Court Opinion

ID: 8635960
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 19:45:15.852102+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:55:55.694744
License: Public Domain

HOPKINSON, District Judge.
This suit was brought eighteen years after the bond was executed, and fourteen years after the surety’s liability by reason of the default, of the principal. It is a suit on a sealed instrument, which is described by the plaintiff in his declaration, and which the defendant in his plea has alleged not to be his deed. A bond is now offered in evidence, which is not the bond so described, nor that -which the defendant has denied to be his; it is a joint bond given by himself and another person, while the former is expressly stated in the declaration to be a joint and several bond of the defendant, and it is not alleged that any ocher person is joined with him. It is no doubt true that amendments may be made, not only in form but even in substance. But surely the court is not to be put to sea; nor is this privilege to be so construed as to introduce suddenly, and on the trial, new parties and a new cause of action. My difficulty is, that the proposed amendment would introduce an entirely new cause of action. The bond as set forth in the new count, now offered as an amendment, differs in the most essential particulars from that originally declared on, as it is described in the declaration. It is impossible for us to decide that they are the same instruments, merely from similarity in certain particulars. The same parties may, on the same day and in the same penalty, have given a joint and several bond, as well as a joint bond. What are pleadings? They are the manner and form in which a party is required to present his case to the court, and if he has made a mistake in this form, which is peculiarly under the direction of the court, he may be allowed to amend it. But here there is no error in the manner and form of stating the plaintiff’s case, but in the case itself. He has mistaken his cause of action. He has brought the defendant here to answer his complaint; he has formally stated and declared what that complaint is; the defendant has put in his answer to it; and the parties appear, each to maintain his allegation. *1126But now the plaintiff informs the court that he has no such complaint as he has averred; although he has another which he prays may be substituted for that which he cannot maintain.
On the whole I am of opinion that the amendment ought not to be now made; and on the ground that it introduces a new cause of action.
A nonsuit was entered, with the assent of the district attorney.