OPINION
Appellants Alicia and Ernesto Gonzalez challenge the trial court’s grant of a writ of possession to Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., for property located at 641 Milton Henry Avenue, El Paso, Texas (“the Property”). In two issues, Appellants contend the county court at law lacked jurisdiction to enter the writ pursuant to an Agreed Judgment because an underlying title suit was then pending in district court. Alternatively, Appellants maintain that no record evidence exists to show Appellants actually agreed to the judgment. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
Wells Fargo purchased the Property at a non-judicial foreclosure sale in July 2011. 1 Wells Fargo sent Appellants a written notice to vacate the premises following its purchase of the Property, then filed suit for forcible detainer. Appellants answered and sought a plea in abatement to allow for resolution of the underlying title dispute in a collateral wrongful foreclosure suit filed in district court. The justice court granted a writ of possession to Wells Fargo, and Appellants appealed.
On appeal but prior to trial de novo in County Court at Law No. 5, the parties reached a Rule 11 settlement agreed (“the Agreed Order”) allowing Appellants to *712 stay in possession of the property under certain conditions. The Agreed Order contained an attached Agreed Judgment. The Agreed Order specified that the trial court would “sign the Agreed Judgment that had been approved by the parties and attached hereto” and thereby grant possession to Wells Fargo pending resolution of the wrongful foreclosure suit, Appellants’ failure to continue making payments, or August 15, 2012, whichever event occurred first.
Appellants do not dispute they defaulted on the Agreed Order by failing to meet one of the conditions precedent to their continued possession of the property. The County Court at Law No. 5 subsequently signed and entered the Agreed Judgment. Appellants appealed that judgment to this Court.
DISCUSSION
In Issue One, Appellants argue that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter a writ of possession under the terms of the Agreed Judgment, since a collateral title suit was then pending in district court and “there was no evidence of a landlord-tenant relationship” between Appellants and Wells Fargo. In Issue Two, Appellants contend that the Agreed Judgment is invalid as a consent judgment because no record evidence demonstrates that they ever, in fact, consented to it. We disagree with Appellants on both fronts.
Standard of Review and Applicable Law
We review questions of subject matter jurisdiction
de novo. Gibson v. Dynegy Midstream Services, L.P.,
“[T]he sole issue in a forcible detainer action is who has the right to immediate possession of the premises.”
Villalon v. Bank One,
The Texas Property Code establishes that a person who refuses to surrender possession of real property on demand commits a forcible detainer if the person, without obtaining rights through forcible entry:
(1) is a tenant or a subtenant wilfully and without force holding over after the termination of the tenant’s right of possession; [or]
(2) is a tenant at will or by sufferance, including an occupant at the time of foreclosure of a lien superior to the tenant’s lease ....
Tbx.Prop.Code Ann. § 24.002(a)(West 2000).
“The demand for possession must be made in writing by a person entitled to possession of the property and must comply with the requirements for notice to vacate under Section 24.005.” Tex.Prop. Code Ann. § 24.002(b).
Analysis
Appellants maintain that because they raised the issue of proper title in a collateral district court action, the justice court was precluded from acting on the forcible detainer suit until that title suit was resolved. However, merely raising the issue of title is not enough to defeat the justice court’s original jurisdiction.
Bruce,
Here, Wells Fargo has failed to direct this Court’s attention to the deed of trust at issue, meaning that, unlike in Rice, we cannot determine whether a landlord-tenant relationship existed by virtue of the deed of trust. However, a copy of the superseding Rule 11 settlement agreement between Appellants and Wells Fargo under the Agreed Order does appear in the clerk’s record, and by its plain terms, establishes a landlord-tenant-type relationship between the parties. As such, the justice court and the county court, sitting on appeal, could properly act and determine the issue of who had superior right of possession without necessarily needing to assess who owned title to the Property. Appellants have failed to establish a genuine title issue precluding the justice court from exercising jurisdiction over the forcible detainer controversy, and their jurisdictional argument on this point is without merit. We overruled Issue One.
As for Appellants’ argument that the record fails to show they affirmatively assented to the Agreed Judgment, we find it unconvincing. “When a consent judgment is rendered without consent or is not in strict compliance with the terms of the agreement, the judgment must be set aside.”
Chisholm v. Chisholm,
The Agreed Judgment clearly became operative by consent to the overarching Agreed Order and the undisputed occurrence of a triggering event.
See Chisholm,
Appellants also urge us to vacate the Agreed Judgment on the basis that specific fact-findings in the Agreed Judgment are unsupported by legally or factually sufficient evidence in the record. We decline to entertain these arguments. While Appellants are correct that by filing an answer, they disputed the operative facts at issue and thereby placed the onus on the plaintiff to affirmatively prove the case laid out in its pleadings,
see Bradley Motors, Inc. v. Mackey,
On the record presented, we find that because Appellants did not effectively withdraw their consent to the Agreed Judgment prior to rendition, the Agreed Judgment governs the possessory relationship between Appellants and Wells Fargo in relation to the Property. Since Appellants became tenants at sufferance under that Agreed Judgment, Wells Fargo established it had a superior right of possession, and the trial court did not err in granting a writ of possession to Wells Fargo.
Issue Two is overruled. The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Notes
. Wells Fargo maintains that this foreclosure took place pursuant to a deed of trust that named Appellants as tenants at sufferance following the foreclosure. However, in its brief, Wells Fargo’s citation to the clerk’s record directs us to a deed of trust that lists two borrowers who are not subject to this appeal. There is no evidence in the record before this Court establishing what the Appellants’ deed of trust entailed.
