6 Wend. 506 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1830
By the Court,
In the case of Sackett v. Thompson, 2 Johns. R. 206, the court refused to allow an amendment by the substitution of a new count, or the adding of new counts, it appearing that after a trial, and before the jury rendered their verdict, the plaintiff had voluntarily submitted to a nonsuit, brought a new suit for the same cause of action, and four times noticed the last suit for trial. From the remark in that case, that the statute of limitations had not run out, and from the adjudged cases adverted to by the court, it is manifest that circumstance had a controlling influence in the denial of the motion. Here, unless the plaintiff be permitted to amend, the statute will be a bar to a new action. Although more than six years have elapsed