The statute provides that “ the court may, on motion of either party, at any time, in furtherance of justice, on such terms as may be proper, permit such party to amend any-pleading * * * by inserting other allegations material to the case; or, when the amendment does not substantially change.the claim or defense, by conforming the pleadings or proceedings to the facts proved.” (Code, § 2689.) Upon what ground the court refused leave to amend does not appear; but in our opinion the refusal might properly enough have been made upon the ground that the amendment was not asked in furtherance of justice. If the defendant borrowed the plaintiff’s money, she ought to repay it. It is true, it was her right, in the outset, to set up and prove, if she could, that the note was a Sunday contract; but such
There is still another ground upon which we think that the refusal to allow the amendment might have been placed. If the note was delivered on Sunday, it was delivered on the day the money was borrowed. No one can read the evidence and come to any other conclusion. Now, the defendant herself had sworn positively that she was present when the money was borrowed, and that it was some days afterwards that she signed the note. The jury could not have found that her contract was a Sunday contract without discrediting her testimony, It is difficult, indeed, to see how the jury could have so found without believing that she had perjured herself. Now, we do not think that the court was bound to allow her to amend so as to make an averment of a fact which the jury could not have found except in contravention of her own deliberate testimony.
In our opinion the judgment must be
AfKIKMED.