In our judgment a stipulation continuing the hearing on petitioner’s motion to dismiss under section 581a of the Code of Civil Procedure does not constitute a general appearance which saves an action frоm dis *303 missal for failure to issue summons under that section. We have therefore concluded that a mandate requiring dismissal of the action should issue in this case.
We set out the chronology of the procedures:
July 29, 1959—Moran, real party in interest (plaintiff below), filed an action for damages arising from an auto accident naming petitioner as a defendant.
August 18, 1960—No summons having been issued, petitioner prepared, served by mail, and filed with respondent court a notice of motion to dismiss the action pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 581a in that Moran failed to procure the issuance of summons within one year of the filing of the complaint. The court set the motion for hearing for Septеmber 7, 1960. Movant sought no other relief. Summons has never issued.
August 31, 1960—Attorneys for both parties signed, and filed in respondent court, a written stipulation which provided that the hearing on the motion to dismiss the action be continued from September 7, 1960, to September 28, 1960.
September 7,1960—The court entered a minute order granting a continuance pursuant to the stipulation.
September 28, 1960—The court heard the parties upon the motion to dismiss. Moran’s affidavits alleged that the failurе to issue summons emanated from an administrative oversight at Moran’s attorneys’ office.
December 9, 1960—Bespondent court denied petitioner’s motion to dismiss in a memorandum decision. The court expressed its belief that it had discrеtion to deny dismissal. It held that relief should not be granted since petitioner was fully aware of the pending action and had, through an insurance adjuster, secured a medical examination of Moran.
Petitioner’s requеst for a writ of mandate rests upon the premises that Code of Civil Procedure section 581a requires a mandatory dismissal of the action and that the stipulation to continue the motion did not constitute a general appearance. We turn to a consideration of each of these.
Code of Civil Procedure section 581a clearly provides for a mandatory dismissal, not a dismissal resting in the discretion of the cоurt. The section reads: “No action heretofore or hereafter commenced shall be further prosecuted, and no further proceedings shall be had therein, and all actions heretofore or hеreafter commenced must be dismissed by the court in which the same shall have been com *304 menced, on its own motion, or on the motion of any party interested therein, whether named in the complaint as a party or not, unless summons shall have issued within one year, and all sneh actions must be in like manner dismissed, unless the summоns shall be served and return thereon made within three years after the commencement of said action, except where the parties have filed a stipulation in writing that the time may be extended. ... A motion to dismiss рursuant to the provisions of this section shall not, nor shall any extension of time to plead after such motion, constitute a general appearance.” (As amended Stats. 1955, ch. 1452, § 5, p. 2640; emphasis added.)
The cases hold the statute to be mandatory. Thus the plaintiff in
Walker
v.
State
(1956),
While the trial court helpfully explained its reasoning in its memorandum, setting out its reliance upon
Wyoming Pacific Oil Co.
v.
Preston
(1958),
*305
We cannot concur in Moran’s second position that the dismissal may be avoided upon the ground that petitioner, by joining in a stipulation to continue the hearing of the motion to dismiss, entered a general appearance. Since the 1955 amendment to section 581a of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that any extension of time to plead, after such motion, does not constitutе a general appearance, a stipulation to continue the time for hearing such motion could hardly do so. The 1955 amendment to section 581a obviously intended to codify the rule of certain casеs holding that a request for an extension of time to plead, coupled with a motion to dismiss or quash, does not constitute a general appearance. (See
Russell
v.
Landau
(1954),
If the motion to dismiss under section 581a does nоt constitute an attempt to secure affirmative relief on the merits resulting in a general appearance, a stipulation to continue the hearing date of such motion to dismiss surely cannot compоse a general appearance. Obviously the stipulation which leads to an extension of time to plead does not differ in principle from the stipulation which continues the hearing of the motion. The рostponement of the argument upon the motion can hardly fall in a different category than the postponement of the pleading on the motion.
The reasoning of
Brock
v.
Fouchy, supra,
Neither the eases upon which Moran relies nor other earlier decisions construe a stipulation for the continuance of the motion under this section as a general appearance. The rulings in Moran’s citations of
Zobel
v.
Zobel
(1907),
In Zobel defendant appeared at a hearing upon plaintiff’s motion to strike defendant’s demurrer and answer. He orally requested a continuance of the hearing of that motion. Later, alleging а lack of personal service, he moved to set aside a decree in favor of plaintiff. The court held (page 101) that the request for the continuance constituted a general appearance and a submission to the court’s jurisdiction since the request could be granted only upon the hypothesis of jurisdiction. The comparable situation in Pfeiffer involved a stipulation which requested not only postponement of a trial date but also affirmative relief in that certain real property be deemed attached to the realty that was the subject matter of the litigation.
Earlier eases dealing with the subject matter of general appearance do not specifically apply to the instant stipulation. The court found general appearances in the following situations : a stipulation extending time in which to plеad upon the cause of action
(Roth
v.
Superior Court
(1905),
Roth, Cooper
and
California etc.
were characterized in
Davenport v. Superior Court
(1920),
We deal, here, not in a general appеarance or in a request for relief on the merits but in a stipulation continuing a hearing of a motion to dismiss. The principles discussed above and the legislative precept make it plain that such a stipulation does not constitute a general appearance under this section of the statute.
In pursuit of the policy that litigation should not stretch into the infinite, the Legislature has specified that an action must be dismissed unless summons shall have been issued within one year. The Legislature has further expressly stipulated that an extension of time to plead after a motion to dismiss an action so terminated does not constitute a genеral appearance. To hold that a stipulation to continue the hearing of such a motion, as distinguished from “any extension of time to plead after such motion,” becomes a general appearance would be to frustrate the policy and to rend apart the language. This court cannot treat legislative purpose and expression so cavalierly.
We order that a writ of mandate issue commanding the Superior Court of the State of California, in and for the County of San Mateo, to dismiss Action No. 85668 currently pending in said court.
Bray, P. J., and Duniway, J., concurred.
