGraff’s
    continued vitality was not squarely before us, we expressly acknowledged
    that “a judgment can be ‘on the merits’ for purposes of claim preclusion
    even if it results from the parties’ stipulation or certain pre-trial rulings by
    the court.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Northpoint LP v. Maricopa County, 
    212 Ariz. 98
    ,
    102 (2006)). Contrary to the majority’s assertion, Kopp endorsed DeGraff,
    albeit implicitly, rather than undercut it. 
    Id.
    ¶65           Second, the majority, citing Kopp, also claims that DeGraff
    conflicts with our cases recognizing that “under the doctrine of respondeat
    25
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    superior, an employer is vicariously liable for its employee’s tortious acts,
    not the employee’s adjudicated liability.” Supra ¶ 34. The majority
    overstates this purported conflict. For example, in Kopp we cited the
    Restatement (Second) of Agency § 217B cmt. c (Am. Law Inst. 1958), for the
    proposition that “the liability of the [principal] cannot exist without the
    liability of the [agent].” 244 Ariz. at 441 ¶ 9; see also Restatement (Third)
    of Torts: Apportionment of Liability § 13 cmt. e (Am. Law Inst. 2000) (“The
    vicariously liable party is liable only for the share of plaintiff’s damages for
    which the tortious actor is held liable . . . .”). Of course, imputation of
    liability requires imputation of tortious acts, but the extent of DeGraff’s
    conflict with our cases on this point is debatable. See, e.g., Dominguez v.
    City of Scottsdale, 
    587 F. Supp. 3d 914
    , 937 (D. Ariz. 2022) (“Put simply,
    because the agent has been adjudicated not liable, as a matter of law, the
    principal is not [vicariously] liable.” (alteration in original) (quoting
    Jamerson v. Quintero, 
    233 Ariz. 389
    , 392 ¶ 14 (App. 2013))); see also Howard v.
    Wash. Elementary Sch. Dist. 6, No. 1 CA-CV 20-0390, 
    2022 WL 363766
    , at *4
    ¶ 16 (Ariz. App. Feb 8, 2022) (mem. decision) (upholding dismissal of
    vicarious liability claim against public employer based on dismissal of
    claim against employee for failure to timely serve notice of claim); Angulo
    v. City of Phoenix, No. 1 CA-CV 12-0603, 
    2013 WL 3828778
    , at *2 ¶¶ 7–8 (Ariz.
    App. July 16, 2013) (mem. decision) (same). The majority’s contention that
    Restatement (Second) of Agency § 217B cmt. c “does not suggest that a
    judgment must be entered against an agent-employee individually before
    the principal-employer can be found vicariously liable” because it
    supplements Restatement § 217B(2), which forbids “judgments on the
    merits for the agent and against the principal,” supra ¶ 37, merely begs the
    question before us—what is an “adjudication on the merits?”
    V.
    ¶66           The majority asserts that DeGraff generates a “peculiarity”
    because “‘an adjudication on the merits’ would mean a tort claim was
    actually adjudicated to exonerate an employee from wrongdoing for
    purposes of vicarious liability (the DeGraff circumstance) but the seminal
    issue underlying that tort claim—whether the employee engaged in
    wrongdoing—was not for purposes of issue preclusion (the Kopp
    circumstance),” and purports to end confusion concerning the preclusive
    effect of judgments involving respondeat superior and issue preclusion.
    Supra ¶ 33. This premise reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of how
    DeGraff and issue preclusion relate. This preclusive distinction is not a
    peculiarity, but rather a reflection of the principal difference between
    26
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    derivative or vicarious claims and independent ones. See Kopp, 244 Ariz.
    at 442 ¶ 14. The majority’s reasoning, typified by its claim that we have
    “chip[ped] away parts” of DeGraff, supra ¶ 46, seems to question the very
    distinction between respondeat superior (and claim preclusion) and issue
    preclusion. What the majority characterizes as “chipping away” at
    DeGraff was simply clarification of the circumstances in which it applied.
    Errors arose not from DeGraff but rather from the courts that misapplied it.
    The majority further injects uncertainty as it raises the question whether it
    concludes that Kopp also was wrongly decided.
    ¶67            Although respondeat superior is independent from
    Rule 41(b) and common law claim preclusion, DeGraff is not an island. It
    shares an inherent logic and reasoning with this rule and doctrine. As SRP
    explains: “The law follows a simple logic: vicarious liability claims put
    employers in their employees’ shoes to vicariously bear the employees’
    liability; when the employees’ liability is extinguished (i.e., dismissed with
    prejudice for any reason), there no longer exists any liability for the
    employer to vicariously bear.” Thus, a plaintiff cannot establish a prima
    facie respondeat superior claim because a vicarious action against an
    employer for its dismissed employee’s negligent conduct is, in effect, the
    same claim. See Restatement (Third) of Torts: Apportionment of Liability
    § 7 cmt. j (Am. Law Inst. 2000) (“When a party is liable solely on the basis
    of another person’s tortious conduct, there is no direct responsibility to
    assign to the party to whom liability is imputed. In that situation, the
    party who committed the tortious acts or omissions and the party to whom
    liability is imputed are treated as a single unit for the assignment of
    responsibility. For example, an employer who is vicariously liable for the
    negligence of an employee and the employee are treated as a single
    entity.”).
    ¶68           DeGraff, Rule 41(b), and common law claim preclusion also
    often coincide. For example, an involuntary dismissal of an employee in
    a vicarious liability claim against the employer implicates DeGraff and
    aligns with Rule 41(b), because the employee’s dismissal is “an adjudication
    on the merits.” See Anguiano, 
    76 Ariz. at 250
     (observing that “classifying
    dismissals according to the time and reasons for which they were granted”
    would “conjure up a hydra-headed monster in the field of procedure”).
    Similarly, DeGraff corresponds with claim preclusion when an employee is
    dismissed with prejudice in an action separate from the vicarious liability
    claim against the employer. See, e.g., Chaney Bldg. Co. v. City of Tucson,
    
    148 Ariz. 571
    , 573 (1986).
    27
    LAURENCE V. SRP
    JUSTICE LOPEZ, joined by JUSTICES BEENE and KING, Dissenting
    ¶69          The majority contends that overruling DeGraff will end
    courts’ “wrestl[ing] with its illogic for decades.” Supra ¶ 46. However,
    far from adding clarity to the law, the majority creates a legal distinction
    between two “types” of an identical phrase: “adjudication on the merits.”
    Prospectively, courts must differentiate between an “adjudication on the
    merits” under Rule 41(b) and an “adjudication on the merits” that, in the
    majority’s words, “go[es] to the merits.” See id.         What the latter
    “adjudication on the merits” embodies in the wide spectrum of case
    dismissals—from jury verdicts to court judgments to party settlements—is
    anyone’s guess. The majority leaves our courts to wrestle with this
    “hydra-headed monster” in ensuing decades. See Anguiano, 
    76 Ariz. at 250
    .
    VI.
    ¶70            The majority asserts that we “do not even attempt to defend”
    DeGraff’s “conclusory and faulty” legal reasoning. Supra ¶ 22. This
    characterization ignores the entire thrust of our dissent. DeGraff, and its
    shared logic and frequent intersection with Rule 41(b) and common law
    claim preclusion, dictate that Laurence’s failure to prove the employee’s
    liability forecloses a derivative action against SRP. See Falcon ex rel.
    Sandoval v. Maricopa County, 
    213 Ariz. 525
    , 527 ¶ 10 (2006) (“If a notice of
    claim is not properly filed within the statutory time limit, a plaintiff’s claim
    is barred by statute. Actual notice and substantial compliance do not
    excuse failure to comply with the statutory requirements of ARS § 12-
    821.01(A).” (internal citation omitted)). If we were writing on a blank
    slate, perhaps we may agree with the majority, but that is not the posture
    in which we consider the issue. As the majority acknowledges in citing
    Knick v. Township of Scott, Pennsylvania, 
    139 S. Ct. 2162
    , 2177 (2019), supra
    ¶ 17, “[t]he doctrine of stare decisis reflects a judgment that in most matters
    it is more important that the applicable rule of law be settled than it be
    settled right,” id. (cleaned up) (quoting Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 235
    (1997)). This is precisely our point. DeGraff has been the law in Arizona
    for nearly eighty years and it should remain so because the majority has
    shown only its “mere disagreement” with the case and that its holding is
    debatable, not that it is clearly erroneous or manifestly wrong. See Young,
    
    227 Ariz. at
    6 ¶ 22.
    28