Appeal from a dismissal of an action for failure to use due diligence in the prosecution thereof. The motion to dismiss was addressed to the inherent discretionary power of the court and was granted under that power. It is appellants’ claim that the court had no jurisdiction to grant the motion. This contention is based upon the last sentence of section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which 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.” Appellants argue that the mandatory portion of the section compelling a dismissal after the three-year period deprives the court of the power of dismissing the action for any delay amounting to a shorter period than that which under the statute gives a defendant an absolute right of a dismissal. The record discloses that this action was brought against defendant hospital for injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff Julia Inderbitzen while she was being delivered of a stillborn child in defendant institution, which injuries are alleged to be due to malpractice by defendants and their servants. Special damages were claimed by her husband in procuring subsequent medical care.
The action was commenced July 19, 1926. More than four years thereafter the case was brought to trial. At the conclusion of plaintiffs’ case the court granted a motion of defendants for a nonsuit. A new trial was denied and plaintiffs appealed. The judgment was reversed. (Inder
bitzen
v.
Lane Hospital,
Defendants' affidavit in support of their motion to dismiss sets forth in substance among other things that many of defendants’ witnesses were internes and nurses of defendant hospital at the time of the operation and some have since removed to places far distant from San Francisco; in other instances their whereabouts are unknown; that nothing prevented plaintiffs from bringing the action to trial promptly following the filing of the
remittitur,
and their delay in this respect is inexcusable and unreasonable. Under these facts plaintiffs’ contention that a court, in view of section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure making it mandatory for it to dismiss an action if not brought to trial within three years from the going down of the
remittitur,
is circumscribed or impaired in its inherent jurisdiction to dismiss in a shorter period, is wholly without merit. While this precise provision of the code it seems has not received judicial construction in this state, the principle has long been established that the mandatory provisions in statutes of like character do not have the effect claimed. Thus in
Lieb
v.
Lager,
9 Cal. App. (2d) 324 [
It is only fair to present counsel for plaintiffs to state that they have only recently become connected with the case and are in no manner responsible for the delay in the *107 prosecution of the action. The record shows that there have been several substitutions of attorneys in the course of the litigation.
The judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Knight, J., and Cashin, J., concurred.
