¶ 1. Esther Perlman’s then-husband, Johnny Lee Adkins, sexually assaulted Zenobia Faul’s ten-year-old granddaughter while the granddaughter was staying in Perlman’s home. Adkins pled guilty to fondling the child and was sentenced to prison. Faul, as her granddaughter’s representative, sued Perlman, alleging Perl-man was liable to her granddaughter for negligent supervision and negligence per se.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 8. A.F.
¶ 4. All three assaults occurred in Perl-man’s living room, two occurring while A.F. was either watching television or playing a video game with Adkins. A.F. testified Perlman was not in the room when the assaults occurred, and A.F. said nothing to Perlman about what had happened. A.F. later told her mother about the assaults. In 2005, after an investigation, Adkins was arrested. He pled guilty to touching a child for lustful purposes and was sentenced to fifteen years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with ten years suspended.
¶ 5. In July 2007, Faul, as A.F.’s guardian and next friend, filed a civil suit against Perlman, who was no longer married to Adkins.
¶ 6. Trial was set for July 13, 2010. On June 18,
¶ 7. On July 22, Faul filed a motion to reconsider, arguing the circuit court erred by granting summary judgment without a hearing. The circuit court heard Faul’s motion to reconsider on August 26. Faul presented a letter, which she argued she should have been permitted to present at the cancelled summary-judgment hearing. This undated letter, found in Perlman’s home during the 2005 investigation, is addressed to “Mr. Adkins” and was written by “your wife.” It makes four accusations: (1) “You’re a Cheater”; (2) “You go look at girls because I’m out of town”; (3) “I can’t trust you”; and “If you loved me you wouldn’t treat me that way.” Faul argued this letter created a material factual dispute about Perlman’s knowledge of Adkins’s actions.
¶8. After considering the letter and Faul’s other arguments, the circuit court denied Faul’s motion to reconsider for the same reasons it had previously granted summary judgment-a lack of evidence Perlman reasonably foresaw Adkins’s assaults on A.F. The circuit court also addressed Faul’s procedural argument that Perlman’s motion for summary judgment must be deemed abandoned under Rule 4.03(5) of the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court. The court explained the summary-judgment hearing was not scheduled to be heard until the day before trial because of the court’s busy schedule, not Perlman’s failure to pursue her motion.
¶ 9. Faul timely appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 10. There are two procedural avenues to ask for reconsideration of a judgment-a Rule 59(e) motion to alter or amend a judgment or a Rule 60 motion for relief from a judgment or order. M.R.C.P. 59(e); M.R.C.P. 60. “How a court treats a motion for reconsideration turns on the time at which the motion is served. If the motion is served within ten days of the rendition of judgment, the motion falls under Rule 59(e).” Carlisle v. Allen,
¶ 11. Our standard of review for a trial court’s grant or denial of a motion for summary judgment is de novo. Lewallen v. Slawson,
DISCUSSION
¶ 12. Faul’s appeal raises both substantive and procedural issues. Substantively, Faul asserts a material factual dispute exists concerning Perlman’s knowledge of Adkins’s sexual acts and propensities. Thus, she argues the grant of summary judgment based on lack of evidence of causation was improper. Procedurally, she argues the circuit court violated both the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure and the Uniform Rules of Circuit and County Court by granting summary judgment without a hearing four days before the scheduled trial. M.R.C.P. 56; URCCC 4.03(5). She claims the circuit court was required to deem that Perlman had abandoned her summary-judgment motion because it was not heard at least ten days prior to trial. URCCC 4.03(5).
¶ 13. On de novo review, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment, as we too find Faul failed to present a triable fact issue on the foreseeability of Adkins’s sexual propensities. And because we find no material factual dispute existed and no evidence Perlman actually abandoned her motion for summary judgment, we find the circuit court’s failure to follow the mandatory requirements of Rules 56 and 4.03 is harmless error.
I. Faul’s Claims
A. Negligent Supervision
¶ 14. For Faul to recover for negligent supervision, she “bears the burden of producing evidence sufficient to establish the existence of a duty, breach, proximate causation, and damages.” Buck ex rel. Buck v. Camp Wilkes, Inc.,
¶ 15. We begin with duty. “Common law traditionally has not imposed a broad duty upon individuals to control the conduct of others.” Warren ex rel. Warren v. Glascoe,
¶ 16. Mississippi has not addressed the specific circumstances of this case — a wife’s duty to protect against and/or warn about her husband’s criminal conduct toward a minor under her care in her home. But in Chaney v. Superior Court,
Where, as here, a complaint alleges injuries resulting from the criminal acts of third persons the common law, reluctant to impose liability for nonfeasance, generally does not impose a duty upon a defendant to control the conduct of another, or to warn of such conduct, unless the defendant stands in some special relationship either to the person whose conduct needs to be controlled, or to the foreseeable victim of such conduct.
(Internal quotations and citations omitted). The California Court of Appeals concluded: “[WJhere a wife invites a child into her home[,] she assumes a special relationship based on the child’s dependence upon her.” Id. at 75-76 (citing Pamela L. v. Farmer,
¶ 17. As with Mississippi’s premises liability and teacher liability doctrines, California’s spousal liability is based on the foreseeability of the husband or wife’s behavior. “[WJhere a child is sexually assaulted in the defendant wife’s home by her husband, the wife’s duty of reasonable care to the injured child depends on whether the husband’s behavior was reasonably foreseeable.” Id. at 76; cf. Simpson,
¶ 18. The circuit court correctly found foreseeability, based on Perl-man’s knowledge of Adkins’s deviant propensities, was also necessary to establish proximate cause. “There is no liability predicated on lack or insufficiency of supervision where the event in connection with which the injury occurred was not reasonably foreseeable.” Levandoski v. Jackson County Sch. Dist.,
¶ 19. The circuit court held Faul offered no proof to show Perlman knew or should have known of Adkins’s propensities to commit the sexual assaults or that Perlman had any knowledge that the crimes were being committed. The circuit court applied the foreseeability test for premises owners from Simpson, which looks for actual or constructive knowledge. Simpson,
1120. In Glover, the minor rape victim’s supervisor knew that the two young men who assaulted her had violent tendencies and had expelled one of them from the youth program the victim attended. Glover,
¶21. In contrast, Perlman had known Adkins for several years before they married. During that time Adkins had never been reported, arrested, or convicted for committing a crime, let alone a crime against a child. And A.F. testified she never told Perlman what had happened. Therefore, we find the factual evidence sufficient to survive summary judgment in Glover and Summers is not present here.
¶ 22. The letter to Adkins offered at the reconsideration hearing, which accused Adkins of being a “cheater” and “looking] at girls because I’m out of town,” was undated and not found by the police investigating Adkins until January 25, 2005, after all three incidents occurred. Further, the text of the letter does not refer to his sexual proclivities for children. So it creates no genuine dispute of what Perlman knew or should have known about Adkins’s deviant behavior towards children in 2004, when all three assaults — and Perl-man’s alleged negligence — occurred.
¶23. Further, we reject Faul’s assertion that Perlman’s deposition testimony that she knew where A.F. was and
¶ 24. Perlman testified, while A.F. may have been out of her field of vision, Perl-man knew when A.F. was watching television or playing the computer in the living room, a separate room with a door in the front of the house. A.F. testified all three assaults occurred in this room, the first while A.F. was watching television and the second while she was playing a computer game. Perlman testified she knew Adkins would sometimes help A.F. set up a video to watch or a computer game to play. Thus, at most, it can be inferred that Perlman knew Adkins was in the room with A.F. while A.F. was watching television or playing on the computer. It cannot be reasonably inferred that Perlman knew or should have known Adkins was sexually assaulting A.F., absent some evidence Perlman had actual or constructive knowledge of Adkins’s sexual proclivities.
¶ 25. Because we find no material factual dispute concerning foreseeability, we affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment on Faul’s negligent-supervision claim.
B. Negligence per se
¶ 26. To establish negligence per se, a plaintiff must show: (1) the defendant breached a statute or ordinance; (2) the plaintiff was within the class protected by the statute or ordinance; and (3) “the violation proximately caused his injury.” Palmer v. Anderson Infirmary Benevolent Ass’n,
¶ 27. And at the summary-judgment stage, Faul did not dispute Perlman’s argument that the complaint failed to allege a negligence per se claim against Perlman. Nor did she mention the statute or ordinance Perlman violated. Though the circuit court did not specifically address Faul’s negligence per se claim in its order granting summary judgment, it is clear from his order finally dismissing Perlman as a defendant that the circuit court was dismissing both claims against Perlman. On appeal, Faul does not argue her negligence per se claim should have gone to a jury, let alone cite any legal authority or record evidence in support of this claim. “Because the appellant bears the burden of persuasion on appeal, this Court will not consider issues on appeal for which the appellant cites no supporting authority.” Sumrall v. Miss. Power Co.,
¶ 28. We therefore affirm the dismissal of Faul’s negligence per se claim as it was
II. Procedure
¶ 29. While Faul is correct that granting summary judgment without a hearing is error, this error “may be harmless error if there are, indeed, no triable issues of fact.” Partin,
¶ 30. We also find no reversible error in the circuit court’s not deeming Perlman’s motion for summary judgment abandoned under Uniform Rule of Circuit and County Court 4.03(5). There is simply no evidence Perlman failed in her duty to pursue her motion for summary judgment under Uniform Rule of Circuit and County Court 2.04. See Nance v. State,
¶ 31. In affirming the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment, we do not gloss over the mandatory “shall” language of Rule 4.03. Rule 4.03(5) does declare: “All dispositive motions shall be deemed abandoned unless heard at least ten days prior to trial.” URCCC 4.03(5). But as with our consideration of the mandatory requirements of Rule 56, we apply a harmless-error analysis to the mandatory procedural requirements of Rule 4.03(5). Adams,
¶ 32. Under Rule 2.04:
It is the duty of the movant, when a motion or other pleading is filed, including motions for a new trial, to pursue said motion to hearing and decision by the court. Failure to pursue a pretrial motion to hearing and decision before trial is deemed an abandonment of that motion; however, said motion may he heard after the commencement of trial in the discretion of the court.
URCCC 2.04 (emphasis added). Trial was set for July 13. Perlman filed her motion for summary judgment on June 15 and set it for hearing. Faul responded on June 28. As noted by the circuit court, the earliest the court could hear the motion was July 12. We agree with the circuit court that the fact Perlman’s motion was not heard by July 2 was due to the court’s busy schedule, not Perlman’s failure to pursue her dispositive motion to a hearing and disposition. URCCC 4.03(5); URCCC 2.04. Cf. Braddock Law Firm, PLLC v. Becnel,
¶ 33. We find no reversible error in the circuit court’s not deeming Perlman’s motion abandoned. Further, Faul cannot show she was prejudiced by the timing of the circuit court’s consideration because, as already discussed, she has not demonstrated a triable factual dispute exists concerning Perlman’s liability.
CONCLUSION
¶ 34. Upon de novo review of the merits, we find no material factual dispute on the issue of foreseeability. Thus, we find no reversible error in the circuit court’s disposition of Perlman’s motion for summary judgment within ten days prior to trial and without a hearing. We affirm the circuit court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Perlman and its final dismissal of Perlman as a defendant in this case.
¶ 35. THE JUDGMENT OF THE HARRISON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE APPELLANT.
Notes
. Because of the nature of the crime and the victim's age, this opinion refers to Faul's granddaughter by her initials only.
. Faul also named Adkins as a defendant, bringing claims of assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence per se. Adkins did not join Perl-man's motion for summary judgment. Upon granting Perlman summary judgment, the circuit court certified the judgment in favor of Perlman as final. See M.R.C.P. 54(b) (providing that a judgment resolving claims between fewer than all the parties becomes final and appealable upon an express judicial determination that there is no just reason for delay and express judicial direction of the entry of a final judgment). Adkins is not a party to this appeal.
.All subsequent dates are from 2010.
. See note 2, supra.
