This is an appeal from the decision of the district court of Ramsey county, dismissing this action for want of prosecution on an application therefor made by the defendant, under the provisions of § 6999, Revised Codes of 1905. Said statutory provision reads:
It is the duty of the court to enforce this statute upon an application made by the party entitled to apply for dismissal. In so doing the court is vested with authority to determine on the record, or on such additional evidence as it may desire and as shall be presented, whether the case is one coming within the five-year provision mentioned in the first paragraph of the statute, and whether a failure by plaintiff to have the matter brought to trial, or in course of proceedings for final determination, within such five-year period, is occasioned by plaintiff’s neglect, or is excusable under all the circumstances.
In this determination, a court is clothed with judicial discretion akin to that in passing upon an application to vacate a judgment under § 6884, Revised Codes of 1905, wherein, except in cases of manifest abuse, the holding of the trial court will not be disturbed. See Racine Sattley Mfg. Co. v. Pavlicek, 21 N. D. 222, 130 N. W. 228, wherein all previous holdings of this court on said subject are collected. We apply such rule to the case at bar, and briefly recite the record facts to determine whether the trial court abused its discretion in applying the statute and deciding that the case be thereunder “deemed dismissed and abandoned by the plaintiff,” and making the formal order dismissing it accordingly.
The facts are not controverted. The summons and complaint were filed July 6, 1903, and issue joined thereon by answer served Novem
The action is one in equity, triable to the court. This court will take judicial notice that the county seat of Ramsey county at all times; has been the place wherein the district court chambers of that district are located, and that four terms of court each year since the commencement of this action have been fixed by statute to, be held, at any of which plaintiff, in the absence of good cause shown to the contrary, could have forced the trial of.this case. Instead of so doing, it has. been permitted to encumber the court calendars of more than twenty-terms of court, as fixed by statute to be held. Granting that both counsel have during a considerable portion of this time acquiesced, that does not excuse plaintiff’s neglect in commencing an action and permitting it to slumber without trial being had for five and one half years after joinder of issue, and for nearly six years from its commencement, during which time, and some two years after the case had been at issue after defendants had filed note of issue, bringing it on the calendar, a dismissal for want of prosecution had been had, which dismissal was set aside, however, by stipulation, without apparent inconvenience to plaintiff, demonstrating no desire on the part of defendants’ counsel to take any advantage of plaintiff or plaintiff’s counsel in the case. The statute was enacted to apply to cases of this-kind.
The effect of the statute is to declare that a plaintiff permitting a case to drag along without trial for five years after its commencement is prima facie guilty of such unreasonable neglect as, in the absence of' proof sufficient to satisfy the court to the contrary, entitles the opposing party to take a dismissal thereof. The statute in effect declares a. presumption of negligence on the part of the plaintiff, and throws-upon him the burden of exonerating himself therefrom, or suffer dismissal of his action. The statute in question does not extend the limit
This case is analogous to the leading New York case of Seymour v. Lake Shore & M. S. R. Co. 12 App. Div. 300, 42 N. Y. Supp. 92, and the following from the opinion in that case is applicable: “The defendant made out a prima facie case of unreasonable neglect to prosecute. The action remained at issue for nearly six years without any step having been taken by the plaintiff to bring it to trial. Unreasonable neglect having thus been shown, the burden of excusing the neglect was thrown upon the plaintiff. . . . The defendant, moving to dismiss, may rest upon proof of neglect thus defined. The rule then throws upon the plaintiff the burden of making it appear to the court that such neglect was not unreasonable. The plaintiff in the present case has failed to make this appear. The only excuse he gives is contained in the vague statement that the action would have been tried long since, but for the ill health of his attorney Tor several years/ . . . Such a statement furnishes no basis for the exercise of judicial discretion. . . . His condition is not bettered by the filing of a note of issue and the service of a notice of trial shortly before the-defendant made its motion to dismiss. These acts simply evince present readiness to proceed. They have no bearing upon the past neglect, and they certainly do not tend to excuse it. The defendant says that it has lost its witnesses by the delay. This may or may not be so. It was to prevent the possibility of such instances, and to compel diligence in legal procedure, that the practice was instituted. We deem it our duty to apply the statute and the rule of practice with reasonable fairness. Looseness in their enforcement would inevitably lead to an increase of the mischief which the legislature and the judges in convention aimed to lessen. The order should be reversed.” And the action of the lower court denying a motion to dismiss was set aside,, and the action dismissed. For other similar holdings, see Israel v.
The foregoing authority is here applicable. The facts in the case at bar are more extreme than in Seymour v. Lake Shore & M. S. R. Co. supra. Whatever the intentions of plaintiff may have been, the facts remain that from July 6, 1903, the date of the commencement of this action, a period of more than five years elapsed until July 15, 1908, date of service of note of issue by plaintiff, without any steps being taken by him toward final determination of the cause. In the meantime, defendants had brought the case on the calendar, and once, in January, 1906, procured its dismissal for want of prosecution; and •even then plaintiff waited two years before procuring a written stipulation setting aside the dismissal and reinstating- the cause on the
The order appealed from is affirmed, with costs.