This action was commenced on the 15th of April, 1902, to recover $50,000 damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff while a passenger on defendant’s road.
On the 22d of September, 1904, a stipulation was entered into that a commission issue to obtain testimony of certain witnesses on behalf of plaintiff and that until the execution and return of the commission the trial of the action and all proceedings on the part of plaintiff and defendant be stayed. On the twenty-ninth of October following, upon the stipulation, an order was entered directing that the commission issue. The order also contained this provision: “ Further ordered that until the execution and return of the foregoing commissions the trial of the above-entitled action and all proceedings on the part of the plaintiff and defendant be stayed.”
Nothing further seems to have been done under the order,
The defendant was not in a position to move to dismiss the action. The order directing the issuance of the commission prevented it from making' such a motion and stayed it from taking any proceedings in the action until the execution and return of the commission. The plaintiff could not move the ■ trial of the action without defendant’s consent so long as the order remained in force, and while her delay in obtaining the depositions of the witnesses, as provided in the order, directing the issuance of the commission, might enable the defendant to move to vacate the stay, it did not enable it to move to dismiss the action for lack of prosecution. While that order remained in force the plaintiff as well as the defendant had to obey it, and, therefore, her failure to move the trial furnished no ground whatever for dismissing the action.
Upon the merits I am of the opinion that the motion should have been denied." So far as appears the plaintiff has, at all times, been desirous of trying the action. She has sustained substantial damage as evidenced by the offers of settlement. Whatever delay took place up to the time Mr. Soley was appointed plaintiff’s attorney seems to have been by mutual consent, or at least was as much the fault of one party as the other. After Mr. Soley was substituted as her attorney he was frequently requested, either by the plaintiff or her repre
The order appealed from, therefore, is reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Scott, Miller and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
