for personal injuries arising* out of an automobile-bicycle collision ; defendant failed to answer and default was entered February 6, 1964. Thereafter defendant retained an attorney and on February 14, 1964, counsel for both parties stipulated that the default be vacated and set aside and defendant be permitted to file her answer. The first pretrial conference set for January 14, 1965, was taken off calendar for failure of plaintiff to file Certificate of Readiness; the second, for December 3, 1965, was also taken off calendar, because plaintiff’s counsel advised the court he could not find his file pertaining to the action; the third, set for June 6,1966, resulted in a joint statement of issues, contentions and itemization of damages, and trial was set for August 23,1966.
On August 23, 1966, plaintiff moved for a continuance because his counsel was engaged in trial; his motion was denied but the cause was ordered off calendar and the memorandum to set was vacated. The minute order of August 23, 1966, provided that “Counsel may restore the case to the calendar and secure a trial date by presenting a new Memorandum to Set and Certificate of Readiness to Room 216 within 30 days after 11-25-66.” Plaintiff did not file a new Memorandum to Set and Certificate of Readiness within 30 days following November 25, 1966; he did not file it until April 24, 1967 (five months later). Thereafter no further action was taken by plaintiff. Almost a year later, April 1, 1968, defendant moved to dismiss for lack of prosecution; then on April 11, 1968, plaintiff filed Notice of Motion to Restore to Calendar and Declaration in Support Thereof. Plaintiff’s motion to restore the cause to the trial calendar was granted on April 19, 1968, without prejudice to any motion under section 583, Code of Civil Procedure, and trial was set for September 20, 1968. On April 22, 1968, defendant’s motion to dismiss under section 583, Code of Civil Procedure, was granted. Plaintiff appeals from the order of dismissal.
Appellant contends that the dismissal of the action was an abuse of the trial court’s discretion in that under the circumstances the litigation should be disposed of upon substantial rather than technical grounds, and the court in previously granting his motion to restore the cause to the trial calendar must have recognized there was neither prejudice to defendant nor undue delay in bringing the matter to trial. He *53 argues that the delay was excusable because of the pressure of other legal matters.
Section 583, Code of Civil Procedure, provides that "The court may in its discretion dismiss any action for want of prosecution on motion of the defendant and after due notice to the plaintiff, whenever plaintiff has failed for two years after action is filed to bring such action to trial. ...” The discretion of the trial court under the foregoing section is broad and the court’s exercise thereof will be disturbed only upon appellant’s showing of manifest abuse.
(Weeks
v.
Roberts,
In the trial court, the burden of showing excusable delay to avoid the consequences of section 583 is on the party opposing the motion to dismiss.
(Breckenridge
v.
Mason,
*55
periods of time, unreasonable delay in bringing the cause to trial (see
Sprajc
v.
Scandinavian Airlines Systems, Inc.,
That on April 19, 1968, plaintiff’s motion for order to restore the cause to the trial calendar was granted over defendant’s opposition is hardly a ruling that there had been neither prejudice to defendant nor undue delay by plaintiff, as urged by appellant, for the order granting the motion contained the express proviso that “Motion [was] Granted without prejudice to any motion made under Section 583 CCR. ’ ’ Moreover, the setting of a new trial in no way affects defendant’s rights to move to dismiss under section 583.
(Atkinson
v.
County of Los Angeles,
“Section 583
requires
a dismissal of an action if it is not brought to trial within five years after it is commenced, and
authorizes
a dismissal, within the discretion of the trial court if it is not brought to trial within two years. As the time passes from two years nearer and nearer to five, the showing required to justify a failure to bring a case to trial grows greater and greater.”
(Membrila
v.
Vonett Sales Co.,
The order is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Thompson, J., concurred.
