This case is before us on the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s second replication to the defendant’s first plea.
To this the defendant demurred, her first ground of • demurrer being formal, was sustained by the Common Pleas Division and amendment was allowed. The other grounds of demurrer were certified to this Division as substantial, and were as follows, viz.: Second. Because the plaintiff in said replication says in substance, that said plaintiff has always been and still is within the age of twenty-one years, to wit, of the age of eighteen years. Third. Because the plaintiff, in said replication, does not allege that her said next friend, Benjamin Bliven, was, at said time, when, etc., within the age of twenty-one years.
*380 The question, then, before us, is whether the replication of infancy by an infant plaintiff, suing by her next friend, to the defendant’s plea- of the statute of limitations, is a proper one.
Under Gen. Laws R. I. cap. 234, § 3, the limitation within which a person sui juris may bring an action like the one brought in this suit, is six years next after the cause of action shall accrue, and not after. As this plaintiff is not su/L juris, but is an infant within the age of twenty-one years, section 6 of said chapter applies to her. Said section 6 is as follows; "viz.: “If any person at the túne any such action shall accrue to him shall be within the age of twenty-one years, or of unsound mind, or imprisoned, or beyond the limits of the United States, such person may bring the same, within such time as hereinbefore limited, after. such impediment is removed.” If, then, the statute of limitations in this case extends the right of this infant plaintiff to sue until six years after she shall attain the age of twenty-one years it is perfectly clear that an action, brought by her while she is still but eighteen years of age, is brought in good time, it haying been brought several years earlier than it needed to have been. How, then, could the defendant, admitting as she does that the plaintiff was within the age of twenty-one years at the time of bringing this suit, successfully demur to plaintiff’s replication pleading her legal impediment, viz., her infancy? We quite agree with the counsel for the defendant where he says on page two of his brief — “It will not fail to be noticed that the statute merely accords minors the privilege of waiting until they become of age before bringing a suit, and that it does not preclude them from instituting a suit while under age if they choose to do so.”
We fail to see how the demurrer can be sustained.
It seems to us that the defendant must be laboring under some misapprehension as to what her demurrer applies to, as. her counsel’s brief applies to a demurrer to a fancied replication of infancy to the plea in set-off, but no such replication to that plea has been filed, and, unless the set-off is for something other than necessaries, it is more than probable that, the plaintiff did not intend to set up her infancy as to that.
Demurrer overruled.
