35 S.W. 1056 | Tex. | 1896
The Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth Supreme Judicial District has certified to this court the following statement and questions:
"In the above entitled cause the following issues of law arise, which this court deems it advisable to present to the Supreme Court of the State of Texas for adjudication, to-wit:
Question 1. In an action of trespass to try title, where the defendant by cross bill seeks affirmative relief, the allegations of the cross bill being in the ordinary form of an action of trespass to try title, fully describing *623 the land, can the plaintiff take a non-suit, dismiss the cause, and thereby deny to defendant the right to be heard on the cross bill?
2. "On this point, does the case of Hoodless v. Winter,
In an action of trespass to try title, the defendant may, in addition to his defensive pleas, set up in a cross-bill or plea in reconvention his own right and claim to the land, and by appropriate allegations seek an affirmative recovery against the plaintiff. Egery v. Power,
When the defendant in a suit, by a cross bill or plea in reconvention containing appropriate allegations, shows a cause of action against the plaintiff with reference to the subject matter of the suit, the plaintiff cannot, by dismissing his case, defeat the defendant's right to a trial upon the cross bill. Egery v. Power,
In an action of trespass to try title, the defendant may file his defensive pleas as a preparation to meet the plaintiff's case upon trial, and he may in addition, by a cross bill or petition, set up his own title and claim to the land as against the plaintiff, and by appropriate allegations and proper prayer put himself in the attitude to insist upon a decision of the matter at issue, whether the plaintiff desires to proceed with the litigation or not. The matter upon which the defendant may file a cross bill is not restricted to such as he could not introduce under his plea of not guilty, but may embrace matters which he could avail himself of as a defense as well as such matters as would be necessary to plead specially in order to obtain relief, or it may consist of either without the other.
After a careful examination of the opinion written by Judge Henry in the case of Hoodless v. Winter,
We think that it is a fair construction of this opinion to hold that the decision in that case rested upon the fact that the allegations of the answer were not such as to constitute a cross action asking affirmative relief against the plaintiff in the case. It is true that some of the language which follows the quotation last made would, taken alone, indicate that the learned judge who wrote the opinion intended to express the view of the law that a defendant could not in a cross action set up as ground of affirmative relief that character of title or claim of right which might be asserted under the plea of not guilty, or as defensive matter. But we think that, taken together with that which precedes and that which follows, the language is not susceptible of that construction, and that it was intended simply to illustrate the proposition that, under the pleadings in question, the defendant could have availed himself of all the matter properly alleged therein, and could have obtained the relief in a regular trial on the plaintiff's case, which he sought by the allegations of his plea.
In the case of Ellis v. Singletary,
The plaintiff had the right to dismiss his own case, but this could not operate to discontinue the cross bill of the defendant, and if the cross bill contained sufficient allegations for the purpose, it would stand as an action by defendant against the plaintiff upon which defendant was entitled to trial as if it had been an original suit. *626