This suit was instituted by the defendant in error against the plaintiff in error to recover the title and possession of lots Nos. 6 and 7 in the town of De Kalb, Tex. The lots are described by reference to a plot of the town made by the Texas & Pacific Railway Company which was recorded in the office of the county clerk of Bowie county. The defendant in error answered disclaiming as to a portion of lot No. 7, and as to the remainder by plea of not guilty and title by adverse possession for a period of more than 10 years. He also in a supplemental answer suggested improvements in good faith. At the conclusion of the evidence, the court gave a peremptory instruction in favor of the defendant in error for the title and possession of all the property sued for. The following is the substance of the undisputed facts upon which the defendant in error relies to support the verdict and judgment rendered: A conveyance by the Texas & Pacific Railway Company to A. M. Getts in February, 1901; a general warranty deed from Getts and wife to A. G. Grump, the plaintiff in error, R. T. Lacy, and J. B. Hatchell, trustees of De Kalb Lodge No. 285 Knights of Pythias, dated August 22, 1908, and duly recorded; a general warranty deed dated September 11, 1908, from R. T. Lacy, A. G. Crump, the plaintiff in error, and J. B. Hatchell, trustees of De Kalb Lodge No. 285 Knights of Pythias, to himself. The plaintiff in error proved as the basis of his claim that in 1901 he received a conveyance from the Texas & Pacific Railway Company to lots 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5 of block 4 as shown on the plot of the town of De Kalb; that about the time this purchase was made the agent of the railway company pointed out to him a point as his southwest corner, telling him that his land lay east of that point; that he relied upon that designation as his true southwest corner, and fenced all of lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 and a portion of lot No. 7; that he had been in possession of the property, claiming the same adversely, since that date. As rebutting the adverse claim of the plaintiff in error, the defendant in error offered in evidence the deed made by the trustees of the lodge of the Knights of Pythias, among whom was the plaintiff in error, conveying the property to defendant in error in 1908, as estopping the plaintiff in error from asserting any adverse claim based upon possession prior to that deed.
The only purpose for which it becomes necessary to invoke an estoppel by deed in this instance against the grantor is to prevent him from claiming the benefit of a hostile prior possession. There certainly can be no injustice in construing his deed as implying the relinquishment of a claim which is admitted to be without foundation in either law or equity. It follows, then, that his adverse possession can only be permitted to date from a time subsequent to the date of his deed, and that restriction confines him to a term too short to perfect a title by limitation.
“In the court below the defendant pleaded improvements in good faith, but on the trial there was no evidence of the value of the land without the improvements, and hence their value and defendant’s good faith were not passed upon in the findings. There was proof of the-value of the improvements made. But the statute does not award to the defendant such value, but only the difference between the value of the land with, and its value without, the improvements. The defendant therefore, in failing to-prove the value of the land, left the court below without the means of awarding him the-benefit of his plea. If the right under which the plaintiff l-ecovered had been such as could only have been .enforced in a court of equity,, she would not have been permitted to recover-without indemnifying the defendant for his improvements. Story’s Eq. vol. 2, § 1238. But,, as ali-eady stated, her right and remedy wore legal, and the defendant could therefore only rely upon his statutory right for such indemnity.”
That language is applicable to the conditions disclosed by tbe record before us. The-suit is one to recover possession of land. The occupant pleads improvements in good faith. His remedy is statutory. Having failed to-make the proof necessary to enable tbe court to give tbe statutory relief, he is not entitled, to its recovery.
The judgment is affirmed.
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