Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent.
While the majority correctly posits that a slight delay in filing an amended complaint will not support a trial court’s dismissal of the complaint where the defendant has suf
For this reason, I would affirm the trial court’s order.
Lead Opinion
This is an appeal by the plaintiff Andres Araujo-Sanchez from two final orders which dismiss the plaintiffs third amended complaint against the defendants Henry A. Amoon, Alex Alonso, and Marcelino Suarez. The sole basis for the dismissal was that the plaintiff was fourteen days late in filing his third amended complaint under a prior trial court order which had dismissed the plaintiffs second amended complaint, but had given the plaintiff thirty days to file an amended complaint. Plaintiffs counsel miscalendared the due date of the amended complaint because he misread the court’s order to give him thirty days from the date of the entry of the order of dismissal to file an amended complaint, as is usually the case in orders of this nature— instead of thirty days from the date of the hearing on the prior motion to dismiss, as provided by the said order.
Because (a) the miscalendaring by plaintiff’s counsel of the amended complaint’s due date constitutes excusable neglect for the subsequent untimely filing of the third amended complaint, (b) the defendants were in no way prejudiced by the delay in filing the said amended complaint, and (c) the subject amended complaint was late by a relatively small amount of time— fourteen days — which caused no significant inconvenience to the court, we conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in dismissing the third amended complaint as being untimely filed. D’Best Laundromat, Inc. v. Janis,
Reversed and remanded.
HUBBART and FERGUSON, JJ., concur.
