45 So. 898 | Ala. | 1908
Lead Opinion
The original complaint in this case was filed October 8, 1899, containing five counts, and on
On the trial now appealed from the fourth count now remains as it was when last before this court, and the sixth count was amended so as to make a count in case based on the willfulness or wantonness of defendant’s servants. The defendant’s plea numbered 11 to these counts is “that the said plaintiff ought not to have and maintain the aforesaid action therein alleged against it, because it says that the said several supposed causes of action in said counts mentioned did not, nor did any or either of them, accrue at any time within one year next before the filing of sáid count against the said defendant in manner and form as the said plaintiff hath in said counts complained against it, the said defendant.” To this plea the plaintiff interposed a demurrer and assign
The fourth count as amended is in trespass, and the plea of the statute of limitations of one year was no answer to it. There was no evidence to sustain it, and in view of the previous history of this case and the full evidence as to the accident we cannot suppose that any evidence existed to sustain this count. Consequently, as further shown in this opinion, the overruling of the demurrer to plea 11 was error without injury.
Up to the time of the final amendment of the sixth count of the complaint, which charges willful, wanton, or reckless conduct on the part of the servants of the defendant, the allegations of the complaint had been either such as to set up simple negligence, or willful, wanton, or reckless conduct on the part of the defendant itself; said count being in trespass. The amendment places the claim for damages on the willful, wanton, or reckless conduct of the servant of the defendant, being a count in case. This sets up a new claim or different
On the question of the general charge, which -was given, in favor of the defendant, the plaintiffs own testimony shows that he was guilty of contributory negligence, and this is practically admitted; but the claim is that the defendant is liable, under the fourth and sixth counts as amended, for the willfulness, wantonness, etc., in running into a thickly populated locality where people were liable to be on the track, etc. Without entering into the evidence in detail on this question, the fourth count is in trespass, and charges the willfulness, etc., against the defendant, and there is not a particle of proof to sustain it; and as to the sixth count the plea of the statute of limitations of one year was applicable, and the evidence shows that the action was barred at the time the amended count was filed. So, with the record as it was, and on the evidence as presented, there was no er
The judgment of the court is affirmed.
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
I did not sit when this case was originally decided; but, now that it has become necessary for me to take part in the disposition of this application, I feel it my duty to express my views upon the questions involved. It will be readily seen from the opinion, from which a majority of the court decline to recede, that the fate of the controversy is made to turn upon the sufficiency of the plea of the statute of limitations interposed as a defense to the sixth count, which was added by way of amendment to the complaint, and which counted for a recovery upon the willful or wanton conduct of defendant’s servants, and, therefore, in case. It will also be noted that the first, second, and third counts of the complaint as originally filed were in case, counting for a recovery upon the negligence of defendant. So, then, the simple question is: Can a count in case, predicating a recovery upon willful or wanton conduct of the servants of defendant, be properly added by amendment to a complaint which sought a recovery for negligence? I regard this question as settled in the affirmative by the case of Central of Ga. Ry. Co. v. Foshee, 125 Ala. 221, 27 South. 1006. If the added count introduced no new cause of action, and it did not, as was held in the case above cited, then the matter brought forward in the amended count is necessarily within the lis pendens of the original counts, and is not subject to be defeated by the plea of the statute of limitations, unless the cause of action laid
The reasoning in the case of Nelson v. First National Bank, relied on as supporting the holding of my Brothers, is, in my judgment, wholly unsound, and my reasons in part for holding this view will be found extendedly set forth in the case of Ala. T. & I. Co. v. Hall, 152 Ala. 262, 44 South. 586, 597. In addition to what I then said, I wish to say, further, that the doctrine sustaining the defense of the statute of limitations to a new claim, introduced by amendment, growing out of the cause of action originally sued on, is, in my opinion, wholly untenable and cannot be sustained. Logically, this holding would lead to the result that the plaintiff in this case could have maintained, at the same time, two separate and distinct actions upon the same cause of action, but each asserting a different claim growing out of that cause of action, and a recovery upon one of those claims would be no bar to a recovery upon the other. In short, this plaintiff could have sued this defendant in one action for negligently injuring him, and in the other for his willful and wanton injury by defendant’s servants; and, clearly, if the claim sought to be recovered for in the latter case was not within the lis pendens of the former, a judgment in the former would not be res adjudicata as to the latter. So, then, under the doctrine announced, although the plaintiff be cast in one of his actions he may have judgment upon the same cause of action in his other; or he may institute only one action, say, for his willful or wanton injury, and if he he cast in that suit he may then institute another action upon his new claim for negligent injury, and, if not barred by the statute of limitations when begun, recover, notwithstanding he had only suffered one injury at the hands of defendant’s servants.
Concurrence Opinion
concur in this conclusion. The other Justices, adhering to the former opinion, hold that the application must be denied.