Baranco v. Birmingham Terminal Co.

Decision Date18 January 1912
Citation175 Ala. 146,57 So. 434
PartiesBARANCO v. BIRMINGHAM TERMINAL CO.
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

Appeal from City Court of Birmingham; C. W. Ferguson, Judge,

Action by Raffaela Baranco against the Birmingham Terminal Company. From a nonsuit, on a refusal to allow an amendment to the complaint, plaintiff appeals. Reversed and remanded.

Frank S. White & Sons, for appellant.

Weatherly & Stokely, for appellee.

SAYRE J.

In this case plaintiff sued for damages alleged to have been caused by defendant's wrongful act in placing a permanent obstruction across the street upon which his lot fronted. The averment is that the obstruction diminished the value of his property and caused the loss of profits in his business conducted thereon. Plaintiff offered to amend his complaint by changing the description of his lot. The amendment described a totally different lot, but one contiguous to that described in the original complaint. Upon the court's refusal to allow the amendment, plaintiff took a nonsuit, with a bill of exceptions.

The amendment should have been allowed. Previous to the Code of 1907 it was always held by this court that the only limitation upon the right of a plaintiff in a civil action at law to amend his complaint was that the form of the action should not be changed. There could not be an entire change of parties; nor could there be the substitution or the introduction of an entirely new cause of action. Mahan v Smitherman, 71 Ala. 563. Now it is provided that actions ex delicto may be joined in the same suit with actions ex contractu arising out of the same transaction or relating to the same subject-matter. Code, § 5329. And in the way of further definition of those cases in which amendments must be allowed it is now provided that new counts or statements of the cause of action shall not be held to relate to new causes of action, or causes of action other than that stated in the original complaint, so long as they refer to the same transaction, property, title, and parties as the original. Code, § 5367. The wrong complained of in this case, the gist of both the original complaint and the complaint as stated in the proposed amendment, was the same, to wit, the wrongful obstruction of the street. The allegations in respect to the diminished value of plaintiff's lot and the loss of profits which would have been earned in plaintiff's business served only to show how and to what extent...

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