Opinion
Sеacall Development, Ltd. (Seacall) appeals from an order denying its motion to be relieved from a judgment of dismissal for failure to prosecute. We reverse and direct the trial court to grant the motion.
Facts and Proceedings Below
Seacall, a landlord, requested rent increases from respondent Santa Monica Rent Control Board (Board) for 11 of its condominium units.
In September 1994 Seacall, displeased with the amounts of the increases the Board allowed, filed a petition for a writ of administrativе mandate. Seacall was represented before the Board and on the petition by Attorney Brenda Barnes.
In September 1995, a year after filing the petition, Barnes wrote to the Board requesting it to prepare the administrative record.
Nearly a year later, in August 1996, Barnes wrote to the Board requesting the hearing portion of the record be provided to her on a computer disk. In that letter she stated her goal was to obtain a decision on the writ petition by the end of 1996.
*204 In Seрtember 1996, two years after the petition was filed, the trial court sent Barnes an order to show cause why the case should not be dismissed for failure to prosecute citing, inter alla, Code of Civil Procedure section 583.420 and local rules of court.
A hearing on the order to show cause was set for November 5, 1996. Barnes did not appear on the date set for hearing. The court on its own motion continued the matter to November 27, 1996, believing the order to show cause may have been sent to the wrong address. A notice of the new hearing date was directed to Barnes at a different address.
Barnes did not appear for the rescheduled hearing and, on November 27, 1996, the trial court dismissed Seacall’s action and directed Barnes to give notice. She did not do so.
On January 17, 1997, Barnes filed a notice of change of address with the court.
On March 3, 1997, Seacall substituted Gordon P. Gitlen as its counsel in place of Barnes. Barnes resigned from the State Bar the same day.
Between March аnd December 1997, Seacall’s new attorney, Gitlen, engaged in settlement negotiations with the Board over the subject rent increases.
On or about January 22, 1998, while attempting to set a date for a hearing on the petition, Gitlen and the Board’s counsеl learned for the first time the action had been dismissed in November 1996.
On February 10, 1998, Seacall filed a motion for relief from dismissal on the ground Barnes’s positive misconduct should not be imputed to Seacall.
The trial court denied this motion and Seacall filеd a timely appeal.
Discussion
The only issue before us on appeal is whether the trial court erred in refusing to set aside the order of dismissal on the ground Seacall had been “abandoned” by its attorney, Barnes. 1
Without doubt Barnes acted negligently in handling Sеacall’s case. As a general rule, however, the negligence of an attorney is imputed to
*205
the client.
(Carroll
v.
Abbot Laboratories Inc.
(1982)
California courts recognize an exception to this rule in those cases “ ‘where the attorney’s neglect is of that extreme degree amounting to positive misconduct, and the person seeking relief is relatively free from negligence.’ ”
(Carroll, supra,
What constitutes “abandonment” of the client depends on the facts in the particular action. Even where abandonment is shown, hоwever, the courts also consider equitable factors in deciding whether the dismissal of an action should be set aside. These factors include the client’s own conduct in pursuing and following up the case
(Aldrich
v.
San Fernando Valley Lumber Co.
(1985)
The facts in the present case plainly show Barnes abandoned her client. And, although the client possibly was not as vigilant as it should have *206 been, we find the reasons for setting aside the dismissal clearly outweigh the reasons for letting it stand.
Barnes did even less in representing Seacall than other attorneys found to have abandoned their clients. In Daley, for example, the attorney filed the complaint, filed a memorandum to set the case for trial and signed a stipulation to amend the pleadings (albeit after a lengthy dеlay). (227 Cal.App.2d at pp. 384-385.) In Fleming, the attorney filed the complaint, recorded a lis pendens, answered the cross-complaint and conducted limited discovery. (23 Cal.App.4th at pp. 70-71.) In the present case, Barnes filed the petition for writ of mаndate and ordered the administrative transcript. She took no further action to prosecute her client’s case. Barnes substituted herself out of the case de facto long before she did so de jure.
If there is a weakness in Seacall’s motion for relief, it is in Seacall’s failure to contact Barnes in the two years between the filing of the action and its dismissal. In contrast, the client in
Daley
made 12 to 15 attempts to contact her attorney (
Nevertheless, we do not believe Seacall’s failure to initiate contact with Barnes in the two-year period is a sufficient ground for denying Seacall equitable relief from Barnes’s positive misconduct. As the court pointed out in
Daley,
the only thing clients generally know about the prosecution of lawsuits is “that several years frequently elapse between the commencement and trial of lawsuits.” (
More significant than the client’s failure to act
before
being put on notice of dismissal is the client’s diligence
after
receiving notice.
(Aldrich, supra,
The Board properly refrains from contending it would be prejudiced if the dismissal was set aside. In this case the prejudice would be virtually nil because there are no witnesses who might disappear or whose mеmories might fade. The issues before the trial court on a petition for administrative mandamus are purely legal and governed by the administrative record. (Code Civ. Proc., § 1094.5, subd. (b).) Furthermore, we note the order to show cause re dismissal issued on the trial cоurt’s own motion, not on the motion of the Board. Thus it does not appear the Board was particularly concerned about the two-year delay in bringing the petition on for hearing.
We also find it significant this case was dismissed under the discretionary two-yеar time period of Code of Civil Procedure section 583.420. (See
Fleming, supra,
The Board counters this public policy argument with one of its own. It points out Seacall’s motion to set aside the dismissal was not filed within the six-month period allowed by Code of Civil Proсedure section 473 during which “ ‘there is a strong public policy in favor of granting relief and allowing the requesting party his or her day in court.’ ”
(Rappleyea
v.
Campbell
(1994)
We do not find this argument persuasive. While it is true the motion for relief in
Daley
was made under Code of Civil Procedure section 473 (
Finally, we are aware of the tension between a policy which punishes the innocent client for the sins of his or her attorney and a policy which, in a
*208
sense, rewards the attorney for his or her incompetence.
(Fleming, supra,
The narrow application called for in
Carroll
is achieved by requiring а “total failure on the part of counsel to represent the client”
(Carroll, supra,
The application of these factors to the present case convinces us the trial court erred in refusing to set aside the judgment of dismissal. After filing the action and requesting the administrative record, Barnes sat on the case and did nothing to represent Seacall. Once Seacall discovered the case had been dismissed it moved within a few weeks to set aside the dismissal. No prejudice to the Board would result from the granting of thаt motion. The fact the dismissal was not mandatory but discretionary also weighs in favor of granting relief. The only factors weighing against relief are Seacall’s apparent failure to press Barnes to act during the two-year period following the filing оf the suit and the policy against conferring an undeserved benefit on an incompetent attorney. However, as we explained above, Seacall’s failure to implore Barnes to get on with the case was not unreasonable under thе circumstances. Moreover, because Barnes is no longer practicing law, she will not be tempted by her escape from potential malpractice liability here to rise to even greater heights of incompetence аnd professional irresponsibility. (See
Carroll, supra,
Disposition
The order denying the motion to vacate the dismissal is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court with directions to grant the motion and vacate the dismissal. Each party to bear its own costs on аppeal.
Lillie, P. J., and Woods, J., concurred.
Notes
In its opening brief on appeal, Seacall argues the minute order setting a new date for hearing on the order to show cause lacked a proof of service and therefore the dismissal order *205 is void for want of notiсe. This argument, raised for the first time on appeal, will not be considered.
In its reply brief, the Board argues this appeal should be dismissed because Seacall sold eight of the eleven condominium units while the action was pending and, as a result, this appeal is “virtually moot.” While an appellate court generally will not review questions that are moot
(Keefer
v.
Keefer
(1939)
