184 S.W. 257 | Tex. App. | 1916
J. T. and L. M. Baker brought suit against the appellee to recover damages on account of alleged injuries to their property. The case went to trial after the alleged cause of action would have been barred by the statute of limitation, had the suit not been instituted prior to that time. Upon the trial, L. M. Baker testified that the property alleged to have been injured was formerly the property of himself and J. T. Baker, but that prior to the injury he had purchased the interest of J. T. Baker therein. Thereupon the appellant, upon leave of the court, filed an amended petition, in all respects similar to the original petition, except it was alleged that the property belonged to L. M. Baker, instead of to J. T. and L. M. Baker, as alleged in the original petition. The appellee then excepted to the amended petition as showing upon its face that the cause of action therein alleged was barred by the statute of limitation. This exception was sustained by the court, and, the appellant having declined to further amend, judgment was entered dismissing the case. The appellant, having excepted to such action of the court and perfected his appeal, here presents such action for review.
The specific question here presented is: Where a suit is brought to recover damages for specified injuries to specific property, alleged in the original petition to belong to two parties, and, by amendment, the property is alleged to belong to one of such parties, did the filing of the original petition toll the statute of limitations as to the cause of action set out in the amended petition, the allegations, except as to such ownership, being the same? It is true that the ownership alleged in the original petition would not have been supported by proof of ownership as alleged in the amended petition, but this is not necessarily conclusive as to the point here in issue.
"A variance of this character * * * has frequently been held fatal. * * * But evidently the correction, by amendment, of any misdescription that would be fatal on an objection for variance between the allegata and probata, cannot be held to be a new suit." Thompson v. Swearengin,
It has been held that a petition bad on general demurrer is sufficient to interrupt the statute of limitations. Kinney v. Lee,
That a party plaintiff may, in a proper case, be dropped by amendment, and that limitation would not thereby be rendered available against the remaining plaintiff or plaintiffs, cannot be doubted. Railway Co. v. Watson,
The principal purpose of amending a petition is to allege facts other or different from those theretofore alleged, and which, without such amendment, would not have been admissible in evidence. The question is not, have different facts from those in the original petition been alleged in the amendment? but do the facts alleged in the amendment constitute a different cause of action from that originally alleged?
"Amendments are allowed expressly to save the cause from the statute of limitations, and courts have been liberal in allowing them, when the cause of action is not totally different." Walker v. Railway Co.,
On the other hand, the right to plead the statute of limitations in bar of an action is secured by statute, and is not to be denied *259 simply because the plaintiff is thereby denied a trial on the merits of his case.
The language of our statutes of limitation is that "every suit shall be instituted," or "shall be commenced," or "shall be brought," within the time therein mentioned, R.S. arts. 5672-5690. Of course, this means that the suit shall be brought by the party having the cause of action. So that a suit by A. will not suspend the statute as to a suit subsequently brought by B. for the same cause of action, there being no privity in such cause of action between A. and B. It is upon this principle that a suit brought by on against an executor, administrator, or guardian will not arrest the statute of limitations as against a suit for or against such party in his individual capacity, for, though the same individual, in their legal aspect they are different persons. A suit against an executor or administrator is a suit against the estate of the deceased, or rather, against his heirs or legatees, and not against such legal representative as a person. This is clearly stated in Henderson v. Kissam,
"The object of making [A. C.] Allen, as the representative of the deceased, a party was that the property of the estate, and not his own, might be subjected to the debt. * * * Had the defendant been removed from the office of administrator, and another appointed, the suit would have proceeded against the administrator de bonis non, and not against the defendant * * * The fact that the person now charged [by amendment] individually is the identical person who had been charged [in the original petition] as the representative of another cannot affect the rights of the defendants, or operate in favor of the plaintiff."
See, also, Morales v. Fisk,
There is no difficulty in determining, as an abstract proposition of law, when a cause of action set forth in an amended petition is or is not subject to the plea of limitation. The authorities all agree that if the amendment sets up a new or different cause of action, the statute is not tolled by the filing of the original petition. The difficulty lies in determining what is a new or different cause of action, and in this regard it has been said by high authority that there is hopeless conflict. This question is fully discussed in an able opinion by the Supreme Court of Arizona in the case of Boudreaux v. Gas Co.,
In Phœnix Lumber Co. v. Waterworks Co.,
"(1) Would a recovery had upon the original bar a recovery under the amended petition; (2) would the same evidence support both of the pleadings; (3) is the measure of damages the same in each case; (4) are the allegations of each subject to the same defenses?"
These tests, or some of them, have been announced in numerous cases. Applying the second of these tests to that case, the learned judge proceeds to show clearly that the same evidence would not support the two petitions, in that under the original petition, which declared upon an express contract, the issues would have been only was the contract made, was it breached, and what, if any, damage resulted to the plaintiff by reason of such breach; whereas —
"in answer to the amended petition, the defendant would be required to meet a great number of circumstances and facts originating at different times and dates, arising out of transactions by different persons in its employ, all of which would be inadmissible in answer to and would constitute no defense to the original petition."
This reasoning applies, to a greater or less extent, to all cases where the original petition declared upon a contract and the amendment declared upon a tort (Booth v. Packing Co.,
On the other hand, it has been held that an amendment did not set up a new cause of action against which limitation was not suspended, where the petition alleged that the plaintiffs were partners in a firm composed of three parties, and the amendment alleged that the copartnership was composed of two of said parties (Pridgen v. McLean,
We think that cases, above cited, in which the suit was by partners, are in point for the reason that a partnership is not a legal entity, capable, as such, of maintaining a suit, but the suit must be brought by *260
the persons composing such copartnership. Frank v. Tatum,
Why is the addition or subtraction of a new party plaintiff not bringing a new suit? Because the same cause of action is being prosecuted against the same defendant. Why may the statute of limitations be pleaded in bar of the cause of action as to the additional parties plaintiff, as was held in Telfener v. Dillard, supra, where the same wrong was complained of against the same defendants? Because the additional plaintiffs did not "institute" their suit, as required by the statute of limitations, within the prescribed period. The cause of action as to the original parties was not changed by the amendment, but the new parties did not sue upon the cause of action alleged until after the alleged cause of action was barred by limitation.
What is a cause of action? Mr. Justice Brown in Phœnix Lumber Co. v. Waterworks Co., supra, said:
"The courts have found it very difficult to give any general definition of the phrase `cause of action' which would apply to all cases alike and few courts have attempted to do so. Pom, on Remedies, § 452. However, the following definition will be sufficient for the disposition of the case now before us: In the abstract, a cause of action consists of `the right claimed or wrong suffered by the plaintiff, on the one hand, and the duty or delict of the defendant on the other. Rodgers v. Mutual Endowment Ass'n,
Thus it will be seen that it was "the wrong suffered by the plaintiff on the one hand and * * * the delict of the defendant on the other" (correlative terms) which were held to constitute plaintiff's cause of action. The "right claimed by the plaintiff" and the "duty of the defendant" are, in a strict sense, no part of a cause of action, but it is the violation of such right by the nonobservance of such duty which constitutes a cause of action. The "right claimed by the plaintiff" is not to be molested in his person, property, or reputation; the "duty of the defendant" is to refrain from injuring the plaintiff. Proof of ownership is not necessary to show a "cause of action," but only to show the plaintiff's right to maintain a suit on the same. A cause of action is a wrong committed or threatened, and the damage resulting therefrom (Miller v. Hallock,
"The cause of action is not changed by an amendment which claims merely a different measure of damages." Scanlon v. Railway Co.,
In Walker v. Ry. Co.,
Applying the definitions of cause of action to the facts of the instant case, we find that the same wrongful acts and the same damages resulting therefrom are set forth in both the original and the amended petitions with such particularity that the appellee knew that it was called upon, by the allegations in the original petition, to meet the same charges of deliction as those made in the amended petition, and in both petitions appellant showed his right to recover by alleging his ownership of the property injured, the only difference being that, as between him and J. T. Baker, he would have owned one-half of the judgment under the allegations of the original petition whereas he would have been the owner of all of the judgment under the allegations of the amended petition, which fact, in the absence of any defense against J. T. and L. M. Baker jointly, which would not have been equally available to the defendant against L. M. Baker individually, did not concern appellee. Appellant brought his suit upon a good cause of action, before the same was barred by the statute of limitations, and was prosecuting his same suit for the same cause of action under his amended petition.
Applying the tests as to the identity of the causes of action in the two petitions as laid down in Phœnix Lumber Co. v. Waterworks Co., supra, the questions there propounded and the answers are as follows:
(1) Would a recovery had upon the original bar a recovery under the amended petition? Yes; because appellant having alleged in his original petition that the property injured belonged to himself and J. T. Baker, he would be estopped in a subsequent suit to deny such fact.
(2) Would the same evidence support both pleadings? As to the cause of action, yes, the same wrongs being alleged in each petition.
(3) Is the measure of damages the same in each case? Undoubtedly so.
(4) Are the allegations of each subject to the same defenses? Yes. The defenses to the allegations in each petition might have been: (a) No injury was committed; (b) want of authority in the agent of appellee, who is alleged to have committed the wrongs complained of; (c) the damages were not as great as claimed by plaintiff; and (d) the damages, in whole or in part, were occasioned by the contributory negligence of the owner or owners of the property injured. *261
We think that the case of Foster v. Ry. Co.,
It might be thought at first blush that the case of Hopkins v. Wright,
This case must be reversed for another reason. Article 1995, Rev. St, reads as follows:
"Judgment may, in a proper case, be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs, and against or for one or more of several defendants or interveners."
In Kansas City v. King,
"The fact that the Kings sued jointly does not require that there shall be a joint recovery or none at all. The common-law rule was that the several plaintiffs in an action must all recover jointly, or all utterly fail; but our Code (section 396) provides `that judgment may be given for or against one or more of several plaintiffs and for or against one or more of several defendants.' If no amendment had been made, and the proof had shown that James King owned the entire interest in the property, and had sustained the entire loss, he would have recovered for that loss. Hurd v. Simpson,
It will be seen that the Kansas statute is essentially the same as ours. The additional words "in a proper case," appearing in our statute, mean only where the evidence requires it, and add nothing to the meaning of the statute. We think that the Supreme Court of Kansas properly construed the statute of that state, and we so construe our statute above set out. Our Supreme Court, in Adderson v. Anderson,
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below is reversed, and this cause is remanded for a new trial in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.