Plаintiff appeals from an order and judgment made pursuant to section 581a of the Code of Civil Procedure dismissing her action as to certain defendants based upon a failure to return the summons to the clerk within three years after commencement of the action.
Plaintiff also attempts to appeal from an order denying her motion to vacate and set aside the judgment of dis
*88
missal, but this attempted appeal must be dismissed because “the attempt to appeal from the order refusing vacation of the order of dismissal is but a repetition of plaintiff’s appeal from such last mentioned order.”
(Schultz
v. Schultz,
The action is one for false imprisonment, slander, libel and assault and battery. The facts are undisputed. The record before us discloses, in chronological order, the following proceedings taken in the litigation from its inception up to thе order and judgment of dismissal and subsequent filing of summons:
February 1, 1956—Complaint filed.
January 30, 1957—Summons issued.
January 30, 1959—Service of summons and complaint on defendant R. P. Gibson.
February 2, 1959—Service of summons and complaint on defendant R. B. Conrad.
February 2, 1959—Affidavit of service of summons and complaint on said defendants, subscribed and sworn to before attorney for plaintiff acting as a notary public.
March 24, 1959—Motion of said defendants to dismiss pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure, section 581a, granted and minute ordеr of dismissal as to said defendants.
April 2, 1959—Summons with affidavit of service filed in the office of the county clerk.
The sole question presented is whether the summons was “served and return thereon made” within three years after the commencement of the action as required by section 581a of the Code of Civil Procedure which, as apt, reads: “No action heretofore or hereafter commenced shall be further prosecuted, and no further proceedings shall be had therein, and all actions heretofore or hereafter commenced must be dismissed by the court in which the same shall have been commenced, on its own motion, or on motion of any party interested therein, . . . and all such actions must be in like manner dismissed, unless the summons shall be served and return thereon made within three years after the commencement of said action. ...”
The plaintiff urges thаt “return thereon made” as used in the statute means by definition merely the endorsement of service on the summons. In
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co.
v.
Rollaway Window Screen Co.,
Code of Civil Procedure, section 581a, enacted in 1907, is based upon subdivision 7 of section 581 as added in 1889, which provided that an action shall be dismissed “unless summons shall have been issued in one year and served, and return thereon made within three years after the сommencement of said action.” The earliest case on the subject is
Vrooman
v.
Li Po Tai
(1896),
Appellant urges that we reexamine the foregoing rule in the light of decisions from other jurisdictions, particularly the State of Montana. Such an examination was made in
Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co.
v.
Rollaway Window Screen Co., supra,
In view of the long and uniform acceptance of the rule by the reviewing courts of this state and by the legal profession generally in governing their conduct thereby, we are not disposed to strike down the settled rule because оther states have decided differently, for the reason that “an excess of virtue in the decision of an outside jurisdiction does not cause it to prevail over the settled judicial policy of this state.”
(Estate of Fritz,
Appellant further contends that the 1957 amendment of Code of Civil Procedure, section 410, requires that the phrase “return made thereon” as used in said section 581a be now held to mean only “the attachment of the certificаte or affidavit, and its delivery to counsel.” Prior to 1957, section 410 provided, in part, “When the summons is served by the sheriff ... it must be returned, with his certificate of its service ... to the office of the clerk or judge from which it issued. When it is served by any other person, it must be returned to the same place. ...” The italicized portion was amended in 1957 to read: “. . . to plaintiff if he is acting as his own attorney, otherwise to plaintiff’s attorney.” (Stats. 1957, ch. 497, p. 1531, § 1.)
Although the plaintiff’s brief аsserts that the summons was in fact “served and returned to plaintiff’s attorney on or before the deadline date,” the record before us does not *91 affirmatively substantiate that assertion. There is nothing on the summons or affidavit of service disclosing any date of the delivery thereof to the plaintiff’s attorney, although the affidavit of service discloses that it was subscribed and sworn to before him on February 2, 1959, 1 the action having been commenced February 1, 1956. The record does not disclose any affidavit on behalf of plaintiff in opposition to the motion to dismiss. It does, however, contain the affidavit of plaintiff’s counsel in support of a motion to vacate the judgment of dismissal to the effect that “counsel did cause to be served and return made to counsel, the summons hereinbefore issued” but said affidavit does not aver the date of said “return made to counsеl.” However, appellant’s brief states that “by affidavit herein filed, in our instant case, the summonses [sic] were in fact served and returned to plaintiff’s attorney on or before the deadline date.” This statement is unchallenged by respondents and whereas we do not accept the statement in the brief as evidence of the fact, yet inasmuch as respondents have replied to appellant’s argument as to the effeсt of the 1957 amendment of section 410 upon section 581a, we have decided to pass upon the contention so raised by appellant.
The essence of plaintiff’s brief argument on this contention, without citation of authority, is that “the courts had to rely upon section 410 in developing the ‘California Rule’ interpreting the dismissal statute. It thus must follow that the substantial amendment to said section, delecting [sic] the language upon which the сourts so relied, will require a change in the California Rule.” We think the argument is based on the fallacious major premise that the long line of decisions above referred to holding that the phrase “return thereon made ’ ’ in section 581a means the filing of summons and proof of service with the clerk of the court, reached that conclusion upon the language of section 410. Other than
Frohman
v.
Bonelli, supra,
In a review of Selected 1957 Code Legislation in 32 California State Bar Journal, 501, it is sаid at page 531, with reference to the 1957 amendment of section 410: “Formerly § 410 provided that the summons must be returned to the office of the clerk or judge from which it was issued. Once returned there, the summons became defunct
(Fanning
v.
Foley
(1893),
“Bead this section in connection with § 581a, which requires the court to dismiss an action unless a return is made within three years of filing the complaint. The return required by § 581a has been interpreted to mean the filing of summons and certificate or affidavit of service with the court (Frohman v. Bonelli (1949),91 Cal.App.2d 285 [204 P.2d 890 ]), and it seems doubtful that the amendment to § 410 will change this interрretation. Thus a return to the court within three years will, in all probability, still be required to prevent dismissal. ’ ’
Section 581a is part of chapter 1, entitled “Judgment in General,” part 2, title 8, of the Code of Civil Procedure and is the first of several sections dealing with involuntary dismissal for lack of prosecution. It is followed by section 581b (dismissal of transferred cases for nonpayment of fees) and section 583 (dismissal for failure to bring action to trial). Section 410 is part of title 5, entitled “Of the Manner of Commencing Civil Actions,” part 2 of said code delineating the procedural steps of filing, issuance of summons, method of service of summons, and acquisition of jurisdiction by service of summons and complaint. If there is any conflict between *93 section 410, as amended, and section 581a, it is to be resolved by the statutory rule of construction that “ [i]f the provisions of any title conflict with or contravene the provisiоns of another title, the provisions of each title shall prevail as to all matters and questions arising out of the subject matter of the title.” (Civ. Code, § 23.3.) The “matters and questions arising out of the subject matter” of title 8 relate to voluntary and involuntary dismissals, either for want of proof or lack of prosecution. Those arising out of title 5 relate to the proceedings for commencement of an action and the service of summons. Hence, we conclude that the provisions of section 410, as amended, “shall prevail” as to the “matters and questions” relating to the procedural handling of a summons after service, but not as to the requirement of section 581a to avoid dismissal for lack of prosecution.
Unquestionably, the Legislature intended to, and did, change the procedural requirement in section 410 that upon service of the summons, it be “returned” to the plaintiff, if in propria persona, or to the plaintiff’s attorney instead of to the clerk of the court as formerly. The question is whether by this amendment of section 410 the Legislature intended to amend section 581a by implication, and thus overturn long-established principles of law relating to section 581a. It may not be successfully contended that the amendment of section 410 repealed section 581a by implication. Hence, in ordеr that the amendment of section 410 have any effect on section 581a, it must be found by way of an amendment by implication. As a general rule, an implied amendment of one code section by an express amendment of another code section is not to be favored and may be only upheld where there is no reasonable basis for harmonizing the former with the latter as amended.
(Cf.
82 C.J.S. 418 Statutes, § 252;
People
v.
Leong Fook,
Analogically illuminative is the recent decision of
Kusior
v.
Silver,
Even in ease of statutes
in pari materia
it is the established rule that “ ‘Where a statute, with reference to one subject contains a given provision, the omission of such provision from a similar statute concerning a related subject is significant to show that a different intention existed. ’ ” (
City of Port Hueneme
v.
City of Oxnard,
“ There is no rule of law that necessarily requires the same meaning to be given to the same word used in different places in the same statute”
(Sunset Tel. & Tel. Co.
v.
Pasadena,
The purpose of section 581a is expressed in
Gonsalves
v.
Bank of America,
Any reexamination of sectiоn 581a in light of a contention that its meaning has been changed by the amendment of section 410 should be predicated upon the “ ‘. . . recognized rule that where a statute is susceptible of two constructions, one leading inevitably to mischief or absurdity, and the other consistent with justice, sound sense and wise policy, the former should be rejected and the latter adopted. ’ ”
(Jacobs
v.
Department of Motor Vehicles,
Finally, plaintiff would exculpate herself from the mandatory provisions of section 581a by a plea that her delay was reasonable. Other than an absence of defendant from the state or self-conceаlment within the state, the statute provides no other excuse for failure to serve and return the summons within the three years after the commencement of the action. “The statute is ‘jurisdictional’ in the sense that the court has no power to excuse the delay, nor can it refuse to act merely because the party fails to make a motion for dismissal. It has power to act only in a certain way, that is, by ordering a dismissal.”
(Gonsalves
v.
Bank of America, supra,
Appeal from order denying motion to vacate and set aside judgment is dismissed, and the judgment of dismissal is affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Ashburn, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 30, 1960.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
There is but one affidavit of service and it avers service on two defendants at different places and at different dates, and is subscribed and sworn to by the two different individuals without disclosing which affiant served which defendant. However, the sufficiency of such proof of service to comply with the requirements of Code of Civil Procedure, section 410, is not raised and need not be decided.
