delivered the opinion of the Court.
The deceased, Guerney O. Burtch, sustained personal injuries while assisting to unload a heavy ensilage cutter from a freight train operated by "petitioner. ' He sued in a state court, and recovered damages on the theory that state law, and not the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, applied. This court reversed the judgment, holding that the federal act applied, and remanded the cause for a new trial. On February 10, 1921, while the appeal was pending in the state supreme court, Burtch died, and his widow (now Lula Carroll) was appointed administratrix. Upon her application she was substituted as respondent in this court.
B. & O. S. W. R. R.
v.
Burtch,
Three years after the death of Burtch when the case was back in the state court of first instance*.respondent, by leave of that court, amended the complaint, and, among other things, alleged for the first time the death of Burtch as a result of the injury, and demanded judgment in a single sum for the loss and injury sustained by the deceased during his lifetime and the pecuniary loss resulting from his death. A motion to require respondent to state these, claims as separate causes of action was over *494 ruled. The answer affirmatively alleged that in so far as the amended complaint was based upon the death of Burtch, the cause of action was barred because not brought within two years, as required by § 6 of the act (U. S. Code, Title 45, § 56), which provides that no action shall 'be -maintained under the act unless commenced within two years from the day the cause of action accrued. The jury returned a verdict for respondent and the judgment thereon was affirmed by the state supreme court.
In respect of the statute of limitations, that court held that the challenged amendment did not introduce a new cause of action, but was a mere amplification of the original complaint and related-back to the commencement of the action. In support of the ruling, reliance was had upon the decisions of this court that neither an amendment for the first time setting up the right of the plaintiff to sue as personal representative,
Mo., Kans. & Tex. Ry.
v.
Wulf,
.But here two distinct causes of action.are involved, one for the loss and suffering of the injured person while he -lived, and another for the pecuniary loss to the beneficiaries named,in the act as a result of his death.
St. Louis & Iron Mtn. Ry. v. Craft,
The statute, it is true, provides that “ there shall be only one recovery for the same injury ”; but this has the effect not of merging the two rights into a single cause of action, but of limiting the personal representative “to one recovery of damages for both, and so to avoid the needless litigation in separate actions of* what would better be settled once for all in a single action.” St. Louis & Iron Mtn. Ry. v. Craft, supra, p. 659.
The cause of action which arises from death accrues at the time of death, and the two-year period of limitation then begins.
Reading Co.
v.
Koons,
The court below gave weight to the fact that this court, in disposing of the former appeal, remanded the cause for a new trial, and suggests that .this would not have been done if the complaint was not subject to amendment so as to allow a submission of the case to a jury under, the federal act. It is enough to say that on the former appeal the right to maintain an action on account of *496 Burtch’s death was in no way involved; and there is no warrant for assuming that this court had in mind any future proceedings in respect thereof.
We do not stop to discuss the complaint, rather faintly urged, that the trial court gave conflicting and improper instructions to the jury on the subject of assumption of risk. That question received the consideration of this court in
Texas & Pacific Railway
v.
Archibald,
Judgment reversed.
