Defendants appeal from (1) “Order Vacating and Setting Aside Order of Dismissal” * and (2) “Order Setting Aside Portion of Order of Dismissal.” †
Question Presented
Was there an abuse of discretion in making either order?
Record
Plaintiff sued defendants for a money judgment and attached defendants’ $1,200 bank account and $3,000 due defendants from one Capabianco. The latter intervened, offering to pay that amount into court. On stipulation of the parties it was deposited with the superior court clerk “pending the determination of the action ...” After three years, the court released the attachment of the bank account, pursuant to section 542b, Code of Civil Procedure, which requires such release after three years. December 10, 1953, plaintiff filed “Notice of Motion to Advance on Trial Calendar” to be heard December 18th. December "16, 1953, more than three and three-quarters • years after suit-, filed, defendant served and filed “Notice of Motion for Order Dismissing Action for Lack of Prosecution,” to be heard two days later, December 18th (the same day that the motion to advance- was to be heard). December 16th an order short
December 24th a telegraphic notice of motion for an order setting aside the last mentioned order, to be heard December 28th, and stating that the notice and the setting of the hearing was pursuant to the personal direction of the judge who made that order, was received by defendants. This was followed on December 29th with a formal “Notice of Motion to Vacate and Set Aside Order of Dismissal” on the grounds set forth in section 473, Code of Civil Procedure, to be heard January 5, 1954. December 28, 1953, the judge who made the order of December 23d dismissing the action and returning the $3,000, made an “Order Setting Aside Portion of Order of Dismissal.” This stated that that portion of the order of December 23d, ordering the return of the money, “was made through the inadvertence of Court, ex parte and without notice to plaintiff or counsel for plaintiff ...” It set aside said portion of said order and ordered defendants to redeposit said moneys in court, to be held subject to the further order of the court. * January 5, 1954, the motion to vacate the order of dismissal was heard by a different judge than the one who made the order to dismiss and on January 22d an “Order Vacating and Setting Aside Order of Dismissal” was made. †
1. Discretion—Second Order.
The motion to set aside the order of dismissal was heard on conflicting affidavits, that of plaintiff’s attorney O’Dea and that of defendants’ attorney McGuire. O’Dea’s affidavit recited that the complaint was filed March; 1950, and defendants’- answer September 26th. October 6th plaintiff filed
In opposition, there is no affidavit by the defendants’ counsel who dealt with plaintiff’s counsel nor any denial of the matters in plaintiff’s counsel’s affidavit. The only affidavits were those of defendants’ counsel filed with the notice of motion to dismiss and that of the counsel who appeared for defendants on that motion. The first affidavit alleges the bald conclusion that plaintiff had failed to prosecute the action and had not acted with due diligence. It alleged that nothing had been done to bring the case to trial since August, 1951. It alleged in effect that because of plaintiff’s lack of diligence, defendants would be unable to present their defense due to the death of one Charles Rickenbach. (It is significant that the affidavit does not state when he died. Plaintiff’s affidavit that he died close to the filing of the suit is nowhere denied.) Practically all the other matters alleged in this affidavit are matters of record which could not be denied but which in nowise negative the allegations of plaintiff’s later affidavit showing the reasons for delay. The affidavit of the second attorney states that he appeared in opposition to the motion to advance and gave as his grounds the pending of the motion to dismiss, requested the deferring of the motion to advance until the motion to dismiss had been heard, that on the hearing of the motion to dismiss he pointed out that plaintiff had filed no affidavit in answer to defendants’ affidavit accompanying the notice of motion to dismiss, and that plaintiff did not request an opportunity to file counteraffidavits. It is obvious that were the facts as to the delay in bringing the action to trial as set forth in plaintiff’s affidavit on the motion to vacate, and not denied, fully before the court on the motion to dismiss, the court would not have dismissed the action. “. . . when there have been mutual bona fide efforts to compromise and the plaintiff has delayed bringing the action to trial because of a reasonable belief, induced by the nature of the negotiations, that a trial could probably be avoided, it would be an abuse of discretion to dismiss the action.”
We do not agree with defendants’ contentions. The very purpose of section 473 is to give a party the opportunity of repairing the damage done because of his failure or that of his counsel to make the showing he could have made, provided, of course, that that failure is due either to mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect. There was such situation here. It should be pointed out, too, that the undenied fact is that most of the delay in bringing the case to trial was due to plaintiff’s acquiescence in defendants’ requests and that while defendants’ affidavit upon which the court apparently acted in dismissing the ease, stated that plaintiff was not diligent, the correspondence between the maker of the affidavit and plaintiff’s counsel in the latter half of 1953 belied that statement. Moreover, defendants were not fair with the court in drawing the affidavit in such a way that it is made to appear, without saying so, that a witness who died about the time the suit was filed died a long time thereafter. It definitely is made to appear in the affidavit that defendants’ inability to use that witness was due to plaintiff’s delay in bringing the ease to trial.
While plaintiff could have, and should have, asked time on the motion to dismiss to prepare proper affidavits, nevertheless, in view of the history of the case, the negotiations between counsel, the writings and all the circumstances of the case and the inadvertence of plaintiff’s counsel, it clearly appears that the order of dismissal was granted by the judge through the mistake, surprise, inadvertence and excusable neglect of plaintiff’s counsel, and therefore plaintiff was entitled to have his day in court on the merits. As the court said in
O’Brien
v.
Leach,
There are many cases in California dealing with the granting or the denial of relief under section 473. It is well settled that a motion under that section is “addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court. Its determination will not be disturbed in the absence of a clear showing that this discretion has been abused. (See for a good statement of the rule,
Beard
v.
Beard,
The following language from
Proulx
v.
De Moti,
Nor is the fact that the motion to vacate was heard by a judge other than the one who heard the motion to dismiss significant. A reading of the affidavits on the motion to vacate shows conclusively that the true facts were not present before the first judge due to the emotional distress, surprise and inadvertence of plaintiff’s counsel.
Defendants’ contention that as the order, of dismissal is an appealable one, and no appeal was taken, no other relief can be obtained is answered by
Harth
v.
Ten Eyck,
“That the court had jurisdiction to entertain the motion under section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure may not successfully be questioned.”
2. The First Order.
Five days after making the order of dismissal the judge who made it signed an order, of his own motion, setting aside the portion returning the $3,000 to defendants, stating that that portion “was made through the inadvertence of Court, ex parte and without notice to plaintiff or counsel for plaintiff ...” Defendants point out that as to the $3,000, the court at the time of the dismissal had the power to do one of three things: (1) order payment to defendants; (2) as in
Lord
v.
Superior Court,
The orders are affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Wood (Fred B.), J., concurred.
