(After stating the foregoing facts.) While the law does not require that a pleader in a justice’s court shall set forth his cause of action with all that formality which is required in courts of record, what is required to be set forth is subject to the rule that pleadings are to be taken most strongly against the pleader. The pleader in the justice’s court must avoid expressions which are ambiguous, or pay the penalty resulting from the use of such language. Applying this rule, the cause of action alleged was certainly equivocal in its terms. It can be construed either as a suit for a penalty under the statute, or a suit for the overcharge as such and a separate count for a penalty. If the pleader had seen ■fit to stand upon this cause of action as originally drawn, no other ■course would have been open to the court than a dismissal of his case as a penalty for not stating in clear and unambiguous terms what was the subject-matter of his claim. But he did not stand upon it. He resorted to the right of amendment in order to relieve the pleading from the ambiguity apparent in it. As it •originally stood it was open to a double construction. The penalty for the use of such language would have been a dismissal, if the most unfavorable construction would have ousted the jurisdiction *800of the court. See, in this connection, Holbrook v. Norcross, 121 Ga. 319; Mayor and Council of Eastman v. Cameron, 111 Ga. 110. The appellant however admits the fault and seeks to remedy it by amendment. That is, he said in effect, I was not clear in the outset as to the claim set up, but I propose now to make it clear by eliminating those things which produce equivocation or ambiguity. This was permissible. As was said by Mr. Chief Justice Bleckley, in Ellison v. Ga. R. Co., 87 Ga. 691, “Amendment is a resource against waste. It proceeds on the principle that it is better to preserve what has been done and improve it than to throw it away.” The effect of the amendment in this case was not to make a new cause of action, but simply to relieve a doubt arising from the ambiguous words of the pleader as to what was the cause of action originally alleged. The words of Mr. Chief Justice Sanderson, in Nevada Co. v. Kidd, 28 Cal. 684, are pertinent in the present case: “The common-law rule, that a pleading must be taken most strongly against the pleader where the language used is ambiguous, has not, as counsel seems to suppose, been forgotten by us; but we did not fall into the error of supposing that it had any application to the question presented by the record in this case. Where the pleader stands upon his pleading and maintains its sufficiency in law, in the presence of a demurrer or other hostile attack, the rule to 'which counsel appeals with so much confidence undoubtedly applies. In such a case all doubts are to be resolved against the pleader. He asks no mercy and is entitled to no quarter. But that is not this case. Here the pleader confesses his pleading is bad, and that it imperfectly and ambiguously expresses his meaning and intent, and he therefore appeals to the mercy of the court to be allowed to amend it ‘in furtherance of justice/ so as to present more clearly his case of complaint. To such a case the rule under consideration, which is a rule of war and not of mercy, can have no possible application; on the contrary the utmost liberality, consistent with the ends of justice, ought to-be exercised by the court.”
As amended the ease was a suit for an overcharge, and of such a. suit the justice’s court had jurisdiction. But the amount involved was less than $50, and therefore no appeal to the superior court would lie. The judge did not err in dismissing the appeal.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Fish, C. J., absent.