Appellants, Exa Neill et al., filed this suit on March 6, 1934, against the Pure Oil Company et al., to recover the title and possession of two tracts of real estate. Plaintiffs alleged in their first amended petition, on which they stood for trial, that Exa Neill was the surviving wife of J. W. Neill, deceased, and that the other plaintiffs, except J. C. Young and Ralph Sexton, were the children of J. W. Neill and Exa Neill; that J. W. Neill died intestate, on November 1, 1928, and, during his lifetime, owned a 60-acre tract of land out of the H. V. Moore survey and an 86-acre tract out of the John Walling survey, in Van Zandt county, Tex., and at the time of his death was seized and possessed of said real estate; and that the plaintiffs, as the heirs of J. W. Neill, were entitled to the title and possession of the two tracts of land; and further alleged that the defendants claim to own the 60 acres, by virtue of a deed executed by J. W. Neill on September 3, 1910, file'd for record October 21, 1916, and recorded in Volume 118, page 175, of the Deed Records of Van Zandt county, Tex.; and that defendants also claim to own the 86-acre tract under a deed executed by J. W. Neill et ux. to E. B. Tun-nell, on March 23, 1908, filed for record July 4, 1926, and recorded in Volume 169, page 139 of the Deed Records of Van Zandt county, Tex.; and, further, .that, at the time each of the said deeds were executed, J. W. Neill was of unsound mind, did not have the mental capacity to understand the nature of the transaction, and was not able to sell property or make conveyances, and by reason thereof plaintiffs were entitled to have the two deeds canceled and held for naught.
In answer to plaintiffs’ petition, all of the defendants pleaded fully, but, in view of the disposition made of the case by the trial court, it .will only be necessary to consider the action of the court on defendants’ special exceptions, in which defendants specially excepted to plaintiffs’ petition, upon the ground that it was' insufficient in law, because it appears upon its face that the suit was barred by the four-year statute of limitation (article 5529, R.S.1925). The trial court sustained the exceptions and, as plaintiff declined to amend, the suit was dismissed.
The basic question involved on this appeal is whether plaintiffs have asserted such a cause of action in their pleadings as is barred by the four-year statute of limitation (article 5529), which reads as follows: “Every action other than for the recovery of real estate, for which no limitation is otherwise prescribed, shall be brought within four years next after the right to bring the same shall have accrued and not afterward.” In determining this question, the form in which the action is brought is not material. Whether the suit is one for the recovery of land does not depend upon the form of the pleadings, but upon the nature of the title asserted. Plaintiffs pleaded all the elements in trespass to try title, as well as the cancellation of the deeds under which defendants claim title. It will be seen that the plaintiffs and defendants each claim title to the land in controversy through a common source — plaintiffs, by heirship from
It is the settled law in this state, we think, that a deed executed by a person of unsound mind is not void but voidable. 24 Tex.Jur. 380, 383; E. J. Williams, G’d’n, v. Louis Sapieha,
In the case of E. J. Williams, G’d’n, v. Louis Sapieha,
In the case of Bookhout et al. v. McGeorge,
Affirmed.
