Court Opinion

ID: 6967133
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 01:55:52.033893+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:08:39.575535
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice Craig delivered the opinion of the court: As will be observed, the plaintiff was injured on the 17th of January, 1892, and suit was brought on the 29th day of the following March. What purported to be a declaration was filed, but it stated no sufficient cause of action. No declaration was filed stating a cause of action until January 31, 1895,—more than three years after the accident and more than one year after the Statute of Limitations had run; and the question presented by the record is, whether the Statute of Limitations was a bar to the action when the amended declaration was filed, on the 31st day of January, 1895. It is a well established rule of pleading that a new cause of action, distinct from that already averred in the declaration, cannot be set up by way of amendment to the declaration or by adding additional counts to the declaration after the time for suing upon such cause of action has expired by the Statute of Limitations. But when the amendment by an additional count is introduced merely to re-state in a different form the same cause of action set up in the declaration as originally drawn, and not to present a new and different cause of action, the rule does not apply, and a plea of the Statute of Limitations to such new count cannot be sustained. (North Chicago Rolling Mill Co. v. Monica, 107 Ill. 340.) The rule indicated is fully sustained by the case cited and also by the following cases: Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Cobb, 64 Ill. 128; Phelps v. Illinois Central Railroad Co. 94 id. 548; Mitchell v. Milholland, 106 id. 175; Dickson v. Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. 81 id. 215; Blanchard v. Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Railway Co. 126 id. 416; Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad Co. v. Jones, 149 id. 361; Haynie v. Chicago and Alton Railroad Co. 9 Ill. App. 105. In-the Phelps case, supra, in the discussion of this question, it was among other things said (p. 557): “The causes of action declared <$n in the original declaration in the present case were for a failure to perform a common law duty by a common carrier,—to receive and carry goods offered for carriage. The causes of action stated in the . additional counts are for failing to carry and safely deliver goods which defendant had received for carriage as a common carrier. The former were for refusing to enter upon the performance of the duty of a common carrier; the latter were for the failure to complete the performance of the duty of a common carrier, the performance of which had been entered upon. Under the circumstances of this case and our former decisions the difference is vital, there being no liability for refusing to receive and carry, but only for not carrying after having received the freight. The receipt is a necessary element of the cause of action. The original declaration negatived such receipt; the amended one averred it. We are disposed to agree with the view taken by the Appellate Court, that there were wholly different causes of action declared on in the original and amended counts of the declaration, and that, the evidence showing that the causes of action described in the additional counts accrued more than five years before those counts were filed, they were barred by the Statute of Limitations.” The other cases cited lay down the same doctrine. Indeed, the result of all the cases we have examined on the question is the same. They hold that where an amendment of the declaration is a mere re-statement of the cause of action averred in the declaration it relates back to the beginning of the action, but where it sets up a new cause of action the Statute of Limitations is a good defense, if the. amendment to the declaration has been made after the statute has run. The question then presented by the record before us is, whether the counts filed by the plaintiff in January, 1895, after the two years provided by the statute for bringing an action had expired, set up a new cause of action, or whether they were a mere re-statement of the cause of action already stated in the declaration. Upon an inspection of the declaration first filed by the plaintiff it will be found that the commencement of the declaration is in proper form in an action of trespass on the case, and no fault is found with the conclusion of the declaration, wherein damages are claimed; but when the body of the declaration is examined, where the cause of action should be set up, no cause of action whatever is averred in the declaration. The amended count does, however, set up a cause of action; but, inasmuch as the original declaration stated no cause of action, it seems to follow that the amended declaration stated a new cause of action,—one which had never been stated before,—and hence the Statute of Limitations was a good defense. There could be no re-statement of a cause of action by the amended declaration unless the cause of action had been stated before. If the plaintiff had stated his cause of action in a defective manner, omitting some feature which should have been incorporated in it, then an amendment re-stating the cause of action would not fall within the statute. But such was not this case. The Phelps case, supra, from which we have quoted, is much like the case under consideration. There the original declaration set up that the railroad company was liable because it refused to receive and carry goods offered for carriage. The refusal to receive and carry was set up as the cause of action. In the amended counts, filed after the statute had run, the cause of action averred and relied upon was a failure to carry and deliver goods which the railroad company had received for carriage as a common carrier. It was held, as the railroad company was under the military control of the government, it was not in the free and unrestrained exercise of its franchise as a common carrier, and hence not bound to receive freight for shipment, and being under no obligation to receive goods for shipment the original declaration failed to state a cause of action; but the amended declaration, which did set up a cause of action, stated a cause of action wholly different from the original declaration, and hence fell within the Statute of Limitations. It is, however, suggested in the argument, that the issuing of a summons arrests the running of the Statute of Limitations, and the filing of the amended declaration related back to the commencement of the suit, and reference is made to Schrœder v. Merchants and Mechanics’ Ins. Co. 104 Ill. 71. It may be conceded that the issuing of a summons in an action at law is the commencement of a suit, and ordinarily the issuing of the summons will arrest the running of the statute, and a declaration filed will relate back to the date of the summons. But that doctrine has no bearing on the facts of this case. Here the suit was commenced by the issuing of a summons before the statute had run. A declaration was filed before the statute had run, but the amended declaration, which set up the cause of action upon which issue was joined and a trial had, was not filed until the Statute of Limitations had run, and all the cases agree that if the cause of action set up by the amendment is a new one, and not a mere re-statement of the cause of action set out in the original declaration, the amended declaration will not relate back to the commencement of the suit. If the amended declaration had been the first and only declaration filed in the cause, we are not prepared to say it would not relate back to the commencement of the suit and thus prevent the running of the statute. But such was not the case. As has been seen, a declaration was filed soon after the suit was commenced. True, it did not set out a sufficient cause of action, but it was nevertheless a declaration, and so treated and so regarded by the parties and the court where the cause was pending. We regard the judgment of the Appellate Court correct, and it will be affirmed. judgment affirmed.