10 Tex. 137 | Tex. | 1853
It is insisted on behalf of the appellant, and plaintiff below, that he was entitled to recover, 1st, by virtue of his lease; 2d, by reason of his prior possession; and that the judgment of the court, denying- his right, is, consequently, erroneous.
The lease constituted the lessee the tenant at will of the corporation. The death of either lessor or lessee puts an end to the estate at will. By the dissolution or civil death of the corporation in this case, the estate at will was determined. No estate survived and subsisted in the plaintiff by virtue of the lease; and it consequently was no evidence of title to support the action.
Had the corporation alienated the land previous to its dissolution, that event would not have divested the title of the vendee; or, had the lease been for a certain period and not merely at will, the right of the lessee to his full term would not, I apprehend, have been affected. But the present, being- manifestly a mere tenancy at will, was determined by the dissolution of the corporation which created it; and there was an end of the rights of the plaintiff under the lease. The court, therefore, did not err in excluding it from the jury.
Judgment affirmed.