128 S.W. 426 | Tex. App. | 1910
In our former opinion we were led to the conclusion that it was essential to a valid judgment in this case that it should locate the boundary line between said surveys, by the fact that the pleadings showed that plaintiff was claiming the land in controversy as a part of the Mizell survey, and that the defendant was claiming it as a part of the Rainey survey, and from the further fact that the parties to this suit filed the following agreement: "It is further agreed that the only question in the case is the true location of the boundary line between the A. Mizell survey and the Clement Rainey survey," and also from the fact that the charge of the court related solely to the location of this line. As was said by Chief Justice Taney in Bennett v. Butterworth, 11 How., 672, 13 Law Ed., 861: "If anything is settled in proceedings at law, where a jury is empaneled to try the facts, it is that the verdict must find the matter in issue between the parties, and the judgment of the court must conform to and follow the verdict." In this case the verdict was a general verdict for the defendant, and the judgment followed the verdict in that it simply decreed that the plaintiff take nothing by his suit. It is plain that *323 this verdict and judgment do not fix the true location of the boundary line between said surveys, and if that was the issue, as said agreement states it to be, said judgment determines nothing.
But, upon a more careful examination of the pleadings in this case, we have concluded that the location of the boundary line between said surveys, in the sense that it was necessary that the jury should find, and the judgment should fix and define, the true location of said line, so that a surveyor could take said judgment and, from the description given therein, run out said line on the ground, was not the issue in this case. We must look to the pleadings, and not to the evidence, to determine the issue, and it can make no difference what the statement of facts shows the issue to be, even though such statement be agreed to by the parties. "The matter in issue is that upon which the plaintiff's cause of action is based and which the defendant denies, as shown by the pleadings." James v. James,
For the reasons herein set forth the motion for a rehearing is granted and the judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Motion granted; judgment below affirmed.
Affirmed.