Plaintiff appeals from a judgment based on an order dismissing the action for lack of diligent prosecution. *Page 471
The record on appeal was not brought up under the so-called alternative method, and the printed transcript contains no copy of any bill of exceptions. This is pointed out in the opinion filed by us when denying respondents' motion to dismiss the appeal (
The following are the facts as shown by those parts of the printed transcript which we may consider: The action is one to recover damages for an alleged libel. Plaintiff filed his complaint June 7, 1919. A demurrer thereto was sustained November 3, 1919. An amended complaint was filed by plaintiff November 13, 1919. A demurrer to the amended complaint was overruled and defendant answered January 5, 1920. The case was set for trial before a jury on April 5, 1920. The trial consumed about four days. After the introduction of evidence the cause was submitted to the jury, and on April 9, 1920, that body returned to the courtroom and announced that it was unable to agree upon a verdict. Whereupon the jury was dismissed. No further action was taken in the case until the expiration of more than two years, when defendants, on April 17, 1922, filed notice of their intention to move for a dismissal of the action upon the ground that plaintiff had not diligently prosecuted it. The motion to dismiss came on for hearing April 24, 1922. On that day the court, according to a recital in its judgment of dismissal, examined the record and affidavits on file, and from such examination found that no sufficient excuse has been given by the plaintiff for his lack of diligence in prosecuting said action, and that said action should be dismissed." Whereupon it was ordered that the cause be dismissed, and judgment of dismissal was entered accordingly. Though it is recited in the judgment of dismissal that the trial court "examined the records . . . and affidavits on file herein," we have no means of knowing the contents of those affidavits, because, as we have said, the appeal has not been prosecuted *Page 472 under the so-called alternative method and no bill of exceptions appears in the printed transcript.
[1] The evident reason for the dismissal of the action was that plaintiff permitted a period of more than two years to elapse after the first and only trial of the case without doing anything further to expedite his cause to a final determination. It is provided by section
What we thus far have said seems to be conceded. It is claimed, however, that if the dismissal was not made under section
[2] The contention lacks merit. In the first place, even if it were the rule that a defendant must himself seek to have the cause set for trial before he can successfully prosecute a motion to dismiss, we would be compelled to assume, in the absence of a bill of exceptions showing the contrary, that defendants did seek to have the case set for trial but that plaintiff chose not to try it. When an appeal to this court is to be determined upon the judgment-roll alone all intendments will be made in favor of the action of the trial court and in support of the judgment; and if error is claimed the record on appeal must contain sufficient legal evidence of it. (Waymire
v. California Trona Co.,
We have considered the points raised by appellant notwithstanding the briefs filed in his behalf contained language *Page 474 which so reflects upon the character of the trial judge as to require that they be stricken from the files. To save appellant from the consequences of his counsel's improprieties we have examined the briefs, but we cannot permit them to remain a part of the records of this court.
It is ordered that appellant's opening and closing briefs be stricken from the files. The judgment is affirmed.
Works, J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 17, 1924.