45 Mo. 562 | Mo. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action brought under the statute for the recovery of damages. ■ (Wagn. Stat. 619, § 2.) It was originally instituted by the plaintiff, Ruth Buel, as the mother of a minor child, who is alleged to have been fatally injured through the carelessness of one of the defendant’s servants. Subsequently to the filing-of the petition, and eighteen months after the accruing of the cause of. action, the petition was amended so as to introduce Samuel E. Buel, the father of the deceased child, as a co-plaintiff in the action. By the statute (Wagn. Stat. 620, § 6) this class of actions is barred in one year from the time they accrue. Unless the amendment, therefore, has relation to the commencement of the suit, and takes effect, as regards the limitation, from that date, then the action is clearly barred; for it can not be sustained as to one of the plaintiffs, and not as to the other. If either is barred, both are. (See authorities cited below.) Whether an amendment by relation takes effect from the commencement of the suit, or only from the time of its filing, depends on circumstances. The rule is this : where the amendment sets up no new matter or claim, but is a mere variation of the allegations affecting a demand already in issue, then the amendment relates to the com- - mencement of the suit, and the running of the statute is arrested at that point; but where the amendment introduces a new claim, - not before asserted, then it is not treated as relating to the commencement of the suit, but as equivalent to a fresh suit upon a new cause of action — the running of the statute continuing down to the time the amendment is filed. (Sto. Eq. PL, § 904; Holmes v. Moreland, 1 McLean, 10; Miller’s Heirs v. McIntire,
In the case before us,’the amendment, in our view, introduced no new claim or cause of action. It does not, in fact, even introduce a new party. Buel was originally joined as a defendant, as'in a chancery proceeding, .on the ground that his assent to becoming a co-plaintiff had not then been obtained. By the amendment his position was changed from that of a co-defendant to that of a co-plaintiff. That was all. The original petition set out the entire cause of action as fully as the second, and fully stated Bue'l’s paternity of the child, and his title and interest in the subject of the suit. He was assigned, however, to the wrong side of the cause. The amendment simply corrected this mistake. . It did not introduce any new matter. We think, therefore, that, under the rule already given, the amendment must be treated as having relation to the original commencement of the suit, thus rescuing the action from the statute bar.
■ There is no .force in the objection that Mr, and Mrs. Buel, the plaintiffs, had been divorced prior to the accruement of the cause of action sued on. They do not sue -as husband and.wife, but simply as parents. The divorce did not affect the fact of parentage. The statute does not give the action'to the husband and wife, as such, but to the father -.and mother, as the parents of the deceased minor. The circumstance; of the divorce explains the fact that the suit was originally commenced by Mrs. Buel as a femme, sole.
The objection taken to the plaintiffs’ second instruction is well founded. It directs the jury that if they find-certain facts, and also that the injury complained of, as occurring to the deceased child, did not result from any “ undue carelessness ” of the child or its parents contributing thereto, then the verdict should be for the plaintiffs. If the carelessness of the' plaintiffs contributed to the fatal event, as its proximate cause, without which the event would not have occurred, then clearly the plaintiffs ought not to recover. This instruction on the subject of contributory negligence was unhappily phrased, and well calculated to confuse
For aught the case shows,-the jury may have understood the plaintiffs’ second instruction as directing them to find for the plaintiffs, so far as the case turned on the question of contributory negligence, unless they found from the evidence that there was negligence on the part of the plaintiffs of a somewhat excessive and aggravated character, short of,, but approximating, gross negligence.
The defendant’s counsel have made a variety of points which we do not deem it necessary to explore, and therefore pass them without comment.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.