27 Mich. 138 | Mich. | 1873
This is an application for a mandamus to compel the circuit judge to grant an order striking from the files an amended declaration, in a cause pending in the circuit court for the county of Newaygo, wherein John McNab and John R. Parsons are plaintiffs, and Patrick Gorman and Thomas Gorman defendants.
The original declaration, filed March 10th, 1862, was in assumpsit upon the common counts only. To this declaration defendants, May 17th, 1862, pleaded the general issue, and gave notice, among other things, that they would show under the general issue that plaintiffs and defendants in 1860 entered into a contract by which defendants were to cut a certain quantity of pine saw logs on land to be designated by the plaintiffs and belonging to them, for which labor the plaintiffs were to pay a certain sum, to wit: one thousand dollars when the logs should be delivered; and defendants aver that plaintiffs did not designate the land ■and furnish the same, whereby defendants were thrown out of employment, and sustained damages which they will' recoup, etc. In a further amended notice by defendants, the contract is set out in full, and notice given that they will prove, that if any goods and money were ever advanced by the plaintiffs to defendants, they were advanced upon
This declaration is upon the special contract alluded to in the notice of the defendants, and by its' averments shows only a cause of action which is separate and distinct from that set forth in the original declaration, and which could not by any evidence have been ■ brought within the common counts. It was, therefore, for a new and separate cause of action. But as it was still in assumpsit, and the form of the action was the same, and the same plea of non-assumpsit would apply, we do not mean to intimate that the amendment might not, in the discretion of the circuit court, have been properly allowed, if seasonably applied for.
But long before this amended declaration was filed, or leave to file it applied for, the statute of limitations had taken effect upon and barred the cause of action set forth in it. Had a new suit been then commenced for the same
It was urged upon the argument that the notice of the special contract set up by the defendants with their plea, tends to show that the cause of action set forth in the amended declaration was the same in substance as that covered by the common counts in the first declaration; bub. the very purpose of the notice was to show that it was not. the same; and if the notice was true (which seems so far-to be admitted by the amended declaration), it did show that the cause of action was not the same in the first asín the second declaration. The notice was wholly unnecessary. But, so far from showing that the amended declaration ought to have been allowed at so late a day, its tend
The amendment was improperly allowed, and the mandamus must issue as prayed.