delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff, formerly an apprentice of defendant, some six years after he had arrived at majority, brought suit upon the indenture. The statute only allows such suits to be brought within two years after the apprentice comes of age, and for that reason the petition was demurrable; for it is well settled that w'hen the statute creates a bar by lapse of time, and the petition shows that the time has elapsed, the defense may be made by demurrer. (State v. Bird,
The petition counts upon the indenture and charges various breaches in the form of independent counts, and the plaintiff
The plaintiff asks that the petition be treated as containing but one count, notwithstanding its form, inasmuch as the indenture was but a single contract. We might, perhaps, get over the form if there were really but one cause of action in the petition. But the breaches were separate and distinct: one charging a neglect in sending the apprentice to school; another in paying him money; others in other things. Their investigation involved separate and independent inquiries and findings on the part of the jury, and they should be held to be independent causes of action, although arising out of the same contract. The authorities, upon this point are not altogether uniform, although there is a preponderance in favor of our view. The State v. Davis,
the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
