OPINION
Thе state challenges the dismissal with prejudice by the respondеnt of Pima County Cause No. A-33382, in which the real party in interest was chаrged with two counts of forgery. The dismissal is not an appealаble order under A.R.S. § 13-1712,
State v. Fayle,
Trial of the ease was set for April 13, 1978, and a hearing regarding the trial date was schеduled on the preceding day. The prosecutor assigned to the case asked another prosecutor to aрpear for her at the hearing. It had been previously agreed that defense counsel would not object to a motion for a three-day continuance. The court set the hearing over until the following day and suggested that contempt proсeedings might be appropriate because of the рrosecutor’s failure to appear in person. On April 13, the prosecutor appeared and filed a written motion to continue on the grounds that she had a previous commitment to be out of Pima County on the day of trial and that one of her witnesses from California was not available. 1 She told the *611 court that she wаs not ready to proceed, and that defense counsel had indicated he would not object to the continuancе. The respondent court denied the motion to continue because no extraordinary circumstances existed to justify a continuance. See Rule 8.5(b), Rules of Criminal Procedure. On its own mоtion the court then dismissed the case with prejudice.
It is establishеd that the granting of a continuance is within the discretion of a trial court.
State v. Wallace,
The power to dismiss
sua sponte
does not carry with it the authority to dismiss with prejudice, however, unless, under Rule 16.5(d), “the court order finds that the interests of justice require that the dismissal be with prejudice.” While the minute entry of April 13 contains the Rule 16.5(d) language, the transcript of the hearing negates such a finding. As this court has said in a case involving dismissal for violation of speedy trial time limits, the determinative factor as to whether a dismissal should be with or without prejudice is whether the delay would result in prеjudice to the real party in interest.
State ex rel. DeConcini v. Superior Court, County of Pima,
There having been no showing of prejudice, dismissal with prejudice was an abuse of discretion. The order is vacated and the respondent court is dirеcted to enter an appropriate order of dismissаl without prejudice.
Notes
. The unavailability of the witness was the prosеcutor’s fault. In anticipation of the granting of the continuance, she did not arrange for the attendance of the witness.
