The opinion of the court was delivered by
Martin, C. J.: An action to recover damages for personal injuries suffered by a servant of a railroad company from the negligence of a fellow servant must be brought within two years. (A. T. & S. F. Rld. Co. v. King, 31 Kan. 708.) Schroeder was injured February 17, 1886, and he commenced his action February 24, 1887, but his right of action was founded directly upon the duty of the master toward him; and this was not changed, but on March 7, 1888, a -further cause of action was added, and this was based, not upon the negligence of the master, but upon that of a fellow servant, thus setting up a right of action not existing at the common law, but founded upon the statute of 1874. If the second amended petition should *734relate back in. all its.parts to the original petition, then the two-years statute of limitations does not apply ; but if we are to treat the second cause of action as instituted at the time the necessary allegations were made and filed, then the right of action was barrel by that statute. Ás a general rule, amendments and amended pleadings relate back to the filing of the originals or to the commencement of the action. But it has been several times decided by this' court that this rule does not obtain where the defendant has a separate and distinct cause of action against the plaintiff, which is set up by way of cross-petition. (Neddo v. Neddo, ante, p. 507, 44 Pac. Rep. 2, and cases cited.) And we-think the reasoning in those cases must lead to the conclusion that a plaintiff cannot deprive a defendant of the benefit of the statute of limitations by ingrafting upon a case commenced in time another cause of action barred by the statute. In Hiatt v. Auld, 11 Kan. 176, 182, 183, it was held that a cause of action is not saved by section 23 of the code unless the second action is substantially the same as the first; that the form may be different and the regulations may vary, “but the right to recover must grow out of the same transaction, and depend upon similar grounds of liability on the part of the defendant.” It is true that Schroeder had but one grievance, and this was the personal injury sustained by him oh February 17, 1886, in the unloading of rails. For more than a year he prosecuted his action averring the fault of the master alone. Afterward, he alleged another cause of action for the same grievance, not “upon similar grounds of liability on the part of the defendant,” but upon the alleged fault of a fellow servant. In the first cause of action he'relied upon the common-law liability of the master ; in *735the second, upon the.' liability cast upon the master by the statute of 1874 on account of the fault of a servant. Now, although it was permissible to allow a second cause of action to be added by'amendment, this should not deprive the defendant below of the benefit of the statute of limitations as to such added cause of action.
The case of K. P. Rly. Co. v. Salmon, 11 Kan. 83, same case, 14 id. 520, is cited as inconsistent with the conclusion here reached. In that case, the first trial was upon the theory that Salmon was a passenger ; but the judgment in favor of his administratrix was reversed -by this court. After the case had been remanded for a new trial, the court allowed an amendment to the effect that Salmon was an employee of the railway company, and it was held here that this was not error. No question of the statute of limitations was raised, and both the original and the amended petition stated a cause of action at common law, each being based upon the negligence of the railway company itself, and the amendment being favorable to the company, because ordinary care only was required on its part toward an employee, while extraordinary care was due to a passenger.
This question has been recently decided by the supreme court of the United States in U. P. Rly. Co. v. Wyler, 158 U. S. 285. Wyler, an employee of the railway company, was injured in its yards at Wyandotte in April, 1883. He commenced his action in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, Séptember 25, 1885, alleging that he was injured through the incompetency of Kline, a coemployee, and charging that such incompetency was well known ’ to the railway company but unknown to the plaintiff. The petition therefore stated a cause of action at common *736law for the fault of the master. The case was removed to the United States circuit court and remained pending until October 30, 1888, when the plaintiff filed an amended petition, in which he reiterated his original averments and added thereto the charge that his injury resulted from the negligence and mismanagement of Kline. On November 2, 1888, he filed a second amended petition, which eliminated the charge of the incompetency of Kline a,iid the knowledge of such incompetency on the par/ of the railway company, and further stated that he had ‘‘ a cause of action against; the defendant under and by virtue of the law of Kansas in such cases made and provided, in section 1, chapter 93, Laws of Kansas of 1874.” The court decided that the statute of limitations, as applied to such new cause of action, treats the action as commenced when the amendment was incorporated into the pleadings, and not as begun when the action itself was commenced. The Missouri statute of limitations in such cases is five years, but more than that time had elapsed from the date of the injury in April, 1883, until October 30,1888, when the cause of action under the statute was first set up. The court held the action to be barred, Justice White delivering the unanimous opinion of the court, which is very exhaustive, and to which we refer as containing a full citation and review of the authorities upon the subject both old and new.
As it appears from the record that when Schroeder set up his second cause of action it was barred by the statute of limitations, the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and judgment entered in favor of the defendant below.
All the Justices concurring.