Where the plaintiffs submitted no medical evidence supporting their motion to continue the trial of their HCLA claim, and the case had been pending for more than six years, denial of the continuance and dismissal of the case was affirmed.
In Wilson v. Mickles, No. E2025-00349-COA-R3-CV (Tenn. Ct. App. Mar. 31, 2026), the plaintiffs filed a health care liability claim against the defendant based on alleged injuries the plaintiff wife suffered during a dental procedure. The complaint was filed in 2018, and the case was set for trial for November 2023. After several agreed continuances, the case was reset for trial for December 2024. In November, however, the plaintiffs filed a motion to continue the trial, stating that the plaintiff wife was having significant health problems. No medical evidence was attached to the motion.
The defendant opposed the continuance, pointing out that the plaintiff had requested a continuance before due to the same health issues. The defendant argued that the case had been pending for over six years, that it had been continued many times, and that there was no assurance that the plaintiff would be able to participate in a continued trial.


