150 Mo. App. 374 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
This is a suit for damages alleged to have accrued to plaintiff on account of defendant’s negligence in transporting a number.of cattle to the Chicago market. An amended petition was stricken from the files on the theory that it substituted a new and distinct cause of action for. that originally declared upon. Plaintiff,' having declined to further plead, a judgment of dismissal was thereupon entered against him from which he prosecutes the appeal.
The only question for consideration is as to whether or not the amended petition so stricken from the files substituted a new and distinct cause of action for that asserted in the original pleading. The original petition
The third amended petition, which was stricken from the files on defendant’s motion as though it constituted a departure, after formal averments, alleges for
There can be no doubt that the third amended petition above mentioned substitutes another cause of action for that declared upon in the original petition. The original petition proceeds as for tort arising from the fact that defendant breached its common law obligation to transport and deliver the cattle within a reasonable timé. The amended petition seems in a manner to savor
It is difficult to ascertain from the allegations of the third amended petition whether plaintiff complains of the same breach of duty or not, for nothing is said therein as to the failure of defendant to exercise care or transport the cattle within a reasonable time after it received them. The burden of the third amended petition relates instead to certain false representations which it is alleged the station agent made to plaintiff to the effect the road was then operating promptly and that its train would arrive at Bowling Green at eight o’clock that morning to receive the shipment; and that such representations were false and untrue and so known to be by the agent at the time they were made. It is said they .were negligently and carelessly made, also that they were false and untrue and so known to be. It thus seems if they were negligently made they were willful as well, if such can be true in point of fact. Plaintiff says he relied upon the representations of the station agent and delivered his cattle upon the train about noon instead of about eight o’clock in the morning as he expected to do; that because of defendant’s negligence both before and after he delivered the cattle, his loss was entailed, etc.
It is unnecessary to decide whether or not the rep
Amendments are allowed under the code with great liberality as appears from our statute, sections 657, 659, Revised Statutes 1899; sections 657, 659, An. St. 1906. Amendments are allowed under section 657 when they do not charge substantially the claim or defense, and the better considered authorities go to the effect that they Avill be alloAved as long as the general identity of the original transaction affording the ground of complaint is maintained and adhered to. -As long as the gist of tiie action remains the same in the proposed amendment, although the alleged incidents are different, it is regarded as the same cause of action and not the substitution of another, but the authorities rule that the proposed amendment must not only relate to the same transaction, but must adhere as Avell to the contract or injury originally declared upon, sufficient, at least, to maintain in a general Avav the identity of the cause of action first stated, so that the character of the proof Avill remain about the same. The rule proceeds in the interests of natural justice, for it is highly important that the general identity of the cause of action be maintained to the end of the notice which it affords by implication of the general character of proof' the adverse party is called upon to meet. [Stewart & Jackson v. Van Horne, 91 Mo. App. 647; Clothing Co. v. St. Louis, I. M., etc., R. Co., 71 Mo. App. 241; Walker v. Wabash R. Co., 193 Mo. 453, 474, 475, 476, 477, 478, 92 S. W. 83; Rippee v. K. C., etc., R. Co., 154 Mo. 358, 55 S. W. 438;