From an order dismissing an action brought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien the plaintiff has appealed.
An understanding of the points presented by the record involves the following facts: The complaint was filed and the summons was issued on February 27, 1932. The summons was not served but, on March 15, 1932, the attorneys for the parties executed a stipulation as follows: “It is hereby stiрulated, by and between Frederick Schneider, attorney for Merner Lumber Company, and Frank Lee Crist, attorney for *427 J. L. Silvey, et ux., and A. 6. Heald, that defendants J. L. Silvey, et ux., and A. C. Heald may have to аnd including the 20th day of March, 1933, in which to answer the complaint in the above-entitled matter. Dated March 15, 1932. ’ ’ That stipulation was filed March 17, 1932. No answer was ever filed. On March 19, 1935, the defaults of all defendants were entered. On March 22, 1935, the judgment was filed. It recites, among other things: “and it appearing that summons was issued in this cause on February 27, 1932, but that said summons has never been served on any of said defendants and the Court having so found, and it appearing that said A. C. Heald is sued herein as John Doe, and it appearing that defendants John Lewis Silvey, Pauline Silvey, and A. C. Heald aрpeared in this action by the filing on March 15, 1932, of a stipulation signed by the respective attorneys for plaintiff and said defendants extending time for said defendants to answer in said cause until March 20, 1933, and it appearing that no further extension of time to plead has been granted said defendants or is on file and that no answer, motion, or other pleadings by any of said defendants is on file, and the default of each of said defendants, John Lewis Silvey, Pauline Silvey, and A. C. Heald having heretofore been entered by the Clerk according to law”. On August 15, 1935, the defendants served and filed a “Notice of Motion for Dismissal of Action”. It contained a statement that said motion “will be made upon the ground that said defendants have not, nor have either оf them ever been served with summons in said action and have never made an appearance therein and no jurisdiction over them, or either of them has ever been acquired by said court in said action and that the court had no jurisdiction to render or enter the judgment in said action and the said judgment is void and the judgment roll in said action shows said judgment to be void оn its face, and that more than three years has expired since the commencement of said action and the issuance of the summons therein”. It was supported by the affidavits оf John Lewis Silvey and Pauline Silvey, two of the defendants. It was opposed by two affidavits of Frank Lee Crist, the attorney for the plaintiff. That motion was denied on October 28, 1936. Three days latеr, October 31, 1936, the defendants served and filed a second notice of motion. It was a motion to set aside the judgment and for *428 dismissal of the action. It recites that the motion “will be madе upon the ground that plaintiff failed to have judgment entered in said action within three years after the service of summons on the defendants therein, or the equivalent thereof, or within three years after the filing in said action of a stipulation purporting to extend defendants’ time to answer therein if such stipulation constituted an appearance in said action by said defendants, or was the equivalent of service of summons on said defendants therein, and upon the ground that the court had no jurisdiction to render or enter the judgment in said action and the said judgment is void and ineffectual for any purpose and so appears on the face of the judgment roll in said action. Said motion will be based upon this notice of mоtion with proof of service thereof, the papers, records and files in said action and such oral and documentary evidence as said defendants may see fit to offеr at said hearing. ’ ’ The record does not show what evidence was in fact used in support of said motion. The motion was opposed by the affidavit of Paul M. P. Merner, the president of the plaintiff corporation and by the affidavit of K. E. McDougall. The last-mentioned motion was granted on December 28, 1936. It is from the order granting said motion that the plaintiff has appealed.
The plaintiff contends that the judgment was not void on its face and it should not have been set aside. It also contends (1) that section 581a did not authorize the trial court to dismiss the action for want of jurisdiction, and (2) the order dated October 28, 1936, is res judicata and therefore it was error to enter the order appealed from. Those contentions overlap and we will not attempt to treat them separately but will treat them together.
It is not now disputed that the stipulation set out above was equivalent to a personal service and rеturn of the summons as of March, 1932, the date it was filed. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 416;
Roth
v.
Superior Court,
If we have correctly construed section 581a it follows the judgment was not void and the trial court erred in setting it aside.
As opposed to what we have said the dеfendants cite certain language used by the court in
Cook
v.
Justice’s Court,
16 Cal. App. (2d) 745, 748 [
A dismissal was not authorized as a proper proceeding at common law. (18 C. J. 1145.) As the defendants cite no statute authorizing an involuntary dismissal after judgment for any cause except want of jurisdiction it also follows that the trial court erred in entering an order of dismissal.
The order appealed from is reversed.
Nourse, P. J., and Spence, J., concurred.
