11 Kan. 176 | Kan. | 1873
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The district court instructed the jury to find for the defendant Auld, on the ground that the action was barred by the statute of limitations. This instruction was manifestly correct unless the right of action was preserved by some of the saving clauses of the statute.
It is claimed by the plaintiff in error that two errors were made by the court in its rulings, either of which ought to reverse the judgment. First, the court erred in excluding evidence to show the commencement of a former action in due time, and a failure otherwise than upon its merits, and the commencement of the present action within a year from the failure upon the first. Second, in refusing, after the evidence was closed, to permit the plaintiff to amend his petition as offered, the' amendment being in substance that plaintiff did not discover the frauds, conspiracies and partnership charged in his petition until within two years next preceding the filing of his petition, and until within two years of the time of making the motion for leave to amend. The difficulty upon the first of these alleged errors does not so much grow out of the law, as to its application to the facts. The first petition with the amendments thereto is against David Auld alone, stating that one George W. Taylor had bought work oxen of the plaintiff of the value of $4,675, and gave his note therefor dated September 18th, 1865, and made payable in seventy-five days from date, and that afterward Auld bought the train of which these cattle were a part and undertook to deliver the freight in Colorado, a,nd agreed in writing to pay the debt of Taylor to plaintiff. It also contained a count for money had and received by Auld for the plaintiff. During the progress of the trial of the action on this petition, it was dismissed by plaintiff. This was a failure otherwise than upon the merits under the code, as this court decided in
The second point remains to be decided. The answer of the statute of limitations had long been filed. On that, as one of the issues, the case had been tried. After all the evidence was in the plaintiff offered to file an amended petition containing allegations that plaintiff had not discovered the fraud until within two years. Such an amendment at such a time comes too late. It raised another issue which would have to be tried, which might have led to a necessity for a retrial of the whole case. The facts should have been used as a reply to that part of the answer setting up the limitation. There was no abuse of discretion in refusing to allow the amendment to be made at that point of the trial. The omission to make it earlier does not appear to be the result of inadvertence. The answer had long been filed setting up the statute as a defense. Neither the affidavit nor the offered amendment showed when or how the fraud was discovered. See Stearns’ Adm’r v. Page, 7 How., 819. Upon the whole case we think the court correctly held that the action as to Auld was barred, and that the instruction to that effect was correct. This settles the whole case, and renders it ixnnecessary to examine the other rulings as to the admission or rejection of evidence, because with the exceptions noticed none of them would have affected the case on the question of limitation. The judgment is affirmed.