AMENDED OPINION
Marion Dorsey appeals the trial court’s grant of the District of Columbia’s motion to dismiss the complaint, its dismissal of the complaint with prejudice, and its denial, as moot, of her motion under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 41(b) (2002) for leave to serve *668 Corporation Counsel and reinstate her case against the District of Columbia. We affirm the trial court’s grant of the motion to dismiss and the dismissal with prejudice. We also affirm the denial of the motion to reinstate.
I.
Dorsey, who allegedly slipped and fell on ice on January 14, 1999, filed a personal injury suit against the District of Columbia on January 11, 2002, served the Mayor on January 14, and filed an affidavit of service on January 30. On March 21, 2002, under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 41(b), the District moved to dismiss arguing that Dorsey failed to serve Corporation Counsel as required by Super. Ct. Civ. R. 4(j) (2002) and failed to file proof of service upon Corporation Counsel pursuant to Super. Ct. Civ. R. 4(m) (2002). The judge granted the District’s motion to dismiss stating that Dorsey “failed to comply with mandatory rules
Further, in her opposition to the District’s motion to dismiss, Dorsey also moved pursuant to Rule 41(b) for leave to serve Corporation Counsel and to have her case reinstated. The judge denied that motion on the ground that; the complaint having been dismissed with prejudice, the motion to reinstate was moot. This appeal followed.
II.
Dorsey first argues that she was not required to serve Corporation Counsel. She also claims, nonetheless, that she complied with Rule 4(m). We reject Dorsey’s claim that she was not required to serve Corporation Counsel on the authority of
Young v. United States,
Dorsey also argues for the first time on appeal that despite her failure to serve Corporation Counsel, the trial court erred in dismissing her claim under Rule 4(m), which provides that “proof shall be filed as to each defendant.” Although we reject that claim on the authority of Young, supra, the claim also fails on the merits. In support of her claim, Dorsey contends that when she filed proof of service upon the Mayor, she filed proof of service upon the District, which is the only defendant in the case, and thus she did not need to file proof of service upon Corporation Counsel. We disagree.
Dorsey’s reading of Rule 4(m) is contrary to the plain language of Rules 4(j) and 4(m), which must be read together. Reading Rule 4(m) in conjunction with Rule 4(j), proof of service upon
both
the Mayor and Corporation Counsel is required to be filed.
See McMasters v. United States,
Finally, Dorsey wrongly contends that even if Rule 4(m) required the dismissal of her complaint, the trial judge erred in dismissing it
with
prejudice because Rule 4(m) provides that the complaint be dismissed
without
prejudice. In this case even if the trial court had dismissed Dorsey’s complaint without prejudice, any refiled complaint would not have been viable because, as all parties were fully aware, the statute of limitations period governing Dorsey’s claim expired three days after the complaint was filed. Therefore, the trial judge did not commit reversible error in dismissing Dorsey’s complaint with prejudice.
Wagshal,
III.
Although we are dubious of the ground (“mootness”) relied upon by the trial court in denying the motion to reinstate, the trial court correctly denied the motion for another reason and we affirm on that ground.
See Sheetz v. District of Columbia,
Rule 41(b) allows the trial court to vacate a dismissal only after the plaintiff has shown good cause.
1
In applying Rule 41(b) to a dismissal, “the principal factor to be considered [by the trial court] in the good-cause inquiry is the
reason for the plaintiffs failure to comply with the rule.” Bulin v. Stein,
*670 In her opposition to the motion to dismiss and in her motion to reinstate, Dorsey offered no explanation for her failure to comply with the service requirement of Rule 4(j), i-e., her failure to serve Corporation Counsel. Instead, Dorsey merely argued to the trial court that the District was not prejudiced by her failure because the District was on notice due to her proper service of the Mayor. In Cameron we said:
[Wjhile we cannot say that such considerations [of prejudice to the plaintiffs and lack of prejudice to the defendants] are irrelevant to a good cause determination, they cannot by themselves provide good cause for the failure to make service within the [applicable] period ... and do not go toward an explanation for the failure ... to achieve proper service.
Id.,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the second sentence of Rule 41(b) literally applies only to
sua sponte
dismissals, it also makes specific reference to dismissals under Rule 4(m), and we construe the "good cause” language of Rule 41(b) to apply to the instant reinstatement motion. See
Wagshal,
