190 Iowa 557 | Iowa | 1920
Where an amended answer is filed as a substitute for the original, the issues will be ascertained and determined from that alone. Lauman v. County of Des Moines, 29 Iowa 310. In considering a demurrer to a substituted petition, it is error for the court to consider the original petition and an amended petition, to each of which a demurrer has been sustained. Williams v. Williams, 115 Iowa 520. But this can mean no more than that the contents of the original which has been substituted for cannot affirmatively aid the substitute. It cannot mean that the original may not be considered even for the purpose of determining whether the substitute states a new cause of action. That fact cannot be ascertained, except by comparing the substitute with the original. And in Hueston v. Preferred Acc. Ins. Co., 184 Iowa 408, at 413, just such a comparison is made, and it was thereupon held that the substitute did not introduce a new cause of action, or a new right of action. Indeed, the Hueston case answers most of the contentions of appellee.
The filing of amendments or a substitution in a case already put into suit is not the new bringing of a suit. With reference to the statute of limitations, suit is commenced by the service of original notice, or, in some circumstances, by leaving the notice for service. Boone v. Boone, 160 Iowa 284; Parkhill v. Bekin’s Van & Storage Co., 169 Iowa 455; Platt v. Carter, 187 Iowa 777. It follows that the filing of pleadings in a suit al