delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this сase we must decide whether a trespass-to-try-title action is the exclusive means to resolve a dispute between neighbors over the proper location of a boundary line separating their properties, or whether a declaratory judgment action is also an appropriatе way. We hold that the Texas trespass-to-try-title statute governs the parties’ substantive rights in this boundary dispute and that they may not proceed under the Texas Declaratory Judgments Act to recover attorney’s fees. Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.
I
This dispute involves locating the proper boundary line between two residential
Although unable to agree on the boundary’s location, the parties do agree that their respective chains of title do not conflict. All of the Martin acreage derives from the Crowell/Nelson grant and all of the Amerman acreage derives from the DeVoss/Pye grant. The dispute in this case arises from two conflicting surveys. The Martins’ surveyor, Mark Whiteley, surveyed the Martin property in 1993 and set the northeast corner at a one-and-one-half-inch pipe identified in previous surveys as the proper corner location. Gilbert Johnston, the Amerman’s surveyor, conducted his survey of the Amerman tract three years later and placed its northwest corner at a five-eighth-inch rod. The surveyors’ differing placement of these corners causes the thirty-foot overlap at issue in this case.
The Martins filed suit seeking a judgment declaring the proper boundary line аnd granting permanent injunctive relief. They also alleged trespass and wrongful encroachment, adverse possession, trespass to try title, boundary by recognition and acquiescence, and an action to quiet title, but ultimately nonsuited all claims except those for declaratory judgment and to remove the cloud on their title caused by the recorded Johnston survey. The Amermans filed a counterclaim for trespass to try title and also sought injunctive relief. Because the parties agreed that ownership of the disputed thirty-foot strip of land depended upon determining the boundary’s proper locаtion on the ground, the case was submitted to the jury solely as a boundary dispute. After hearing testimony about survey methods and the priority placed on different monuments, the jury found that the Martins’ surveyor properly placed the boundary and that the Amermans’ recorded survey placed a cloud on the Martins’ title. The triаl court rendered judgment on the jury’s verdict and awarded the Martins attorney’s fees pursuant to the Texas Declaratory Judgments Act. See Tex. Civ. PRAC. & Rem.Code § 37.009.
The court of appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment in part, but held that, because the boundary dispute involved title to a strip of land, it was in the nature of a trespass-to-try-title aсtion and must be treated as such.
II
The Texas Property Code provides that “[a] trespass to try title action is the method of determining title to lands, tenements, or other reаl property.” Tex. PROP. Code § 22.001. The Texas Declaratory Judgments Act provides that “[a] person
We have said that boundary disputes may be tried as trespass-to-try-title actions, but not that they must. Hunt v. Heaton,
The Declaratory Judgments Act provides an efficient vehicle for parties to seek a declaration of rights under certain instruments, while trespass-to-try-title aсtions involve detailed pleading and proof requirements. See Tex.R. Civ. P. 783-809. To prevail in a trespass-to-try-title action, a plaintiff must usually (1) prove a regular chain of conveyances from the sovereign, (2) establish superior title out of a common source, (3) prove title by limitations, or (4) prove title by prior possession coupled with proof that possession was not abandoned. Plumb,
The trespass-to-try-title statute was originally enacted in 1840 to provide a rеmedy for resolving title issues. Tex. PROp.Code 22.001(a) (“A trespass to try title action is the method of determining title to lands.... ”). It also eliminated ejectment actions in Texas, which had traditionally been used to restore possession of property to a person legally entitled to it. See Tex. Prop.Code 22.001(b); see generally 2 Powell on Real PROPERTY 246[3] (1991). The statute is typically used to clear problems in chains of title or to recover possession of land unlawfully withheld from a rightful owner. See Standard Oil Co. of Tex. v. Marshall,
The strict pleading and proof requirements applicable to trespass-to-try-title actions have sometimes produced harsh results. See, e.g., Hunt,
The Martins argue that this case does not involve a title dispute as contemplated by the trespass-to-try-title statute because the parties stipulated that their respective chains of title do not overlap. The Martins contend that the court is not determining substantive title rights but is merely declaring the boundary’s location between adjoining properties. See Goebel, 76 S.W.3d at 656. The Amermans, on the other hand, contend this case is necessarily about title because both parties assert competing claims of ownership to the same thirty-foot strip of land. See Vanzandt v. Holmes,
The distinction between formal trespass-to-try-title actions аnd disputes involving only a boundary determination was initially drawn as a means to determine whether this Court had subject matter jurisdiction over the case. Before 1929, we had no jurisdiction over appeals involving boundary determinations, but did have jurisdiction over appeals that involved questions of title. Act of Apr. 13, 1892, 22nd Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 15, 1892 Tex. Gen. Laws 25, amended by Act of Mar. 2, 1929, 41st Leg., R.S., ch. 33 § 1, 1929 Tex. Gen. Laws 68.
The distinction between a title action and a boundary dispute came before the Court in a different context in Permian Oil Co. v. Smith,
The fact that on the trial boundary was the sole controversy controlling title does not keep the former judgment, which disposed of title, from binding the parties and their privies. In trespass to try title determination of the outcome of the suit through the fact of boundary does not alter the cause of action plead [sic] and disposed of by the judgment.
Id. The same principle was earlier stated in Freeman v. McAninch, where the Court held:
[T]he fact that the determination of [title] may have depended on a question of boundary could not change the character of the vital issue in the case, for that was but a question of fact, to be considered like any other fact in determining whether the issue of title to the land should be decided in favor of the one party or the other.... The issue presented by the рleadings, and determined by the judgment, was one of title; and that ... this depended on the fact of true locality of the boundary between the surveys, could not change the character of that issue.
Thus, although we have recognized a procedural distinction between trespass-to-try-title actions and boundary disputes for jurisdictional and evidentiary purposes, we have declined to draw a substantive distinction for purposes of determining claim preclusion. As we said in Freeman, “[q]uestions of boundary are never the subjects of litigation within themselves, but become so only when some right or title is thought to depend on their determi-nation_” Id. at 98. A bоundary determination necessarily involves the question of title, else the parties would gain nothing by the judgment. Id. at 99 (stating that “if the issue of title ... was not determined ... it [would be] wholly unimportant where the boundary between the surveys was”).
For the foregoing reasons, we again decline to recognize a substantive distinction between title and boundary issues, this time for the purpose of allowing alternative relief under the Declaratory Judgments Act. We conclude, as did the court of appeals, that the trespass-to-try-title statute governs the parties’ substantive claims in this case. The statute expressly provides that it is “the method for determining title to ... real property.” Tex. PROp.Code 22.001(a) (emphasis added); see Ely v. Briley,
The Martins rely on language in Brainard v. State,
[Tjhe dispute in the present case is over title, not an enactment, and the Foundation’s claim for declaratory relief [locating the shoreline boundary] is merely incidental to the title issues. In such circumstances, the Act does not authorize an award of attorney fees against the State.
John G. & Marie Stella Kenedy Mem’l Found, v. Dewhurst,
Ill
The Amermans, as cross-petitioners, contend that the trial court erred by failing to submit the case to the jury in the formal mаnner that traditional trespass-to-try-title claims require. The court of appeals concluded that the Amermans waived this point, and we agree.
The Amermans further contend that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s determination that the proper boundary line was that set by the Martins surveyor. We disagree, for the reasons the court of appeals expressed.
IV
For the foregoing reasоns, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment.
Notes
. The judgment of the courts of civil appeals shall be conclusive in all cases on the facts of the case and a judgment of such courts shall be conclusive on facts and law in the following cases; nor shall a writ of error be allowed thereto from the supreme court, to-wit: ... (2) All cases of boundary. Act of Apr. 13, 1892, 22nd Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 15, 1892 Tex. Gen. Laws 25, amended by Act of Mar. 2, 1929, 41st Leg., R.S., ch. 33 § 1, 1929 Tex. Gen. Laws 68.
