DICKINSON, Presiding Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. A wrongful-death beneficiary failed to prosecute this medical-malpractice case for four years, so, on the defendant's motion, the circuit judge dismissed the complaint. The plaintiff refiled, and the defendant twice moved to dismiss, arguing that the statute of limitations had lapsed. Both motions were denied, and we granted interlocutory appeal. Because the statute of limitations is not tolled when cases are dismissed for lack of prosecution, the second complaint was untimely. Accordingly, we reverse and render.
¶ 2. In 2002, Christopher Ingram sued Forrest County General Hospital, Dr. Edgar Grissom, and Kay Thornhill on behalf of Jennifer Ingram's wrongful-death beneficiaries.
¶ 3. Ingram refiled December 29, 2010. Thornhill moved for summary judgment and claimed that the statute of limitations had run. She argued that, under this Court's decision in Knight v. Knight, the statute had not been tolled during the first proceeding.
¶ 5. Thornhill then petitioned this Court for interlocutory appeal, which we granted. She now argues that the circuit judge erred by treating the motion as one under Rule 60(b) and that the statute of limitations barred Ingram's second suit. We agree.
¶ 6. Thornhill styled her second dispositive motion as a "Motion to Dismiss or in the Alternative for Summary Judgment." The motion specifically requested relief under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 12 or Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 56. The motion made no reference to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 60, and the motion never requested relief from the circuit judge's prior order.
¶ 7. But because he previously had denied a similar motion, the circuit judge treated the second motion as one for relief from a judgment under Mississippi Rule Civil Procedure 60(b). Thornhill now argues that this was error, and that the motion should have been treated as one to dismiss or for summary judgment. We agree.
¶ 8. Rule 60(b) states that "[o]n motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding...."
¶ 9. In Holland v. Peoples Bank & Trust Company, a circuit judge denied the defendant's motion for summary judgment.
¶ 10. We explained that "`[a]n order denying summary judgment is neither final
¶ 11. So a circuit judge's decision to deny summary judgment cannot be reviewed through Rule 60(b) because the denial does not constitute a final judgment. Accordingly, we find that the circuit judge erred by treating Thornhill's second dispositive motion as one under Rule 60(b). And the only authority Ingram cites to the contrary is this Court's decision in Richardson, which dealt with a Rule 60(b) motion for relief from an order dismissing the plaintiff's case for failure to prosecute, not an order denying summary judgment.
¶ 12. Thornhill moved to dismiss Ingram's claims, arguing that the statute of limitations ran before Ingram filed his second complaint. The parties agree that Ingram's medical-malpractice claims are subject to the limitations period in Mississippi Code Section 15-1-36, which states:
The parties also agree that, unless the statute of limitations was tolled, it lapsed, because the second complaint was filed in 2010 — nine years after the alleged negligent conduct occurred.
¶ 13. Thornhill argues that in Knight, we held that any time a case is dismissed for lack of prosecution, the statute of limitations is not tolled during the first proceeding. Ingram argues that Knight's holding pertained only to dismissals for failure to prosecute on the clerk's motion under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 41(d), and not those initiated by a party under Rule 41(b). We find that the exception to tolling articulated in Knight applies to all cases dismissed for lack of prosecution.
¶ 14. The "`[a]pplication of a statute of limitation is a question of law to which a de novo standard also applies.'"
¶ 15. In Knight, a circuit judge dismissed claims for assault and battery without prejudice after nearly ten years of inactivity.
¶ 16. The plaintiffs appealed, and this Court considered whether "a complaint should not toll the statute of limitations when a complaint is dismissed without prejudice for failure to prosecute."
¶ 17. But we then adopted a new rule, stating that
¶ 18. We provided several reasons for our holding, including that "[a]llowing the statute to toll in such a situation presents an opportunity for abuse of process, potentially allowing cases to be dismissed and refiled for a period of years or even decades."
¶ 19. We also made it clear that plaintiffs who fail to prosecute their cases have only themselves to blame, noting cases from other jurisdictions which adopted a similar rule for that reason, including the New Mexico Supreme Court, which said:
¶ 20. In Knight, however, we did place some limitation on our holding, stating:
Given the language used in Knight's holding, the reasoning that led to its holding,
¶ 21. First, Knight twice stated its holding without any language limiting it to dismissals under Rule 41(d).
and
Both iterations tie the holding to dismissals for failure to prosecute generally, which can occur under both Rule 41(b) and Rule 41(d).
¶ 22. Second, the reasoning that led us to adopt our holding in Knight applies equally, regardless of whether the clerk or a party moves to dismiss for failure to prosecute. We explicitly adopted the reasoning of the New Mexico Supreme Court which stated that "[a] party who has slept on his rights should not be permitted to harass the opposing party with a pending action for an unreasonable time" and that "the courts should not distinguish between a plaintiff who takes no action before the limitations period expires and a plaintiff who files a complaint before the period expires but who thereafter takes no action."
¶ 23. Irrespective of who moves to dismiss, the rationale that one who files a complaint but takes no action should be treated exactly the same as one who never filed the complaint applies with equal force. In both cases, the plaintiff has sat on his rights and his dilatory action should not be saved by the mere filing of a complaint without actual prosecution.
¶ 24. Finally, to say the Knight holding pertained to dismissals on the clerk's motion alone ignores the authority Knight cited. Knight extensively adopted reasoning from the New Mexico Supreme Court's decisions in King v. Lujan, which dealt with a judge's sua sponte dismissal for failure to prosecute under New Mexico's Rule of Civil Procedure 41(b).
¶ 25. Further, in Richardson, a circuit judge, on the court's own motion, dismissed a tort action for the plaintiff's failure to prosecute.
¶ 26. We first concluded that the motion was not time-barred because, unlike in Knight, the Rule 60 motion did not constitute the filing of a new complaint.
¶ 27. We then considered whether grounds existed under Rule 60 to set aside the dismissal. With regard to the plaintiff's argument that the motion should be granted because, after dismissal, the statute of limitations may preclude it from filing a second complaint, this Court stated "while the potential running of the statute of limitations on the underlying claim demonstrates prejudice to the moving party, that in itself is insufficient grounds for granting reinstatement."
¶ 28. So, under our language and reasoning in Knight, and our characterization of that holding in Richardson, we must conclude that a statute of limitations is not tolled during a proceeding that is dismissed ultimately for failure to prosecute, regardless of whether the dismissal is initiated by the clerk, the judge, or a party. Said differently, while the general rule in this State remains that the timely filing of a complaint and service of process tolls the statute of limitations, we have carved out an exception to that rule for all cases dismissed for failure to prosecute. And because the statute was not tolled in this case, the statute of limitations barred Ingram's second complaint, and the circuit judge erred by denying Thornhill's motion to dismiss.
¶ 29. Ingram also argues, however, that this Court cannot adopt a rule that a case dismissed for lack of prosecution on a party's motion does not toll the statute of limitations, because to do so would deprive the plaintiff of property without due process of law. But Ingram fails to cite any authority to support the view that failing to toll a statute of limitations can violate due process. We consider arguments without citation to authority abandoned.
¶ 30. Further, this Court has adopted the view that "[t]o prevail on a claim for denial of procedural due process, the plaintiffs must show not only that they were deprived of a protected property interest, but also that they were denied the process due them."
¶ 31. Ingram also argues that a rule that the statute is not tolled when a case is dismissed under Rule 41(b) would undermine the judge's authority under that rule to determine whether the dismissal should
¶ 32. Said differently, Ingram is correct that in some cases, like this one, when a judge exercises discretion under Rule 41(b) to dismiss without prejudice, a second action will nevertheless be barred by the statute of limitations under the Knight rule. But Knight contemplated a similar scenario under Rule 41(d) where the dismissal was without prejudice by operation of the rule, but a subsequent suit still was barred.
¶ 33. Finally, Ingram argues that Thornhill should be estopped from arguing that the statute of limitations ran because she agreed that the first suit should be dismissed without prejudice during an in-chambers conference. But the record does not include a transcript or other information about the in-chambers conference. We take this opportunity again to warn the bench and bar that conversations that take place in the judge's chambers are not part of the record and should not be cited to this Court as evidence, unless those conversations are recorded by a court reporter.
¶ 34. Further, as discussed above, Knight assumed that the order of dismissal was without prejudice when it found that the statute of limitations barred a second suit. So, under Knight's reasoning, whether a dismissal is "without prejudice" and whether the statute of limitations has run are distinct inquiries. Therefore, even if Thornhill had agreed to a dismissal without prejudice, that agreement — standing alone — did not amount to a concession that the statute of limitations had not run.
¶ 35. In Knight, we held that the statute of limitations is not tolled when an action is dismissed for failure to prosecute. That holding was not limited to dismissals resulting from the clerk's motion. So the circuit judge erred by denying Thornhill's motion to dismiss and by treating the motion as one filed under Rule 60(b). Ingram's second complaint is time-barred and should have been dismissed. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of Forrest County and render judgment for Thornhill, finally dismissing the complaint and this action with prejudice as barred by the applicable statute of limitations.
¶ 36.
WALLER, C.J., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR. RANDOLPH, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.