Steinbauer v. Bondesen

14 P.2d 106, 125 Cal. App. 419, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 703
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 22, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8343.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 106 (Steinbauer v. Bondesen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steinbauer v. Bondesen, 14 P.2d 106, 125 Cal. App. 419, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 703 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LAMBERSON, J., pro tem.

Appeal by plaintiff from an order and judgment of dismissal, granted upon motion of certain defendants, now respondents herein, made upon the ground that there had been an unreasonable delay in bringing the action to trial.

Plaintiff is the assignee of eighty (80) claimants against eighty-six (86) defendants, and the action is to enforce certain claims against the defendants upon their liability as stockholders of a corporation known as Pacific Preserve Company, the claims being variously for goods, wares and merchandise sold, or services rendered, to said corporation.

The original complaint in the action set forth eighty causes of action, and was filed November 22, 1926. Summons was thereupon issued, and between December 3, 1926, and June 5, 1928, demurrers of various defendants were filed. On August 9, 1928, the respondents, with the exception of Joseph Seeonda, filed their, answer to the so-called “Amended Complaint”, and he, on August 29, 1928, filed his answer to such complaint, it being the only answer filed by Seeonda.

On May 22, 1928, appellant filed a pleading denominated “Amendments to Complaint”, the same being amendments as to matters of detail, and on August 21, 1928, also filed “Amendments to Complaint”, setting forth in one single paragraph a list of the stockholders of the corporation.

On January 3, 1929, the respondents, with the exception of Seeonda, filed their “Answer to Second Amended Complaint”, their answer consisting of a general denial. None of the pleadings were verified.

On September 3, 1930, respondents filed their notice of motion to dismiss the action. The motion was submitted to the court on September 15, 1930, resubmitted on December 31, 1930, and granted on May 5, 1931. After the resubmission of the motion on December 31st, one of the attorneys for appellant, on January 21, 1931, presented to the trial judge in his chambers, an affidavit sworn to by said attorney, but made no request or motion to reopen the hearing, or any *422 showing of good cause for the presentation of the affidavit. The court declined to consider it upon the ground that it was filed after the submission of the motion.

On January 11, 1929, plaintiff filed a memorandum of motion to set the case for trial, and on March 17, 1929, filed a similar memorandum. The case was placed upon the civil active list, but the court refused to set it for trial upon the ground that all of the defendants had not been served, and the cause was not at issue. It appeared on the civil active list at each regular calling thereof, from December 11, 1929, to July 30, 1930, with a notation beside it, "Not at Issue”. On August 16, 1930, the court having refused to set the action for trial because it was not at" issue as to all of the defendants, the plaintiff caused a dismissal to be entered as to certain defendants, and requested that the default of others be entered. In the record it nowhere appears that plaintiff at any time presented to the court the matter of the necessity of having the case tried as to the respondents.

The appellant contends that the granting of the motion for a dismissal was an abuse of discretion, and that the order and judgment of dismissal was against law, because based upon a motion made within less than two years after the answer of the respondents to plaintiff’s last pleading denominated "Amendments to Complaint” was filed, the appellant urging that that was the time at which issues were finally joined.

Respondents base their argument for the affirmation of the judgment upon two grounds: (1) That the dismissal was a proper exercise of the discretion of the court, because the time for bringing the action to trial should have been measured from the date of filing the original answer; and (2) assuming that the facts do not bring the case within the provisions of section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure as it stood prior to 1929, the amendment of 1929 controlled, and the action should have been dismissed because it was not brought to trial within two years after it had been commenced. We shall first consider the second point made by the respondents.

Prior to the amendment of section 583 of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1929, it read in. part as follows: " The court may in its discretion dismiss any action for want of *423 prosecution on motion of the defendant and after due notice to the plaintiff, whenever plaintiff has failed for two years after answer filed to bring such action to trial.” In 1929 section 583 was amended by changing the words “whenever plaintiff has failed for two years after answer filed”, to these words: “whenever plaintiff has failed two years after action is filed”.

This section is one of a series of sections of the Code of Civil Procedure, having the same general object; that is, to compel reasonable diligence in the prosecution of an action after it has been commenced, thereby extending to the party or parties against whom it is brought an opportunity to properly present any defense which may be available at the time of the commencement of the action. Independently of any express authority therefor, the courts have inherent power to dismiss actions for unreasonable delay in prosecution. (Dupuy v. Shear, 29 Cal. 238; Romero v. Snyder, 167 Cal. 216 [138' Pac. 1002].) Section 583, as enacted in 1905, created a restriction upon this power, and was a legislative determination that a delay of two years or less in bringing an action to trial after' answer filed is not to be regarded as unreasonable. (Johnson v. Baker, 167 Cal. 260 [139 Pac. 86].) Section 583 established a rule of procedure, and is similar in purpose to sections 581a, 581b and 582 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

In the case of People v. Kings County Dev. Co., 48 Cal. App. 72, 79 [191 Pac. 1004, 1006], the court said: “The provisions of the section, in other words, involve merely a matter of procedure—that is, the regulation of the conduct of the parties plaintiff with respect to actions after the commencement thereof for the same reason or purpose which is at the bottom of many other provisions of the code as to procedure, to-wit: to facilitate or bring about a final or as speedy a disposition of the litigation as possible or as is deemed by the legislature to be consistent with the rights, not alone of the plaintiff, but also of the adversary party or parties, and also to clear court calendars of cases as expeditiously as possible, thus and thereby preventing an accumulation upon such calendars of actions in which, by reason of long delays in their prosecution, it may become difficult, if not in some instances impossible, to adjudicate the issues according to the real merits or justice of such causes. Indeed, *424

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 106, 125 Cal. App. 419, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steinbauer-v-bondesen-calctapp-1932.