ISHEE, J., FOR THE COURT:
¶ 1. In 2011, Ezell Knight was hospitalized at Tyler Holmes Memorial Hospital (the Hospital) for several months and died in December of that year. Kathryn Knight, on behalf of Ezell and Ezell's beneficiaries, filed a lawsuit in the Montgomery County Circuit Court against the Hospital on February 13, 2013. Kathryn asserted that the Hospital failed to follow proper medical guidelines to treat Ezell and that its failure to do so caused or contributed to Ezell's death. Kathryn timely submitted an unsworn expert designation but later attempted to amend or supplement the designation. The Hospital objected, and filed a motion for summary judgment. Kathryn responded by submitting an additional expert designation and an affidavit without permission from the circuit court. The Hospital moved to strike the designation and the corresponding opinion. The circuit court granted the Hospital's motions while denying Kathryn's. Aggrieved, Kathryn appeals. Finding no error, we affirm.
¶ 2. Ezell was admitted to the Hospital and remained in its care from July 2011 through October 2011. Kathryn asserts that sometime during Ezell's stay at the Hospital, he developed decubitus ulcers that were associated with his death, which
¶ 3. After the filing of the underlying lawsuit in the circuit court in 2013, an agreed scheduling order was entered by the circuit court that included a deadline of October 31, 2013, for Kathryn to file her expert designations. Kathryn timely submitted the single unsworn expert designation of Dr. Alain L. Domkam. The designation stated that Dr. Domkam was "expected to testify that ... Ezell's injuries were caused[] and/or contributed [to] by [the Hospital's] medical negligence in not properly treating ... Ezell['s] ulcers and/or sores." No corresponding expert affidavit was submitted with the designation.
¶ 4. Shortly thereafter, the Hospital requested an extension for its designation of expert witnesses due to the unavailability of necessary medical records. The circuit court granted a one-month extension, and the Hospital timely designated its experts. Approximately three months later, an agreed revised scheduling order was entered that extended the discovery deadline and the motion deadline, but did not address any expert-designation issues.
¶ 5. Subsequently, one of the Hospital's experts, Dr. Dan Warlick, was scheduled to be deposed on April 28, 2014. Two weeks prior to the deposition, Kathryn's counsel requested a cancellation. The deposition was rescheduled for May 12, 2014. Dr. Warlick cleared his schedule at work to accommodate the deposition time. At 11 a.m., four hours prior to the deposition, Kathryn's counsel alerted the Hospital by email that the deposition would have to be cancelled again. At that point, it was too late for Dr. Warlick to reschedule patients for the afternoon. Accordingly, Dr. Warlick billed the Hospital for $3,075 of lost revenue. The Hospital soon filed a motion to recover those costs.
¶ 6. On May 14, 2014, almost six months after expert designations had closed, Kathryn sought to amend her expert designation or, in the alternative, receive additional time to supplement the designation. While the Hospital did not object to a supplementation from Dr. Domkam, it objected to the designation of any additional experts by Kathryn. Subsequently, the Hospital moved for summary judgment based on the lack of admissible expert proof. The Hospital averred that Kathryn had failed to establish: "(1) the specific duty of care owed by [the Hospital] to Ezell ...; (2) how [the Hospital] breached that standard of care; and (3) how the alleged breach of an unarticulated standard of care caused or contributed to any damages alleged to have been sustained by Ezell...."
¶ 7. In response to the Hospital's motion for summary judgment, and prior to the circuit court's ruling on Kathryn's motion to amend or supplement her expert designation, Kathryn attached a supplemented, amended expert designation and an opinion from a new, previously undisclosed expert — Dr. Darley Solomon. The Hospital quickly moved to strike the amended expert designation and Dr. Solomon's opinion.
¶8. A hearing took place on the parties' outstanding motions on October 14, 2014. The circuit court denied Kathryn's motion to amend her expert designation or supplement the designation, and correspondingly granted the Hospital's motions to strike the untimely amended expert designation and supplemented opinion. The circuit court also granted the Hospital's motion for summary judgment as well as its motion to recover costs from Dr. Warlick's cancelled deposition. Kathryn now appeals,
¶ 9. The trial court's rulings with regard to Kathryn's motion to amend or supplement her expert designation and the Hospital's motions to strike Kathryn's supplemented expert designation and opinion are discovery judgments. Our supreme court has previously addressed issues regarding expert-designation deadlines in medical-malpractice cases and has consistently held that "[t]he discovery orders of the trial court will not be disturbed unless there has been an abuse of discretion." Dawkins v. Redd Pest Control, 607 So.2d 1232, 1235 (Miss.1992).
¶ 10. In the instant case, Kathryn never presented the circuit court with a plausible reason for why she should have been permitted to amend or supplement her expert designation with new, previously undisclosed experts and opinions. In her motion to amend or supplement her designations, Kathryn argued that since the discovery deadline had been extended, so too should her expert-designation deadline. However, no reasons were given for the request. The entirety of Kathryn's motion read as follows:
¶ 11. While Kathryn correctly notes that the Hospital was granted an extension previously, the circumstances are easily distinguished. The Hospital requested an extension from the circuit court prior to the expert-designation deadline — not after the deadline had passed. It is within the discretion of the trial judge as to whether a discovery extension should be granted. As stated by the Mississippi Supreme Court in the similar case of Bowie v. Montfort Jones Memorial Hospital, 861 So.2d 1037, 1042 (¶ 14) (Miss.2003):
¶12. At the hearing on the motions, counsel for Kathryn asserted that since her case was originally under the advisement of a different attorney, the motion to amend or supplement should be granted to allow her current counsel more time to prepare. However, the circuit court responded by pointing out that the agreed scheduling order — entered several months before Kathryn's agreed-upon expert-designation deadline — was signed by Kathryn's current counsel. Hence, counsel knew exactly when the deadlines were set and agreed to the deadlines well before the deadlines approached. Thus, there was no prejudice from the changing of attorneys in Kathryn's case. Kathryn's counsel at the time of the hearing had been involved in the case since at least the time the agreed scheduling order was signed.
¶13. After the hearing, the circuit court entered its order and stated:
¶ 14. We agree. Kathryn provided no valid reason for why her expert-designation deadline should have been extended. The only arguments in support of granting the motions consisted of the unfounded issue regarding the change of attorneys and the distinguishable issue regarding the Hospital's request and receipt of a similar extension prior to the date on which its expert-designation deadline would have passed. We cannot find that the circuit court abused its discretion in determining that neither argument constituted reason enough to grant the motion to amend or supplement expert designations. It follows then that the circuit court did not err in granting the Hospital's motions to strike Kathryn's submissions of an amended expert designation and expert opinion. These issues are meritless.
¶ 15. We review a circuit court's grant or denial of summary judgment under a de novo standard. Vicksburg Healthcare v. Dees, 152 So.3d 1171, 1173-74 (¶ 8) (Miss.2014). "If no genuine issue of material fact exists to be resolved, then summary judgment shall be granted, as a matter of law, in favor of the movant." Id. at 1174 (¶ 8) (citations omitted). A circuit court may review "the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any," to determine if a genuine issue of material fact exists. M.R.C.P. 56(c). Additionally, it is well settled:
Vicksburg Healthcare, 152 So.3d at 1174 (¶ 9) (citation omitted). Furthermore, a plaintiff is required to prove the elements by expert testimony in order to survive summary judgment. Johnson v. Pace, 122 So.3d 66, 68 (¶ 8) (Miss.2013) (citations omitted).
¶ 16. We have previously established that the circuit court did not err in excluding the affidavit of Dr. Solomon. Hence, the only expert information available to prove the necessary elements of Kathryn's case was that of Dr. Domkam's designation. In the expert designation, Dr. Domkam was identified as being aware of Ezell's conditions upon his admission to the Hospital. Dr. Domkam's understanding of the specifics of Ezell's illnesses was listed with specificity. The designation goes on to state:
¶ 17. At no point does the designation address the duty of care owed by the Hospital to Ezell in light of his injuries. Likewise, the designation fails to shed light on how the Hospital breached a duty of care. Instead, the designation jumps ahead to provide a blanketed statement that Dr. Domkam was expected to testify that the Hospital caused or contributed to Ezell's death.
¶ 18. Moreover, there was no accompanying sworn affidavit submitted with the designation or at anytime thereafter from Dr. Domkam. Again, it is without question that "[i]n medical[-] malpractice cases, expert testimony is essential to proving that a prima facie case exists, because the expert's testimony demonstrates how the required standard of care was disregarded, and the testimony certifies that the defendant's failure was the proximate cause, or proximate contributing cause of the injury." Vicksburg Healthcare, 152 So.3d at 1174 (¶10) (citation and quotation omitted). The supreme court has clearly stated that the failure to provide sworn expert testimony in medical-malpractice cases requires that summary judgment be granted. Id.
¶ 19. The lack of sworn testimony establishing the applicable standard of care and the Hospital's breach did not go unnoticed by the circuit court. In its order granting summary judgment, the circuit court said: "Nothing exists in the record before the [c]ourt to establish the standard of care or any breach thereof." The circuit court went on to note: "Without an expert witness to testify against [the Hospital] as to the standard of care or any breach thereof, the plaintiff cannot establish the standard
¶ 20. Finally, we address the circuit court's grant of the Hospital's deposition reimbursement request for Dr. Warlick after Kathryn cancelled the deposition by email a mere four hours prior to the start of the deposition. The Hospital correctly notes that Kathryn fails to cite any authority in her appellate brief regarding this issue. It is well-settled law that failure to support an issue on appeal with authority is a procedural bar, and a reviewing court is not required to consider the claim. United Plumbing & Heating Co. v. Mosley, 835 So.2d 88, 92 (¶8) (Miss.Ct.App. 2002) (citing McNeil v. Hester, 753 So.2d 1057, 1075 (¶ 65) (Miss.2000)).
¶ 21. Here, Kathryn's entire argument on appeal regarding the circuit court's grant of deposition reimbursement reads as follows:
¶ 22. As stated previously, Kathryn failed to cite any authority whatsoever in support her contentions that the circuit court's judgment should be reversed with regard to the deposition costs. Moreover, after the Hospital noted Kathryn's lack of authority in its appellate brief, Kathryn still failed to amend the problem in her reply brief. In fact, the section regarding this issue in Kathryn's reply brief is a word-for-word repetition of the exact same argument contained in her primary brief — an identical copy of the two paragraphs listed above.
¶ 23. We stand firm in our long-held assertion that "failure to cite any authority is a procedural bar, and this Court is under no obligation to consider the assignment." Id. (citations omitted). Kathryn's assertions with regard to this issue are legally insufficient. Hence, we refuse to overturn the circuit court's judgment.
¶ 24. As such, we affirm.
LEE, C.J., GRIFFIS, P.J., BARNES, CARLTON, FAIR, WILSON AND GREENLEE, JJ., CONCUR. JAMES, J., DISSENTS WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION. IRVING, P.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.