This action was originally brought against Elizabeth D. Traylor, as the administratrix of the estate of W. W. Traylor, deceased. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff's borrowed a certain sum of money from W. W. Traylor in his lifetime, and gave him as collateral security for the payment thereof a certain watch and two pairs of diamond ear-rings, valued at two thousand dollars; that at Traylor’s death a part of the money borrowed remaining Unpaid, the plaintiffs, on the twenty-first day of November, 1883, tendered it to Elizabeth D. Traylor, the administratrix of said decedent, and demanded the return of the articles pledged as collateral; that she refused to return them; that afterward, on the twenty-fourth day of November, 1883, the plaintiffs presented for allowance to the administratrix their claim in writing against the estate of her decedent, duly verified, and containing all things necessary according to law, etc., upon which this action is founded, for the return of the-articles pledged or the value thereof, viz., the sum *275of two thousand dollars; that upon the last-mentioned day the administratrix refused to allqjw the claim or any part of it, and wholly rejected it.
The prayer of that complaint is for judgment against the administratrix; that she return the property pledged, or in case a return cannot be had, for the value thereof, two thousand dollars, etc,, payable in due course of administration, etc.
This complaint was filed on the tenth day of January, 1884,—less than three months after the date of the rejection of the claim.
Afterward, by leave of the court, an amended complaint was filed on the seventh day of August, 1884. The allegations are the same in both complaints, the latter complaint differing from the first in the respect only that the prayer of the latter omits to ask for the return of the property, and confines the relief prayed for to a judgment, payable in due course of administration, for the value of the property,—two thousand dollars.
The administratrix answered the amended complaint, denying generally the facts alleged in it, and setting up the special defenses that the cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations under section 1498 of the Code of Civil Procedure; that the decedent lost the articles pledged without any fault or negligence on his part, and that they were stolen from him without his knowledge or negligence before coming into the custody of any representative of his estate.
She then preferred a counterclaim upon a promissory note made by the plaintiffs to W. W. Traylor, deceased, for $1,15L63, dated March 29,1882, and prayed for judgment for that sum, interest and costs.
The trial court made findings, in which', among other things, in its third finding, it declares: “That at the time of the making of said promissory note as aforesaid, and at the time of its delivery as aforesaid, said W. W. Traylor held as collateral security for the pay*276ment of said note one gold chronograph watch and two pairs of diamond ear-rings, all of which was the property of these plaintiffs.”
The findings of fact and conclusions of law were filed on the 12th of August, 1885, but no judgment had been entered when the administratrix, Elizabeth D. Traylor, died on the 21st of October, 1885. On the 1st of December, 1885, the present defendant, Louise E. Matthews, was appointed the administratrix of the estate of Mrs. Elizabeth D. Traylor, deceased, and was substituted as defendant in the cause, and on the first day of February, 1886, a judgment nunc pro tunc upon the above-mentioned findings was entered.
The findings, among other things, show that the watch and two pairs of diamond ear-rings were pledged to W. W. Traylor in his lifetime to secure the payment of a promissory note, which, with interest, amounted at the date of this judgment to the sum of $1,522.26; that the articles thus pledged were never returned to the plaintiffs, nor were lost by or stolen from W. W. Traylor in his lifetime, nor were they, or either of them, lost or stolen after his death; that the plaintiffs tendered the amount due upon the note to the administratrix, conditioned on her delivering up to them the watch and ear-rings, which she did not do, as she declared she did not have them; that the claim was duly presented to her for the amount of money claimed to be the value of the articles pledged, which she rejected.
As a conclusion of law, it is held that the defendant, administratrix, is entitled to offset the amount of the promissory note and interest against the plaintiffs’ claim. The judgment was for the defendant, that she recover her costs and disbursements, from which, and an order refusing a new trial, she appeals.
No question as to the correctness of the judgment against the plaintiffs can be*considered, because they have not appealed. - ,The judgment is therefore final as *277to them, and conclusive as against their right to recover. So far as the defendant is concerned, upon the findings as made, she can have no further judgment as against the plaintiffs, for the reason that the amount .of her counterclaim is offset by the plaintiffs’ claim against the decedent’s estate.
The point is made that the amended complaint states a different cause of action from the original complaint, and as the first-mentioned- pleading was not filed until more than three months had elapsed from the rejection of the claim which was then due, and on which it was based, that the action is barred under section 1498 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The cause of action is the same in both complaints, for the same facts are alleged in both as being the foundation of the action; the same evidence is required to prove the statements of facts in one as in the other. In such case “there is no change in the identity of the cause of action. That is the same as before, and the commencement of the action dates from the filing of the original complaint.” (Easton v. O’Reilly, 63 Cal. 308.)
The facts set out in the amended complaint state no new cause of action, and the plaintiffs’ cause is not barred by the statute of limitations. (Easton v. O’Reilly, supra; Cox v. McLaughlin, 76 Cal. 60.)
It is further claimed that the evidence is not sufficient to uphold the third finding. This contention is without force.
The. point made that the finding does not identify the property mentioned in the complaint is untenable. There is nothing in the record to show that the finding could have related to any diamond ear-rings except the two pairs mentioned in the complaint, and it is plain that the .finding is responsive to the allegation contained in that pleading, and refers to the two pairs of ear-rings there described, and no others.
*278The court found against the allegation set up as new matter in the answer, i. e., that the articles left with Mr. Traylor during his lifetime were lost or stolen without fault or negligence, etc. That was proper; there was no testimony proving the allegation, and the court was right in finding against the defendant upon the issue thus made. (Campbell v. Buckman, 49 Cal. 368.) These are the only contentions urged by the appellant, .and we advise that the judgment and order be affirmed.
Belcher, C. C., and Hayne, C., concurred.
The Court.For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.