6 A.2d 538 | Pa. | 1939
This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to permit plaintiff to amend her statement of claim in an action of tort by adding thereto, more than four years after the accident in question, the following: "In then and there failing and neglecting to maintain, in reasonably safe condition, its right-of-way on said highway, by permitting deep and dangerous ruts to accumulate and remain thereon, making it unsafe for other vehicles to travel said highway."
The statement sought to be amended charged the defendant company with a violation of duty on the part of the motorman of the trolley car which was in collision with plaintiff's automobile. The violation of duty so charged consisted of (a) operating the car at reckless speed; (b) in approaching a street intersection without warning; (c) failure to have the car under control.
It is clear that the proposed amendment introduced a new cause of action, to wit, defendant's failure to maintain its right of way in a reasonably safe condition. *570
There is no difficulty in defining the phrase "cause of action." It obviously means what this court in Martin v.Pittsburgh Rys. Co.,
It is elementary that after the Statute of Limitations has run a plaintiff cannot amend his statement by introducing a new cause of action: Mays v. United Natural Gas Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.