Opinion
In this case we issued an alternative writ of prohibition directing respondent court to show cause why it should not be permanently restrained from taking any further action or proceeding in an action brought by real party against petitioners.
The subject action was filed on March 18, 1965. Petitioners demurred to the complaint on May 17, 1965, and answered the complaint on July 9, 1965, after the demurrer was overruled. The complaint was amended on May 6, 1969, pursuant to stipulation of the parties. On January 9, 1970-, real party filed an at-issue memorandum, certificate of readiness, and a notice of motion to advance the casе for trial. On January 16, 1970, petitioners moved to dismiss the action for lack of prosecution pursuant to subdivision (a) of Code of Civil Procedure section 583. 1 The motion was granted on January 28, 1970.
*749 Real party moved to set aside the order granting the motion to dismiss. The motion was granted on February 24, 1970, simultaneously with the granting of a new motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution. (§ 583, subd. (a).) On March 12, 1970, real party appealed from the order granting the motion to dismiss and on the same day proceeded to trial against codefendant Roberts. After the introduction of certain documents into evidence and the taking of some testimony, real party requested and was granted a continuance of the trial. Petitioners were not present at that trial.
The order granting petitioner’s motion to dismiss was reversed with directions to the trial court that it exercise its full discretion in the light of recent cases. Remittitur issued on June 12, 1972. On June 15, 1972, real party filed an at-issue memorandum and certificate of readiness. On June 29, 1973, real party moved to restore the case to the calendar and to have it set for trial.
Petitioners, on July 5, 1973, moved to dismiss the action pursuant to subdivision (b), of section 583, on the ground that the matter had not.been brought to trial within five years after its commencement. On July 29, 1973, petitioners’ motion was denied аnd real party’s motion to restore the case to the calendar was granted. On August 15, 1973, the action was set for trial for September 26, 1973, and concurrently therewith an order was entered denying petitioners’ motion to dismiss. The instant proceedings then ensued.
Subdivision (b) of section 583 provides as follows: “(b) Any action heretofore or hereafter commenced shall be dismissed by the court in which the same shall have been commenced or to which it may be transferred on motion of the defendant, after due notice to plaintiff or by the court upon its own motion, unless such action is brought to trial within five years after the plaintiff hаs filed his action, except where the parties have filed a stipulation in writing that the time may be extended.” Under this code section dismissal is mandatory if the period therein provided has elapsed.
(Crown Coach Corp.
v.
Superior Court,
The appellate courts have, however, established decisionally certain implied exceptions to the mandatory dismissal requirement of the statute where it would be impossible, impracticable or futile due to causes beyond a party’s control to bring an action to trial during the five-year period.
*750
(Crown Coach Corp.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
In this case the complaint was filed on March 18, 1965. A total of eight (8) years, three (3) months and seventeen (17) days had elapsed at the time petitioner filed the motion to dismiss on July 5, 1973. From this period, under one of the implied exceptions to the five-year period, must be excluded the time elapsing from real party’s notice of appeal filed on March 12, 1970, to the issuance of the remittitur on June 12, 1972.
(Guy F. Atkinson Co.
v.
State of California,
*751 Rеal party contends that the action was brought to trial within five years after the filing of the complaint. He asserts that the trial commenced on March 12, 1970, when he proceeded to trial against codefendant Roberts. On that date only six (6) days remained within the statutory period.
This contention is without merit. The actiоn was never brought to trial against petitioners. The trial which commenced on March 12, 1970, against Roberts took place after petitioners had obtained an order dismissing the action as to them. The effect of the written order of dismissal was that of a final judgment as a result of which petitioners were no longer pаrties to the action. Real party treated the order as a final judgment when he appealed from it and ultimately secured its reversal.
Section 58Id specifically provides that a written order of dismissal when signed by the court and filed in the action “shall constitute judgments and be effective for all purposes, . . .”
The effect of the order of dismissal was to terminate the action as to petitioners who at that point became strangers to the action.
(Coburg Oil Co.
v.
Russell,
Real party also claims that it was impossible, impracticable and futile due to causes beyond his control to bring the action to trial during the five-year period. This claim is also without merit. We observe that when real party filed the notice of appeal on March 12, 1970, only six days remained within the five-year period. Upon the filing of the remittitur on June 13, 1972, by virtue of the exclusion in the computation of the time during which the appeal was pending, real party' was in the same position with respect to the five-year statutory period that he was when he filed the notice of appeal, i.e., he had six days, or until June 19, 1972, to bring the action to trial. On June 15, 1972, he filed an at-is'sue memorandum and certificate of readiness, leaving only four days within which to bring the case to trial. Real party made no motion to advаnce the case for trial but waited until June 29, 1973, over a year after the limitation period had run, before he moved to restore the case to the active calendar, as provided by the Santa Clara County Superior Court Rules, 2 and to have it set for trial.
*752 Real party alleges that he had “from time to time made inquiry of the calendar secretary’s office as to when the cause would come up for trial setting conference and be set for trial and was repeatedly advised that the cause was on the civil active list and was in the process of coming up for trial setting conference and to be set for trial.” He also asserts that “Under no stretch of anyone’s imagination could the case go to trial in Santa Clara County in six days.”
Conceding the latter statement to be true, and even further assuming that there was no necessity to have the case restored to the civil active calendar and that the case was normally working its way up the calendar, there was no impossibility, impracticability or futility preventing the case from going to trial in the sense contemplated by the cases providing for such an exception.
(Crown Coach Corp.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
The cases cited by real party concerning the discretion of the trial court are inapposite. Each of these cases deals with the fact-finding power of the trial judge to determine whether a certain set of facts warrant a finding that it was impossible, impracticable or futile to proceed to trial. Here we are dealing with a question of law, i.e., whether delay in trial setting due to crowded trial calendars constitutes good cause for the purpose of tolling the five-year period under section 583, subdivision (b). Under the decisions such delay does not toll the limitation period.
Real party contends that in any evеnt subdivision (c) of section 583 applies to this case and that a trial was had within the three-year limitation provided for in that subdivision. That subdivision, in pertinent part, provides: “. . . When in an action after judgment, an appeal has been taken and judgment reversed with cause remanded for a new trial (or when an appeal has been taken from an order granting a new trial and such order is affirmed on appeal), the action must be dismissed by the trial court, on motion of defendant after due notice to plaintiff, or of its own motion, unless brought to trial within three years from the date upon which remittitur is filed by the clerk of the trial court. Nothing in this subdivisiоn shall *753 require the dismissal of an action prior to the expiration of the five-year period prescribed by subdivision (b).”
Adverting to the reversal on the prior appeal from the judgment of dismissal pursuant to section 583, subdivision (a), we observe that such reversal did not command the cause for a new trial but was a qualifiеd reversal to “permit [the trial court] to exercise its full discretion in the light of the decisions in Denham,
[3]
*5Martindale,
[4]
and
Woolfson,
[5]
and in accordance with the procedures and criteria established in section 203.5 of the California Rules of Court.” (1 Civ. 28293.) Therefore, a new trial was neither expressly nor impliedly provided for; and indeed there was no necessity for a trial as the only question was one concerning the application of section 583, subdivision (a), to the circumstances of the case. In
Muller
v.
Muller,
Reliance is placed by real party on the circumstance that no application was made by petitioners for any action by respоndent court after the remittitur was filed. He asserts that by such inaction petitioner's treated the reversal as an unqualified one, thus requiring a new trial. We observe that petitioners’ treatment of the remittitur is wholly irrelevant to its legal effect. Petitioners were not required to do anything upon the filing of the remittitur. The remittitur directed the trial court to reconsider the motion to dismiss for lack of prosecution for over two years by the exercise of its full discretion. That motion was already before the trial court. Whatever petitioner did or did not do cannot be considered as creating a new trial situation.
Real party сites a line of cases which have construed subdivision (c) of section 583 as applying to two other situations, other than a new trial. These are where the trial court has sustained a demurrer without leave to amend, or where a defendant was granted a summary judgment or other judgment on the pleadings. It is apparent that in those few situations the *754 rights of the parties have been finally determined on the merits of the case, either factually or legally. These cases consider such dispositions as a trial for the purpose of applying the “new trial” language of subdivision (c) of section 583.
Section 656 defines a “new trial” as "... a re-examination of an issue of fact in the same court after a trial and decision by a jury, court, or referee”; and a “trial” has been defined by the decisions as the examination before a compеtent tribunal, according to the law of the land, of questions of fact or law put in issue by pleadings, for the purpose of determining the rights of the parties.
(Tregambo
v.
Comanche M. & M. Co.,
Real party’s reliance on
Carney
v.
Simmonds,
The position taken by real party would result in giving a non-diligent litigant an automatic three-year extension in any case where a defendant has obtained a dismissal for lack of prosecution and the plaintiff, upon taking an appeal from the order of dismissal, is successful in having it reversed. We do not believe that the Legislature intended such a rеsult.
The position in which real party finds himself was brought about by his own neglect'. He presents no justification for the failure to diligently prosecute the action against petitioners, save and except that he was required by the condition of the trial calendar to await his turn for a trial date.
*755
As already pointed out, this circumstance is not a legal justification but constitutes conduct aptly described in
Bass
v.
Braun,
Let a peremptory writ оf prohibition issue directing respondent court to refrain from taking any further action or proceeding in action number 165689, to vacate its order denying petitioners’ motion to dismiss said action, and to enter its order dismissing said action.
Sims, J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 15, 1974, and the petition of the real party in interest for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied March 13, 1974.
Notes
Rule 11.1 of the Santa Clara County Superior Court Rules provides: “Motion to Restore. Trials that are ordered off calendar and resetting of trials after appeal require that counsel shall notice a motion to restore to the active calendar.”
3Denham
v.
Superior Court,
4Martindale
v.
Superior Court,
5Woolfson
v.
Personal Travel Service, Inc.,
