for the Court:
¶ 1. In this intеrlocutory appeal, Jocelyn Howard appeals the denial of her motion to dismiss. Citi Trends did not move to dismiss. Thus, only the claims against Howard are before the Court.
Facts and Procedural History
¶ 2. On January 9, 2009, Lyshell Wilson filed her complaint, which states:
On December 22, 2007, Plaintiff Lyshell Wilson, a business invitee, entered Citi Trеnds located at 4547 North State Street, Jackson, Mississippi, for the purpose of shopping for clothing. While shopping on the premisеs of Citi Trends, Lyshell Wilson was brutally injured when an employee of Citi Trends, Jocelyn Howard, maliciously, reckless, negligently, and violently attacked Lyshеll Wilson with a pair of scissors.
On May 26, 2009, Howard filed a Motion to Dismiss, claiming that Wilson had failed to file her complaint within the one-year statute of limitations set forth by Mississippi Code Section 15-1-35 (Rev.2003), which states: “All actions for assault, assault and battery ... shall be commenced within one (1) year next after the cause of such action accrued, and not after.” Id. In Wilson’s response, she denied that she was filing an assault-and-battеry claim. Instead, she insisted that the claim set forth in the complaint was a claim of negligence.
¶ 3. A hearing was held and, on July 2, 2010, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss. Subsequently, Howard filed this interlocutory appeal. 1 On appeal, Howard presents two arguments: (1) that the complaint alleges assault and battery, and, therefore, the trial court erred in denying her motion to dismiss the complaint, which was not filed within the onе-year statute of limitations for intentional torts; and (2) that Wilson’s attempt to characterize the incident as an act of negligencе is simply an attempt to circumvent the statute of limitations, and, as such, is contrary to Mississippi law.
Discussion
¶ 4. “An appellate court is to review de novo the grant, or denial, of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.”
Ralph Walker, Inc. v. Gallagher,
¶ 5. Howard argues that Mississippi law prohibits Wilson from charaсterizing the December 22, 2007, “violent attack” as an act of negligence in order to escape the operation of the one-year statute of limitations applicable to intentional torts. This Court has addressed similar situations and each time has prohibited the characterization of an intentional tort as an act of negligence in order to escape the one-year bar.
¶ 6. In
Dennis v. Travelers,
¶ 7. Similarly, in
City of Mound Bayou v. Johnson,
It is true that there is a certain amount of negligence language trailing along in [the plaintiff]’s complaint. This is of no moment, as “[tjhere can be no escapefrom the time bar of the statute of limitations applicable to intentional torts by the mere refusal to style the cause brought in a recognized statutory category and thereby circumvent prohibition of the statute.”
Id.
(quoting
Dennis,
¶ 8. Our federal brethren have followed the same course. In
Childers v. Beaver Dam Plantation, Incorporated,
¶ 9. Wilson аttempts to characterize her suit as one not for an intentional tort, but rather for negligence. This alleged act of negligence is described by Wilson in the complaint as follows, “Jocelyn Howard, maliciously, reekless[ly], negligently, and violently attacked Lyshell Wilson with a pair of scissors. Jocelyn Howard repeatedly stabbed Lyshell Wilson ... causing serious bodily injuries” during the “heinous attack.” The language of the complaint is “generically akin to a common law assault and battery,” not an act of negligence.
See City of Mound Bayou,
¶ 10. Wilson’s attempt to describe the violent attack that is the basis of the comрlaint as an act of negligence is nothing more than an attempt to circumvent the statute of limitations applicable to intentiоnal torts. Having missed the deadline for filing an intentional-tort claim for the violent attack, Wilson drafted the complaint to sound in negligencе. However, “[t]here can be no escape from the bar of the statute of limitations applicable to intentional torts by the mere refusal to style the cause brought in a recognized statutory category and thereby circumvent prohibition of the statute.”
Dennis,
¶ 11. As such, the triаl court erred in denying Howard’s motion to dismiss.
¶ 12. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Citi Trends filed a brief, сiting Rule 28(i), Mississippi Rules of Appellate Procedure, and joining in the request that this Court reverse and render the trial court’s order denying the motiоn to dismiss the claims against Howard.
. The elements of assault and battery are as follows:
An assault occurs when a person (1) acts intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with the рerson of the other or a third person, or an imminent apprehension of such contact, and (2) the other person is thereby put in such imminent apprehension.... A battery goes one step beyond an assault in that a harmful contact actually occurs.
Morgan v. Greenwaldt,
