1. limitation of potation'- of period: ex contracta (?) or ex delicto (?) : presumption. I. The subject of this story is Herode De Fasteouw, born in Belgium, 'and brought to Bouton in 1903, at the age of , .... . , , . two years. This happened m pursuance of an agreement evidenced m words following:
“Antwerp, Belgium, Oct. 31st, ’03.
“This is to certify that I, W. B. Donelson, will take the 2 yr. old stallion Herode De Fasteouw, sired by Brin I)’Or, to America and sell him to the best of my judgment, for Bemi Matthys, said Bemy Matthys to run all risks on part of said horse.
“W. B. Donelson.”
*11142. pleading : aemurrer: overruling demurswering over does not con-waiver. *11153. Limitation of actions : plenamlnt Getting up new canse of action: demurrer. *1113In March, 1908, defendant exchanged Herode to Muench Bros. This action for the value of the horse was begun January 16, 1913, though the original notice had been delivered to the sheriff and served December 20th previous. The petition alleged, “that said W. B'. Donelson did take said horse to America and did sell him and has refused and still refuses to pay over the proceeds of said sale.” The prayer was for $440, with interest thereon from October 31, 1903. The answer averred that, on its arrival at Bouton, defendant discovered that the horse was afflicted with a disease known as chorea, of which plaintiff is alleged to have known, and that the horse was exchanged to Muench Bros, in March, 1908, defendant receiving in value about $350. By way of counterclaim, he asked to be allowed $1,300 for the keeping and care of the horse in the meantime, $101.75 for cost of transportation, and $500 as damage in consequence of breach of warranty that one *1114mare bought of and another through plaintiff were with foal. The reply denied the allegations of the counterclaim, and by way of set-off averred that the use made of the horse by defendant more than offset the amount asked for its care and keeping. Later on, plaintiff added a count to his petition, praying to be allowed $2,000 for the use of the stallion 4 years for breeding purposes. Thereupon, defendant withdrew from the answer the paragraph alleging disease of the horse, its exchange, and value of the horses received by him in pursuance thereof. Another amendment to the petition was filed, alleging the conversion of the horse by defendant in March, 1908, that its value then was $1,000, and praying judgment for $3,000. All these pleadings, other than the petition, were filed after March, 1913, and therefore more than 5 years after the alleged conversion of the stallion. On January 29, 1915, plaintiff filed an amended and substituted petition, alleging the contract and the transportation of the horse in pursuance thereof as in the petition, and that defendant retained possession of said horse until the month of March, 1908, and during said month converted said horse to his own use, in that he disposed of said horse by trading same, and failed and refused to account to plaintiff for the reasonable value of said horse at said time, or any part thereof; that its reasonable value was $1,000, and prayed judgment for that amount with interest from March, 1908. A demurrer thereto, on the ground that the amended and substituted petition showed A on ^ace that the cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, was overruled. Defendant raised the same point in his answer, and pleaded the counterclaim previously interposed. So the point was not waived by pleading over, as suggested by *1115appellee. The ruling on the demurrer raised ,, ,. . . ,, _ the question as to whether a new and different cause of action than that pleaded in the , petmon was set up in the amended and sub- , stituted petition. If this was done, and the
new cause of action was barred by-the statute of limitations in 5 years, then the demurrer should have been sustained. Van Patten v. Waugh, 122 Iowa 302; Gordon v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 129 Iowa 747; Cahill v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 137 Iowa 577, 579.
4- muiisiiesSa:iid eatioSf aSimpli" contract. Though the contract contains no prom*se to account for the proceeds of the horse, this is plainly to be implied from the language employed therein, and is as much a part thereof as though written. Fawkner v. Smith Wall Paper Co., 88 Iowa 169; Long v. Straus, (Ind.) 57 Am. Rep. 87; 6 R. C. L. 856. This is not questioned, and the arguments of counsel proceed on the theory that, if the action is founded on written contract, as certainly it ivas originally, the statutory period of limitations within Avhich suit must have' been brought had not expired. Section 3447, Code. If, hoAvever, the action is founded on a contract implied by laAV, the period of the statute of limitations had run prior to the filing of the amended and substituted petition. The situation is such, in many cases, that an' action as of tort, or an action as for breach of contract, may be brought by the same party upon the same state of facts. Cooley on Torts (3d Ed.)*56. Thus, actions for the same loss may be maintained against a common carrier of goods or messages ex contractu or ex delicto; and save when the bar of the statute of limitations is involved, if there be doubt, the cause of action is usually construed as sounding in tort. Owens Bros. v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co., 139 Iowa 538; Mentzer v. Western Union Tel. Co., 93 Iowa 752. But where one would be barred by the statute of *1116limitations and the other would not, the latter will be presumed to have been intended, for it is not likely that anyone would choose to prosecute an action ex delicto which would be barred when the same relief would be available in an action ex contractu. St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Sweet, (Ark.) 40 S. W. 463.
“A tort may be dependent upon, or independent of, contract. If a contract imposes a legal duty upon a person, the neglect of that duty is a tort founded on contract; so that an action ex contractu for the breach of contract, or an action ex delicto for the breach of duty, may be brought at the op‘tion of the plaintiff.”
Prior to the abolition of distinctions between forms of action, and the adoption of the Code system of pleading, it was often important to ascertain whether, under the averments of a declaration, the action sounded in contract or tort. See Dale v. Hall, 1 Wilson 281; Bretherton v. Wood, 3 Brod. & B. 54; Burnett v. Lynch, 5 B. & C. 589. See, also, Staley v. Jameson, 46 Ind. 159 (15 Am. Rep. 285). In Sherman v. Western Stage Co., 22 Iowa 556, there appears to have been no allegation of contract or breach thereof. In Flint & Walling Mfg. Co. v. Beckett, 167 Ind. 491 (12 L. R. A. [N. S.] 924), th,e subject is discussed, and cases bearing thereon collected in the note appended thereto. Here, the situation was such that plaintiff might have sued for damages consequent on the breach of the contract, though this was by converting the property defendant had undertaken to sell, or for conversion alone, resting the claim on the duty to do as agreed, and his violation of such duty. It may be conceded that the pleading did not make it clear on which the cause of action was founded, whether on contract or on tort, and, in these circumstances, to avoid the bar of the statute of limitations, it will be construed to be an action ex contractu rather than ex delicto. St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Sweet, (Ark.) 40 S. W. 463. Any *1117doubt on the question was settled by the filing of the amendment hereinafter referred to. See Taylor v. Taylor, 110 Iowa 207. There was no error in overruling the plea. of the bar of the statute of limitations.
5. limitation of actions : bar-actions : barred actions: right of plaintiff to plead in reply. allegation of the answer, and averred that ° ; II. For reply, plaintiff put in issue the the use of the stallion for breeding purposes and farm work was equal in value to the sum claimed in the counterclaim. Defendant thereupon moved that the portion of the reply pleading an offset to the counterclaim be stricken, for that it constituted new matter which might not be set up in the reply and must be alleged in the petition. The motion was sustained. Thereupon, an amendment to the petition, alleging the same matter and praying for judgment in an' additional amount of $2,000, was filed. A demurrer thereto on the ground that the cause of action included in the amendment was barred by the statute of limitations, was sustained. The amended and substituted reply was thereupon refiled. A motion to strike on the above ground, among others, was overruled. It will be observed that the items for work and breeding services were barred by the statute of limitations, and for this reason, a count therefor could not stand in the petition as against the plea of such statute. But such items might be pleaded as a set-off, under Section 8457 of the Code, declaring that:
“A counterclaim may be pleaded as a defense to any cause of action, notwithstanding it is barred by the provisions of this chapter, if it was the property of the party pleading it at the time it became barred, and was not barred at the time the claim sued on originated; but no judgment thereon, except for costs, can be rendered in favor of the party so pleading it.”
It is to be noted that this does not limit the right to so plead to “any claim of action” as alleged in the petition, *1118but this may be done though such cause is alleged in the answer and counterclaim. Section 3570 of the Code points out under what conditions a cause of action may be pleaded in a counterclaim. The defense to a counterclaim pleaded in the answer necessarily must be set up in the reply (Section 3576, Code); and it must either (1) put in issue the allegations of the counterclaim, or (2) aver “any new matter, not inconsistent with the petition, constituting a defense to the matter alleged in the answer; or the matter in the answer may be confessed, and any new matter alleged, not inconsistent with the petition, which avoids the same, but an allegation of new matter in avoidance shall not be treated as a waiver of the denial of the allegations of the answer implied by law.” Section 3577, Code.
Pleading a counterclaim under Section 3577 of the Code, above quoted, is of new matter constituting a defense, as contemplated in these sections, and such a claim may thus be interposed as a set-off to the counterclaim. This appears from Illsly v. Grayson, 105 Iowa 685, and cases therein cited. Stress is there laid on the fact that the cause of action pleaded in the reply as an offset might not have been included in the petition praying judgment for rent and the establishment of a landlord’s lien under the statute, but this was to indicate the analogy with a case where this is prevented because the cause sought to be interposed as an offset is barred by the statute of limitations, and as a reason for allowing the set-off to be set up in the reply. We are of opinion that the trial judge rightly allowed the reply to stand. Some other rulings on motions are complained of, but all were either discretionary or waived by pleading over.
III. The cause was submitted to the jury, March 12, 1915, and, in pui’suance of agreement, the return of a sealed verdict authorized. A verdict was agreed to at 12:30 o’clock A. M., March 13th, and handed to the bailiff. At *11199 o’clock in-the morning of that day, court convened, and the verdict was' opened and read. It was in words following :
“We, the jury,, find for plaintiff, and assess his recovery at the sum of $578.25; 6 per cent interest, and costs”' — signed by the foreman.
Thereupon, the court instructed the jury, all of whom had returned to the court room, as directed on retiring the previous evening, that:'
“There being some doubt as to meaning of the verdict you have returned, as to the question of interest, I will send you back to your jury room with the following additional • instruction No. 15. Instruction No. 15: You will indicate in' your verdict the date from which the interest on the amount specified in your verdict should begin.”
7. Trial: verdict: amenamem by ana The jury retired, and later returned the same verdict, with these words added: J “From March 31, 1908.” Exceptions were saved by counsel for appellant, and it is contended that • the instruction sending the jury back was erroneous, for that (1) its verdict had been -returned and the jury had been discharged and had separated, and (2) the instruction required the allowance of interest. Under Section 3724 of the Code, “sealing [the verdict] is equivalent to a rendition and a recording thereof.” So considered, it may not be recalled or altered. But this does not preclude inquiry as to whether that presumably recorded was in fact the verdict of the jury. Carlson v. Adix, 144 Iowa 653; Gillespie v. Ashford, 125 Iowa 729; Cohen v. Sioux City Traction Co., 141 Iowa 469.
Nor is it in the way of the jury’s correcting the verdict, when for a party who is entitled to recover an Uncontroverted amount, if at all, by inserting the same. Ox*1120ford Junction Savings Bank v. Cook,, 134 Iowa 185; Wright v. Wright, 114 Iowa 748; Higley v. Newell, 28 Iowa 516, 518; Lee v. Bradway, 25 Iowa 216; Hamilton v. Barton, 20 Iowa 505; Tifield v. Adams, 3 Iowa 487.
But where the, verdict is for an amount less than it should have been, if for a party, the amount may not be increased to the correct sum by the court. Rueber v. Negles, 147 Iowa 734. See, also, Miller v. Mabon, 6 Iowa 456; Rogers v. Hanson, 35 Iowa 283; Hetland v. Bilstad, 140 Iowa 411; Smith v. Doto, 178 Iowa 108. These authorities dispose of the contention that the jurors may not be required to consider the verdict after it has been returned sealed. The rule is firmly settled thereby that, to make some formal correction, or insert some undisputed fact to render the verdict complete and responsive to the issues, the jury, though having separated, may be required again to retire and correct the verdict previously returned, provided this be done promptly. However, the jury, after the rendition of the sealed verdict, and separation, may not be required to settle a controverted issue or to correct their verdict, save as this may be done without deliberation and ministerially, in the way of evidencing in the verdict what had previously been concluded upon, or matters uncontroverted, essential to the disposition of the case. Here, the court had instructed the jury, in the third paragraph of the charge, to allow the plaintiff the reasonable value of the stallion when exchanged in March, 1908, by saying:
“You should also allow plaintiff interest on whatever amount you find was the reasonable market value of said horse at said time from April 1, 1908, to date at the rate of six per cent per annum.”
Then follow instructions relating to the counterclaim and offset thereto, and the jury is directed to deduct the, amount, if any, allowed on the counterclaim from the *1121amount so found owing tbe plaintiff, and return a verdict for the difference.
Under this instruction, the jury might have added the interest to the market value of the horse, and found the total amount owed to the plaintiff, or that amount less any allowance on the counterclaim, and have inserted the same in the verdict; or the market value may have been found, and this, or this less any allowance on the counterclaim, inserted, with the addition, in substance, of the following: “With interest at 6 per cent per annum from March 31, 1908.” From the verdict, it was not clear which method the jury had followed. Directing them to state in their verdict the time from which interest was to be computed merely exacted that the verdict disclose which method had in fact been pursued. So to do did not require deliberation, but the certification, as it were, of what conclusion with reference to interest had been reached, by so indicating in the verdict. If Something had been deducted as an allowance on the counterclaim, and thereby interest not computed on the entire value of the horse, defendant was not prejudiced, and the only question of any significance is whether the interest had been included in the amount inserted in the verdict, or was intended to be added by computation from the date of the breach of the contract. As said, so stating was no more than the performance of a ministerial act, i. e., certifying what the jury had previously found, but omitted to definitely state in their verdict.
8' amendment: ment onníotion tor new trial. IV. After the verdict had been returned and the motion for new trial partly argued, plaintiff filed another amendment to amended and substituted petition by adding thereto, between the words “defendant” and “converted,” the following •„ “In violation of said contract.” A motion to strike was overruled, and rightly so. All the rulings of the court were on the theory that plaintiff was' *1122claiming damages for breach of the contract alleged, and not for tort, and if this was not specifically alleged, • there was" no error in permitting an amendment so doing. No one was’prejudiced thereby, even though after verdict, and the course pursued was specifically authorized by statute. Section 3760 of the Code.
The evidence was sufficient to support the verdict, and the judgment is — Affirmed.
Gaynor, O. J., Evans and Salinger, JJ., concur.