140 S.W. 497 | Tex. App. | 1911
The trial court found that appellee had acquired title to the strip by virtue of the 10-year statute of limitation, and rendered judgment accordingly. Appellant attacks this finding and contends that the possession of the strip by appellee was by mistake, that he did not intend to claim any part of lot 18, and therefore his possession was not adverse. We do not concur in this contention.
The evidence sufficiently shows that the lots adjoin; lot 18 lying to the north of lot 17. Appellee took possession of lot 17 on June 1, 1900. The lot was fenced when he took possession of it, and he entered believing he was taking possession of his land, which he continued to possess from that time until the bringing of this suit, July, 1910, claiming the same as his own, and living on it with his family. He had the lot surveyed by Surveyor Brown about nine years ago, and the fence as it now stands is on the line indicated by the sticks set by Brown at that time to mark the line. The old fence was a little "bit" north of where his fence is now located. Appellee has since his entry claimed the lot as now fenced. It is true that appellee says he only claimed lot 17, paid taxes on it, and is not now undertaking to claim anything but lot No. 17. But his claim is that the part he has inclosed is No. 17, and that it does not include any of No. 18.
Our courts have uniformly held that, when one party in fencing a tract of land by mistake fences a small fraction of a large tract owned by another and holds for 10 years, limitation would apply only to the part inclosed, but would not include the land not inclosed. This rule has no application to the facts of this case. There is no land outside of that inclosed attempted to be held. Appellee is only claiming what he has inclosed, and that so inclosed he has fully met the requirements of the statute of 10 years limitation, which vests in him the title to said strip. Bartine v. McElroy, 123 S.W. 1175.
The judgment is affirmed.