The question on this appeal is whether appellants were entitled to a jury determination of the susceptibility of land to partition in kind. Appellees filed this suit against appellants and certain other defendants in trespass to try title and for partition. Appellants filed general denials and cross-actions also asking for partition. Although appellants made proper and timely demand for a jury trial on all issues, the trial judge determined that the land was incapable of a fair division in kind and ordered the property sold and the proceeds divided among the several owners according to their respective interests. Appellants superseded that judgment, and have appealed contending that they were entitled to a jury trial on the question of whether the land was susceptible of division in kind. Appel-lees contend that a jury trial of that issue was not authorized because the determination of such question is for the trial judge *382 alone, and in any event, there was no disputed issue of fact. Appellants’ contention will be sustained.
The right to trial by jury is a valuable right which will be jealously guarded. Tex.Const. art. I, Sec. 15; art. 5, Sec. 10, Vernon’s Ann.St. Although there are some proceedings in which a jury trial is not permitted (See 35 Tex.Jur.2d Jury, Sec. 18 et seq.), partition is not one of them. It is provided in Texas Rules of Civil Procedure rule 777 that “. . the same rules of pleading, practice and evidence which govern in other civil actions shall govern in suits for partition . . . and in whatever posture the question has arisen, the courts have treated disputed issues of fact in partition proceedings as being for the jury when one has been properly demanded. See
White v. Smyth,
Partition proceedings are peculiar in that they are conducted in sucessive stages.
White v. Mitchell,
The right to have property partitioned in kind is a valuable right.
Pfeffer v. Meissner,
*383 In the case at bar there was conflicting evidence on the susceptibility of the land to division in kind. Appellees’ survey- or testified that the tract was not susceptible to a fair division in kind. On the other hand, both the appellant Henry Tom Ray-son and the witness Harold Chadwick testified that the land could be equitably divided in kind, and suggested methods of doing so. An issue of fact was therefore raised on the question of the susceptibility of the land to division in kind, and since the appellants properly requested it, they were entitled to a jury determination of the issue.
For the error noted, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
