37 Ala. 169 | Ala. | 1861
The 3d section of the act “amendatory of the proceedings in’'chancery,”"(Pamph. Acts of .1857-58, p. 230,) declares, “that amendments to bills and answers shall be allowed, at any time before final decree, to meet the justice of the case; and amendments to bills shall be allowed, by adding or striking out new parties complainant or defendant, and to meet 'any state of proof that shall authorize relief,”'&c. The terms of this statute are very -analogous to “several of 'the most important provisions of»
In the present case, the amendment should have been allowed, if the state of the proof authorized relief. The objection to its allowance is, that the proposed amendment made a new case — that when the amendment was allowed, the statute had barred the right therein asserted ; and that, as to this new matter, or new case, the rule is, that the statute continues to run, not only to the time of filing the original bill, but up to the time when the amendment was allowed.
We think the chancellor obtained a correct conclusion in this case. Although, in the suit by Mr. and Mrs. King, the right to recover depended on the title of Mrs. King-under her grandfather, Mr. Hill; still the suit, in its present
Although in a suit by Mrs. King while sole, as well as in the present suit, the right to recover depends mainly on her title; still the two cases are entirely different, in this : In a suit by her alone, the litigation:would be entirely hers, and the money hers, if she succeeded; in the present suit, the right to recover depends also on a new derivative title, viz., the marital rights of Mr. King, acquired by his marriage with the female complainant. If, on a proper issue, there was a failure to- prove the marriage, this suit must fail, although Mrs. King’s title may be perfect. If this bill succeed, the fruits of the recovery will vest in Mr. King. The suit by Mrs. Croxton -was in her own right. The present is Mr. King’s suit, in which Mrs. King incurs no costs or disabilities, and in which, if there be no change of parties, she can realize no benefit. — Dudley v. Price, supra ; Thrasher v. Ingram, 32 Ala. 645.
The decree of the chancellor is affirmed.