Appellant sued the appellees and certain unknown heirs in trespass to try title to recover a tract of 104 acres of land out of thе J. W. Bryan one-fourth league in Anderson county, Tex., known as the Conaway land. All the defendants answered with pleas of not guilty and general denial, and in addition the appellees in this court, that is, all those so sued below except the unknown heirs, filed a cross-action in trespass to try title against all the other parties, in which they alleged themselves to be the owners of the land under conveyances from James Conaway, Sr., as well as a verbal partition between his heirs, by virtue of a prior possession, and under the 10-year statute of limitation.
Appellant answered this cross-аction by pleas of not guilty and of title in himself by limitation of 10 years.
*964 On the day of the trial before the court without a jury, appellant took á nonsuit as to his main action and defended through his plea of limitation against the cross-bill of the appellees, upon which the cause was heard.
Frоm a judgment for the title and possession of the land in favor of the appellees against all the other parties to the proceеding, the appellant alone appeals.
By mutual concession neither side had record title to the land, the cause turning therefore upon the rival claims to it by possession and limitation.
Appellant insists that he made out a clear title through more than 10 years of independent occupancy for himself, while the appel-lees contend that they not only had a prior possession of the tract upon which appellant entered without adverse or individual right, but that his entry thereon was as their tenant, and that, having never notified them of any adverse- charаcter of his possession, he was estopped to deny their title.
The trial court at appellant’s request filed these findings of fact and cоnclusions of law:
“I find the land in controversy is patented land. The Conaways were in the possession of same, that is, that the defendants were in possession of the land in the fifties, and perhaps earlier, and remained on the land until 1865, when the widow of Dick Conaway married one Odom and moved off of the land, going to Cherokee county.
“I find that the plaintiff, Charlie Beason, went on the land under Mr. Dan Hassell, agent for the Conaways, and paid rent to him for one or two years.
“That another tenant, Zack Lacy, occupied land one or two years as a tenant of Dan Has-sell, аs agent for the Conaways.
“And I further find that a second contract was made with plaintiff, Charlie Beason, by which he occupied the land for threе years under a contract to fence the same for the use of the same for three years, as the agent of the Conaways, and that he has been on said land continuously from that date to this, but that he has paid no rent since about 1905.
“Conclusions of Law.
“X conclude that his possession and limitation therеunder inure to the benefit of Diek Con-away’s heirs, the defendants, and that they are entitled to recover the land on their pleas of limitation for ten years, as against defendants cited by publication, and as against the plaintiff, he being a tenant and had never repudiated their title he сannot recover in this case.”
Appellant attacks these conclusions of both fact and law, and the judgment based thereon: First, as not bеing supported by the pleadings of the appellees in that they did not plead estoppel of a tenant to deny his landlord’s title; secоnd; as being without proof to sustain them, since there was no evidence that he was a tenant of the appel-lees; and third, as having no prоper predicate because the appellees could only recover the land upon the strength of their own title, in which they had fаiled, since the prior possession of it by their ancestors was not only not concurrent with his but had been abandoned many years before aрpellant’s entry) thereon.
Whilе the cases cited do not specifically determine the precise ppint involved in this case, they do pronounce the general rule which clearly includes it, that, in trespass to try title, either a legal or an equitable es-toppel may be proved under the general dеnial without being specially pleaded. This seems also to have been the view of the Court of Civil Appeals of the Second District in Hyman v. Grant,
“To this general rule an exception perhaps exists where, as here, the fact is not in the nature of one in confession and avoidance alone, but one which goes to disprоve the adverse possession alleged, and which therefore would be admissible under the general denial. See Berry v. Jagoe,45 Tex. Civ. App. 6 [100 S. W. 815 ].”
The declaration was not necessary to the decision, but in our opinion it embodies the correct rule in such cases.
While the court below did not statе a conclusion upon the issue of prior possession by the appellees, we think there was a basis in the evidence for one, and that the judgment in their favor might have been rested upon that ground also.
These conclusions require the overruling of all assignments and an affirmance of the trial court’s judgment; it has been so ordered.
Affirmed.
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