69 Mo. 170 | Mo. | 1878
The only question for determination is, whether the amendment was allowable under our practice act. The original was an action ex contractu. The suit was on a bond of indemnity given to the sheriff to induce him to seize certain property under an execution to which the plaintiff, relator, laid claim. The cause of action stated in the amended petition was trespass for seizing, taking and carrying away personal property Alleged to have been the property of plaintiff'. Appellant’s counsel rely upon section 7 of our practice act, (2 Wag. Stat., p. 1035,) which is as follows : “ A petition or answer may be amended by the proper party, of course, without costs, and without prejudice to the proceedings already had, at any time before the auswer or reply thereto shall be filed.”
There is no case in our reports which sanctions such an amendment as was made in this. In Lottman v. Barnett, 62 Mo. 159, the original petition was filed by plaintiff against eight defendants, of whom Barnett was one, stating that her husband was a carpenter engaged in the construe
The terms of section 7 will not warrant the liberal construction contended for by appellant’s counsel. It does not allow an amendment which could not have been made before it was enacted; but allows such amendments as before could only be made in the discretion of the court and with costs, to be “of course without costs.” There is nothing in the section, or the scope and spirit of our practice act, requiring a construction of section 7 which will introduce so radical change in the law of pleading as appellant’s counsel contend has been .effected. The cause of action stated in the original petition could not be united in the same petition with that stated in the amendment. Wag. Stat., § 2, p. 1012. If the amendment made by plaintiff, in this case, be permitted, there is no limit to the right to amend. An action of replevin for a horse could by amendment be converted into action of ejectment, or an action on an account into an action for slander. A defendant served with process pn one cause of action, suffering a default, might be confronted with a judgment on a cause of action totally different from that which he was summonéd to answer.
In the Board of Supervisors, &c., v. Decker, 34 Wis. 378, the court observed of the case of Brayton v. Jones, 5 Wis. 117: “ It is there shown that an amendment before trial, which attempts to change the nature of the-action from one in tort to one" in contract, is properly not an amendment, hut a substitution of a cause of action different in nature and substance to that originally stated.” In McNair v. Compton, 35 Pa. St. 26, the court, Woodward, J., observed of an amended narr.i “We think there was error in refusing to strike off’ the amended narr. That it was intro
Aeeirmed.