Safeguarding modern midwifery

About the Author

Uniting clinical expertise and legal perspective to reveal how midwifery is interpreted—and often misinterpreted—across courts and hospitals.

Martha E Merrill-Hall portrait
Martha E Merrill-Hall JD MS CNM

Martha has led CNM practice across private, Indian Health Service, hospitalist, and critical access settings while litigating personal injury and professional malpractice cases.

Today she researches verdict trends, policy shifts, and licensure actions from the Rocky Mountains—equipping midwives, patients, and counsel with grounded legal insight.

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Why midwives & counsel read

Dual license perspective

Decades of private, IHS, hospitalist, and critical access CNM practice pair with JD work representing both plaintiffs and defendants in professional malpractice.

  • Pro bono defense of advanced practice providers facing board actions.
  • Expert witness experience in midwifery negligence claims.

Where I've practiced

Licensed across Colorado, Montana, Nebraska, Iowa, New Mexico, California, and beyond—spanning CNM hospitalist teams, Indian Health Service care, and cardiology/critical care nursing roots in Vermont and Maine.

Today I research verdicts, legal seminars, and policy shifts from the Rocky Mountains.

What Martha hopes readers gain

  • Historical context for how CNMs/CMs secured hospital privileges and where culture still lags clinical reality.
  • Plain-language breakdowns of licensure boundaries, malpractice myths, and courtroom expectations.
  • Validation for midwives, attorneys, and patients who need equitable framing of the profession’s contributions.
  • Strategies to translate courtroom narratives back into safe bedside practice.

November 14, 2024

Glossary of Legal Terms Pertaining to Litigation

Updated January 12, 2026

Legal Terms Pertaining to Litigation

Affidavit: A written statement made or taken under oath before an officer of the court (attorney) or a notary public or other individual authorized to act.

Allegation: In legal pleadings, an assertion of fact.

Arbitration: Trial proceeding with one or more arbitrators (malpractice attorney or retired judges) who act in place of a judge or jury, their purpose is to mediate or facilitate a decision in the case.

Attest: To affirm a fact; state the truth.

Defendant: An idividual against whom a lawsuit is brought.

Deposition: A method of pretrial discovery. Statement(s) of a witness under oath, taken in question/answer form as it would in a court proceeding. The purpose is for fact-finding. Plaintiff and Defense lawyers are present and both have the oportunity to question (and cross-examine the witness/deponent).

Discovery: Modern, pre-trial procedure and fact-finding allowing each party to the lawsuit to gain important information concerning the facts of the case. Conducted by the adverse parties, inclulding depositions and written interrogatories

Evidence: All means by which any issues of fact are established or disproved.

Expert Witness: Individual possessing special skills, knowledge, or experience in a specific area and whose opinion testimony is admitted into evidence, supporting either claims or defenses asserted in the court case.

Immunity: Protection from legal claims in a lawsuit.

Interrogatories: A form of pre-trial discovery where written questions are proposed by one party and served on the opposing party; Written replies are certified under oath as being true. Interrogatories may only be served on the parties named in the lawsuit.

Liability: Obligation one has created through any act or failure to act, a responsibility for conduct falling below an expected standard, causing a plaintiff's injury.

Malpractice: Professional misconduct; failure to meet the standard of care by a professional that causes harm to another.

Negligence: Failure to act as an ordinary, prudent person in specific circumstances.

Plaintiff: Individual who brings a civil lawsuit seeking damages or legal relief.

Standard of Care: The conduct that a prudent nurse-midwife with similar education, training, and experience would exhibit in the same or similar circumstances; the standard to which a defendant's conduct is compared in order to prove negligence.

Statute of Limitations: The legal limit on the time a person has to file a lawsuit in civil matters. Measured from the time the wrong or injury was, or should have been, discovered.

Subpoena: A court order compelling the appearance of a witness at a judicial proceeding.1

http://www.midwivesontrial.com

  1. Rostant, D. & Cady, R. (1999). Liability issues in perinatal nursing. Lippincott: Philadelphia