DICKINSON, Presiding Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. In this premises-liability case, the circuit court granted summary judgment for the defendants, finding that the plaintiffs' expert testimony failed to establish a triable issue on proximate causation. The Mississippi Court of Appeals reversed the summary judgment and affirmed the circuit judge's refusal to recuse.
¶ 2. After Nekole Bennett and her children suffered personal injuries during a home-invasion robbery, they filed this premises-liability action in the Hinds County Circuit Court against their apartment complex (Highland Park) and the complex's manager (Sharon Sampson). The plaintiffs claimed that the defendants' failure to provide adequate security measures at Highland Park proximately caused the plaintiffs' injuries in the robbery. To support that claim, the plaintiffs designated John Tisdale as an expert in security measures.
¶ 3. After Tisdale was deposed, the defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Tisdale's expert testimony had failed to create a genuine issue of material fact on proximate causation. The circuit judge agreed and granted summary judgment for the defendants, likening this case to this Court's opinion in Double Quick, Inc. v. Lymas.
¶ 4. This Court commonly states that we review the circuit court's decision to grant summary judgment de novo.
¶ 5. But this case requires us to address a unique situation in which the summary judgment may not be reviewed purely de novo. The defendants argue on certiorari that the Court of Appeals erred by employing a purely de novo review because the circuit judge issued a twofold summary-judgment order, requiring distinct standards of review for each part. By their reading, the circuit judge first concluded that Tisdale's testimony would not be admissible at trial. Then, excluding Tisdale's testimony from his consideration, the circuit judge found that the plaintiffs could not establish a triable issue on proximate causation. Were the defendants' characterization of the judge's order correct, we would agree that this case calls for a twofold standard of review. We would first review the judge's evidentiary ruling for an abuse of discretion,
¶ 6. But we do not share the defendants' reading of the circuit judge's order. In that order, the circuit judge stated that, the court having found summary judgment was proper, "the other motions [including the defendants' Motion to Strike/Limit Expert Testimony of Mr. John Tisdale] should be denied as moot." He also reasoned that Tisdale's testimony was insufficient to allow the plaintiffs' claims to survive summary judgment based on this Court's Lymas opinion, which, as will be explained further below, did not deal with the exclusion of expert testimony.
¶ 7. A movant is entitled to summary judgment "if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law."
¶ 8. In Lymas, a jury returned a verdict for Ronnie Lymas based on injuries he suffered in a shooting at the Double Quick convenience store in Belzoni, Mississippi.
¶ 9. This Court began its analysis stating that "the only evidence tending to establish proximate cause was the testimony of the plaintiff's two expert witnesses."
¶ 10. Here, the circuit judge found that Tisdale's testimony was similarly based on speculation and conjecture alone. But Tisdale's deposition reveals that he provided substantially more detailed testimony on proximate causation than that described in Lymas. After discussing the robbery which precipitated this lawsuit — particularly the assailants' entrance and exit from the property in a SUV — Tisdale detailed Highland Park's security failures. Tisdale strongly focused on the fact that, while Highland Park had been advertised as a gated complex and had a gate to control access to the property, the gate consistently was broken and left open. He also emphasized the need for Highland Park to employ armed security to operate that gate and document — using driver's license numbers and license-plate numbers — who entered the complex. He explained that, while every apartment complex may not have a duty to provide these security measures, the professional norms of the security industry lead to the conclusion that a complex with a history of violent crimes like Highland Park
¶ 12. So we conclude that plaintiffs' claims should have survived summary judgment. Our Lymas holding should be understood to hold that a plaintiff may not prove that a premises owner's failure to provide security measures proximately caused injuries based on cursory and unsupported statements of causation by an expert witness. But where, as here, that expert testimony delves into the detail of how the premises owner's failure to employ those measures caused the injury, and provides support to show that those measures would work to prevent the injury, the plaintiff is at least entitled to submit that issue to a jury.
¶ 13. The circuit judge erred by granting summary judgment for the defendants. So we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals, affirm the judgment of the Hinds County Circuit Court in part, reverse it in part and remand the case to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
¶ 14. THE JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF APPEALS IS AFFIRMED. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HINDS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT IS AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART, AND THE CASE IS REMANDED.
RANDOLPH, P.J., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER, PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR. WALLER, C.J., NOT PARTICIPATING.