Appellee, C. W. Drilling, Jr., operates the Farmers Exchange, a retail grocery and feed store at Morrilton, Arkansas. On October 15, 1949, he filed a complaint in the Conway Circuit Court seeking judgment against appellant, W. A. Bridgman, .in the sum of $516.83 on an open account for merchandise allegedly purchased “during the years from 1940 to 1946.” Summons was issued on February 24, 1950, and served on appellant the next day.
On April 8, 1950, appellant filed an answer containing a general denial, alleging that he had not traded with appellee since 1945 and specifically pleading the three-year statute of limitations (Ark. Stats. § 37-206) as a bar to the action. '. j
On October 2, 1950, appellee filed an amendment to the complaint alleging that appellant made the last payment on the account on June 23, 1947, in the amount of $15.30. On the same date appellant filed a demurrer to the complaint pleading the statute of limitations. The trial court treated the demurrer as a motion to make more definite and certain and permitted the filing of the amendment to the complaint by appellee. Appellant renewed his demurrer to the complaint as amended and the demurrer was overruled.
At the trial appellee introduced the original sales and credit tickets showing the last items to have been purchased by appellant on December 19, 1946, and the last payment on the account of $15.30 on June 23, 1947. Appellant testified that he had not traded with appellee since 1945 and denied making the $15.30 payment. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee for $516.83 and this appeal is from the judgment based thereon.
Appellant insists that the trial court erred in overruling the demurrer to the complaint and the amendment thereto and in refusing to direct a verdict in his favor. It is argued that the amendment to the complaint of October 2, 1950, not having been filed within three years from June 23, 1947, the date of the last payment alleged therein, was barred bjr the statute of limitations when filed because the amendment introduced a new cause of action to which appellant was entitled to plead the statute separately. In overruling this contention the trial court ruled that the amendment to the complaint did not constitute a new cause of action, but related back and became a part of the original complaint.
Our cases hold that where there is an amendment to a complaint stating a new cause of action or bringing in new parties interested in the controversy, the statute of limitations runs to the date of the amendment and operates as a bar when the statutory period of limitation has already expired. In other words, if the plaintiff amends his complaint after commencement of the suit by introducing a new cause of action, the statute continues to run until the filing of the amendment which does not relate back to the commencement of the suit. Wood v. Wood,
. In the case of Paris Purity Coal Co. v. Pendergrass,
"We have repeatedly stated that the trial court is invested with broad discretion in allowing amendments to pleadings under Ark. Stats. § 27-1160 in order to effectuate the manifest purpose of the statute to permit the trial of litigation upon its merits. Foster-Holcomb Inv. Co. v. Little Rock Publishing Co.,
We agree with the trial court that the amendment to the complaint did not constitute a new cause of action. Appellee had, and alleged, only one cause of action against appellant and the amendment merely amplified and expanded the cause of action already stated in the original complaint. If appellant had not pleaded the statute of limitations, a recovery upon the original complaint would have barred any recovery under the amendment and the same evidence would have supported both. See Cottonwood Lumber Co. v. Walker,
