[11] Appellant, Jack Dollarhide, challenges the district court's order dismissing his case for lack of prosecution. We will reverse.
ISSUES
[12] Mr. Dollarhide raises a single issue: Did the trial court abuse its discretion by dismissing Plaintiffs/Appellant's Complaint for Lack of Prosecution?
Appellees present this additional issue:
Should this appeal be dismissed because of Appellant's noncompliance with W.R.A.P. 7.017
FACTS
[13] On August 3, 2001, Mr. Dollarhide was injured while working for Baneroft Construction, Inc. On August 29, 2008, he filed a complaint against Seott Bancroft, the owner of Bancroft Construction, and Murray Shat-tuck, the general construction superintendent, asserting claims of co-employee liability. On December 6, 2004, Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck filed their first motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution, contending that Mr. Dollarhide had done nothing to prosecute his action in the fifteen months since the complaint was filed. On January 12, 2005, Mr. Dollarhide's counsel filed a motion to withdraw, citing a conflict of interest. On January 24, 2005, the district court held a hearing on the motions. It denied the motion to dismiss, and granted the motion to withdraw, but with this warning:
I'm allowing you to withdraw, but ... put the other attorney on notice that this is a fast-track case and there will not be the usual time that the Court usually allows for discovery, expert witnesses, and whatever, but this will be on a fast track.
[14] On February 4, 2005, Mr. Dollar-hide's new attorney entered his appearance. He soon filed a request for a scheduling conference. The district court held a scheduling conference on April 21, 2005, and issued an order that established deadlines for the completion of discovery, designation of experts, and filing of dispositive motions and final pretrial memoranda. The final pretrial conference was scheduled for September 28, 2005. No trial date was set. Rather, the scheduling order stated that the trial would be scheduled at the final pretrial conference.
[15] The scheduling order set a deadline of July 1, 2005, for the filing of any dispositive motions. Despite this deadline, Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck filed a motion for summary judgment on August 5, 2005. The scheduling order had provided that dispositive motions would be heard on August 9, 2005. The record contains no order vacating or rescheduling that hearing, although it appears that no hearing was held on the sched
[16] On December 7, 2006, Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck filed another motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution. Mr. Dollar-hide resisted the motion, informing the district court that settlement negotiations had been occurring between the parties, and that he was "prepared to proceed to trial as soon as the [clourt sets a date." He also filed a second request for a scheduling conference, asking the court to schedule a final pretrial conference and trial. The district court took no action on Mr. Dollarhide's request. Instead, on January 16, 2007, it held a hearing on the motion to dismiss. Nearly four months later, on May 1, 2007, the district court entered its order of dismissal, concluding as follows:
15. In this case, there has been no bona fide action of record whatsoever taken towards disposition of this case since March 1, 2006, when this [clourt entered its Order Denying Defendants' Motion for Summary Judgment. The last bona fide action of record towards disposition taken by [Mr. Dollarhide] was on September 16, 2005, when he filed his Pretrial Memorandum, Proposed Jury Instructions and Opposition to Defendants' Motion in Limine.
16. There is no discovery occurring between the parties. All discovery in this case has been completed and the discovery cut off has long expired. There is no pretrial preparation at this time as [Mr. Dollarhide] has never requested a trial date.
17. It has been over nineteen (19) months since [Mr. Dollarhide] has taken any action, let alone bona fide action, towards disposition of this case. [Mr. Dollarhide's] failure to prosecute this case and bring the matter to trial with due diligence is inexcusable given the previous motions to dismiss filed by [Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shat-tuck]. At the January 4, 2005 motions hearing, this [clourt specifically advised [Mr. Dollarhide] that this case is a "fast track case."
18. [Mr. Dollarhide] failed to heed this [clourt's previous instructions. [Mr. Dol-larhide] cannot escape the duty of expediting his case and he may not rest upon the failure to secure a trial date.
Mr. Dollarhide has appealed the district court's order of dismissal.
DISCUSSION
Failure to Comply with W.R.A.P. 7.01
[17] Because it is potentially dispos-itive, we address first the claim by Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck that this appeal should be dismissed because Mr. Dollarhide failed to comply with W.R.A.P. 7.01. This issue requires a two-step analysis: Did Mr. Dollarhide violate W.R.A.P. 7.01; and if so, is dismissal an appropriate sanction? The pertinent portion of Rule 7.01 provides as follows:
The brief of appellant shall contain under appropriate headings and in the order indicated:
(a) A title page which must include:
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(2) Identification of party filing the brief; and
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(J) An appendix, which shall contain a copy of the judgment or final order appealed from and the trial court's written and/or oral reasons for judgment, if any, and the statement of costs required by rule 10.01.
[18] Mr. Baneroft and Mr. Shattuck contend that Mr. Dollarhide violated this rule because the title page of his brief identifies the filing party as "John" Dollarhide rather than "Jack" Dollarhide, and because the brief's appendix does not contain a copy of the order appealed from or a statement of costs. These errors and omissions are apparent on the face of the brief, and we con
[19] Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck seek dismissal of the appeal. Pursuant to W.R.AP. 1.03, the untimely filing of a notice of appeal is jurisdictional, while "failure to comply with any other rule of appellate procedure ... is ground only for such action as the appellate court deems appropriate." Thus, dismissal is not required in this case. We have previously declined to dismiss an appeal in which, despite technical violations of the appellate rules, the pleadings supplied adequate notice, and meaningful review was not precluded. Montoya v. Navarette-Montoya,
Dismissal for Lack of Prosecution
[¥10]1 "The dismissal of a suit for want of prosecution lies within the sound discretion of the trial court." Johnson v. Board of Comm'rs of Laramie County,
[1111 Under W.R.C.P. 41(b), the district court may dismiss "any action not prosecuted or brought to trial with due diligence." Rule 208(c) of the Uniform Rules for District Courts is more specific, indicating that cases "in which no substantial and bona fide action of record towards disposition has been taken for 90 days are subject to dismissal for lack of prosecution." The parties have cited only a handful of Wyoming cases dealing with dismissals for lack of prosecution, and none with facts similar to this case. This scarcity of cases may be due to the fact that dismissal of an action is "the most severe of penalties, which ought to be assessed only in the most extreme situations." Glatter v. American Nat'l Bank,
[112] With that background, we turn to the cireumstances surrounding Mr. Dollar-hide's case. From its beginning, this case moved slowly. The scheduling conference was not held until nineteen months after the complaint was filed, and then at the request of Mr. Dollarhide's new counsel. In the order issued after the scheduling conference, the district court established deadlines for the completion of discovery, designation of experts, and filing of dispositive motions and final pretrial memoranda. It is significant, we think, that Mr. Dollarhide appears to have complied with all of those deadlines. 1
[113] The scheduling order set a date for the final pretrial conference, and provided
[T 14] Nine more months passed, with no apparent action from the parties or the district court. Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck then filed another motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution. In response, Mr. Dollarhide informed the district court that his counsel had tried to arrange mediation of the dispute, and had engaged in ongoing settlement negotiations. The district court made no mention of these settlement efforts in its order dismissing the case. Compare Randolph,
[T 15] While it is true that Mr. Dollarhide could have requested a trial date, there is no reason that Mr. Bancroft and Mr. Shattuck could not have done the same. The law places the "duty of expediting the case" chiefly with the plaintiff. Johnson,
[116] In summary, the district court had warned that this case would be set on a fast track. Mr. Dollarhide complied with all of the deadlines imposed in the scheduling order, and in accordance with that order, he was "ready for trial in all respects by the time of the final pretrial conference." Due to no fault of his, the final pretrial conference was never held. It was never rescheduled, and no trial date was ever set. But despite the slow pace of this litigation, the district court found no prejudice resulting from any lack of prosecution. Under these cireum-stances, the district court could not reasonably conclude that this was the sort of extreme situation justifying dismissal for lack of prosecution. Given our policy of allowing parties their day in court, we deem that it was an abuse of discretion to dismiss Mr. Dollarhide's suit for lack of prosecution. We reverse that decision and remand the case to the district court.
Notes
. In his final pretrial memorandum, Mr. Dollar-hide stated that discovery had not been completed because he had been unable to locate and depose one witness. Nevertheless, in its order dismissing the case for lack of prosecution, the district court concluded that "(alll discovery in this case has been completed and the discovery cut off has long expired."
. The scheduling order required that the "case must be ready for trial in all respects by the time of the final pretrial conference." This requirement is consistent with W.R.C.P. 16(d), which directs that the "final pretrial conference shall be held as close to the time of trial as reasonable under the circumstances." However, the scheduling order also indicated that the district court would not set the trial date until the final pretrial conference. This practice can create a significant practical problem. If the trial date is not set until the final pretrial conference, and is held soon after the final pretrial conference, then trial counsel and witnesses receive only short notice of the trial date, and could find it difficult to make themselves available for trial. See Urich v. Fox,
