Opinion
David Parsons, M.D., appeals the court order dismissing his action with prejudice and vacating his previously obtained dismissal without
I
Parsons sued multiple defendants on various grounds. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the entire complaint, giving Parsons 10 days to amend. Within the 10-day period and without amending, Parsons filed a dismissal of his complaint without prejudice, and the dismissal without prejudice was promptly entered. Learning of the dismissal order, the defendants moved the court to enter an order dismissing the action with prejudice. (Code Civ. Proc., 1 § 581, subd. (f)(2). 2 ) The court granted the defendants’ request and later denied Parsons’s motion to vacate that order. Parsons’s appeal contends he is statutorily entitled to voluntarily dismiss without prejudice any time before his time to amend has expired.
II
The sole issue presented is procedural; we need not recite the underlying factual allegations. Simply stated: the issue is whether a plaintiff may decline to amend a complaint and instead obtain a dismissal without prejudice during the time granted leave to amend following the sustaining of a demurrer.
Here, Parsons filed his written request for dismissal without prejudice to the clerk as provided by section 581, subdivision (b)(1). This subdivision applies by its terms when the written request is made at “any time before the actual commencement of trial, . . .” Trial is defined in the section as “deemed to actually commence at the beginning of the opening statement or argument of any party or his or her counsel, or if there is no opening statement, then at the time of the administering of the oath or affirmation to the first witness, or the introduction of any evidence.” Thus, the validity of Parsons’s dismissal without prejudice depends upon the definition of “actual commencement of trial.”
The defendants’ later motion for dismissal was directed to the court’s authority to dismiss under section 581, subdivision (f)(2), “after a demurrer
The case we address is factually distinguishable because Parsons filed for and obtained a dismissal without prejudice before the time to amend expired, while in Wells the plaintiff sought relief after the time given had lapsed.
In resolving the issue as it was presented in
Wells,
the Supreme Court considered its decision in
Goldtree
v.
Spreckels
(1902)
In
Wells
v.
Marina City Properties, Inc., supra, 29
Cal.3d 781, the Supreme Court held the specific acts designated in former subdivision 1 of section 581 as constituting “the actual commencement of trial” were not exclusive. Further, the court held the amendment of former subdivision 1 to include specific examples was not intended to overrule Goldtree’s longstanding proposition that the sustaining of a demurrer without leave to amend would be considered the commencement of trial for the purpose of
In addressing the issue posed by Parsons on the facts of this case, it is clear that former subdivision 1 is not facially in conflict with subdivision (f)(2) of section 581. Former subdivision 1 enables the plaintiff to dismiss without prejudice until the trial commences, while subdivision (f)(2) only authorizes the court to dismiss after a demurrer has been sustained with leave to amend and the time to amend has expired without amendment. Wells holds that a plaintiff’s right to voluntarily dismiss under former subdivision 1, without prejudice, terminates when no amendment is filed within the time granted by the court. Had the Supreme Court interpreted Goldtree and the legislative intent to preclude the plaintiff’s right to dismiss under subdivision 1 during the time given to amend, it could easily have done so. Instead, in reference to a hypothetical problem posed in an article by Woods, To Dismiss Or Not To Dismiss: That Is the Question (Cont.Ed.Bar 1980) 2 Civ. Litigation Rptr., pages 109, 112, the Wells court stated: “[W]e note that such right of voluntary dismissal, [pursuant to § 581, former subd. 1] which is not barred until expiration of plaintiff’s time to amend after the sustaining of the demurrer, would also not be impaired prior to a decision sustaining the demurrer.” (29 Cal.3d at pp. 789-790, italics in original.)
Although Wells does not specifically address our facts, that decision has been interpreted by Weil and Brown, California Practice Guide: Civil Procedure Before Trial (The Rutter Group 1994) section 11.22 as: “If leave to amend has been granted, plaintiff retains the right to dismiss without prejudice until expiration of the time to amend. [Citing Wells . . .].” (Italics in original.) Even more direct is the statement in California Civil Procedure Before Trial (Cont.Ed.Bar 1994) Voluntary Dismissal, section 58.14, page 9: “If the court sustains the demurrer with leave to amend, the plaintiff may dismiss the action without prejudice until expiration of the time to amend. [Citing Wells.]” 3 (Italics added.)
We are cognizant that the same policy considerations which the majority cite in
Wells,
when reviewing a plaintiff’s right to voluntarily dismiss
Disposition
The order denying plaintiffs motion to vacate the ex parte order of June 24, 1992, is reversed, and the superior court is directed to enter an order vacating its order dismissing plaintiffs action with prejudice.
Kremer, P. J., and Froehlich, J., concurred.
Notes
All statutory references are to the Code of Civil Procedure.
At the time of the decision in
Wells
v.
Marina City Properties, Inc.
(1981)
This interpretation is contrary to that of the two dissenting justices in
Wells
which concludes the majority’s dictum “has the trial of law commencing upon the ruling of the court sustaining the demurrer. If sustained with leave, we have the situation that plaintiff is precluded from dismissing even during the time to amend and the distinction between without
