for the Court:
¶ 1. Shirley LaFontaine (“LaFontaine”) appeals from an order which we find to be a nonfinal judgment. Because hеr appeal is not properly before us, we dismiss her appeal and remand this case to the Circuit Cоurt of Hancock County.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2. LaFontaine filed suit against John Harley (“Harley”) and William Holliday d/b/a Holliday General Contrаcting (“Holli-day”) in the Circuit Court of Hancock County, Mississippi. The record reveals the case was assigned to Judgе Roger T. Clark. After twelve months of inactivity in the case, during which no action of record occurred, the circuit court clerk filed a motion to dismiss the case for want of prosecution under Rule 41(d) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure.
¶ 3. LaFontaine filed a “motion to set aside the judgment of dismissal and to reinstate causes of actiоn.” LaFontaine mailed her motion to the post office box used for all the judges at the Circuit Court of Hancоck County, her filing letter was directed to “Dear Sir/Madam,” and her proposed order was for the “presiding Judge’s signаture.” LaFontaine argued in her motion to set aside judgment that her attorneys did not receive notice of thе clerk’s motion to dismiss. LaFontaine’s counsel argued that, had they received notice of the clerk’s motion, “they would have taken the appropriate steps to prevent the dismissal of Plaintiffs causes of aсtion.”
¶ 4. Judge John C. Gargiulo signed and entered an order reinstating the case. The order to reinstate simply sets forth thаt the circuit court “is of the opinion that [LaFontaine’s motion to reinstate her case] should be GRANTED in all respects.” The record does not reveal why Judge Gargiulo considered and ruled on LaFontaine’s motion when the case was assigned to Judge Clark.
¶ 5. Holliday, acting pro se, filed a motion to reconsider the order reinstаting the case. Holliday argued that Judge Gargiu-lo had abused his discretion in granting LaFontaine’s motion without holding a hearing, and that LaFontaine’s motion should be struck because her foreign pro bono attorney had failed to comply with Mississippi’s pro hae vice rules, and he requested a hearing.
¶ 6. On January 27, 2012, Judge Gargiu-lo entered an order setting aside his prior order reinstating the case. Judge Gаrgiu-lo determined that LaFontaine’s motion to set aside the dismissal and to reinstate her case “should be addressed to and considered by the judge who, on December 12,
¶ 7. LaFontaine now appeals from Judge Gargiulo’s January 27 order.
LEGAL ANALYSIS
¶ 8. It is well settled that “[a]p-peals to the Supreme Court from the circuit court lie only from a final judgment.”
¶ 9. In this case, the order appеaled from is not a final judgment. The January 27 order did not adjudicate the case on its merits; rather, the order set aside a previous order reinstating the case, without addressing the merits of the case. Indeed, Judge Gargiulo’s January 27 order specifically stated that LaFontaine’s motion to set aside judgment of dismissal and reinstate causеs of action should be considered by Judge Clark, as he was the judge who dismissed the case on December 12, 2011. In substanсe, Judge Gargiulo undid any action he had taken on LaFontaine’s motion to reinstate her case, and refеrred her pending motion back to Judge Clark.
¶ 10. As the January 27 order left a pending motion to be dealt with by Judge Clark, the order is not a final judgment that ends the litigation on its merits and leaves the circuit court with nothing left to do but to executе the judgment. Because LaFontaine appeals from a nonfinal judgment, we are without appellate jurisdiction to entertain her appeal.
¶11. APPEAL DISMISSED.
Notes
. Rule 41(d) provides that, in any case in which there has been no action within the preceding twelve months, the clerk of court shall mail notice to the parties that the case will be dismissed unless, within thirty days from mailing of notice, action is taken or an application is made to the court to show gоod cause why the case shall be continued as a pending case. Miss. R. Civ. P. 41(d). The Rule also provides that the сourt shall dismiss each such case without prejudice if no action is taken or good cause is not shown. Id.
. LaFоntaine does not appeal Judge Clark's December 12, 2011, order dismissing her case for want of prosecutiоn, and it does not appear from the record that Judge Clark has ruled on her motion to set aside judgment of dismissal.
. Cotton v. Veterans Cab Co., Inc.,
. Sanford v. Bd. of Supervisors, Covington County,
. Mississippi Waste,
. Banks v. City Fin. Co.,
. Sanford,
. See M.W.F. v. D.D.F.,
