
    Cowper v. Edwards. Adm’r. of Webb.
    Action of debt against Defendant, naming him executor. Plea in abatement, that be is administrator and not ex'cutor. Plaintiff moved to amend upon the act of 1790, and cited Strange 890, where after issue joined, the court permitted an amendment, by laying the as-sumpsit to be made to the Plaintiffs themselves, instead of its being made to their testator: but the Court said, the act. of i 790, is but a repetition of the provisions before made by the acts of amendment and jeofail, and that by this act nothing could be amended, but what the other party might have demurred to, and specially set down as the cause of his demurrer, which was not the case in the present instance. The amendment of writs, to mak® that maintainable which before the amendment was not so, might be productive of great hardship; for very possibly the reason of the bail entering into a bail bond, was his knowledge that'the action on the defective writ could not be supported, and then the amendment would entrap him : so the motion was denied.
   Note. — Our Judges have expounded the act of 1790 with great liberality saying, "any tiling may be amended at any time.” Vide McClure v Burton and others, 1 Car. Law Rep. 472. Davis and another v Evans, Ibid. 499. Williams v. Lee’s Heirs, N. C. Term Rep. 146 Justices of Camden v. Sawyer, 2 Hawks, 61. Boyt v. Cooper, 2 Murph. 286. Wilcox & Co. v. Hawkins, 3 Hawks, 84.  