147 P. 466 | Cal. | 1915
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal of the action based upon his failure to proceed therein and want of prosecution thereof.
The action was one brought to recover damages for personal injuries which plaintiff alleged that he had received while in the employ of the defendant and acting under his orders. The date of the accident as pleaded was January 21, 1909. The complaint was filed January 10, 1910, eleven days before the expiration of the period of limitation prescribed by subdivision 3 of section
Appellant insists that the court was without discretion to dismiss the case, citing as authority which he believes to be conclusive Johnson v. Baker,
"It is true that in several of the decisions above cited, it is held that the provision of subdivision 7 of section 681, now separately sectionized as 681a, to the effect that an action must be dismissed if the summons is not issued, served, and a return made thereon within three years after its commencement *631
does not divest the court of discretionary power to dismiss an action for failure to serve the summons or to prosecute the action diligently, although the time is less than three years after the action is begun. (Witter v. Phelps,
(In the printed decision from which the above language is quoted, sections 681 and 681a are erroneously cited for 581 and 581a.)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . :
"The other defendants had not filed an answer. Section
This is conclusive of the whole matter unless we can say that the facts disclosed by the record in the case now before us show an abuse of discretion by the court. We cannot say that under all of the circumstances disclosed there was such abuse. While the allegations in the affidavit of plaintiff must have appealed powerfully to the sympathies of the judge, who of course would be affected by the maimed condition of a fellow creature, nevertheless the court was bound to consider the fact that both parties lived in the same county and the further circumstances of their frequent meetings. But trivial cost would have attended the service of summons. If after such service and an answer by defendant the plaintiff's poverty and physical disability should have stood in the way of an early hearing, the court doubtless would have considered those matters in the event of application for postponement of the trial. But we cannot say that because the court refused to act upon plaintiff's excuse for failure to serve summons, there was an abuse of discretion.
The judgment is affirmed.
Henshaw, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.