(after stating the case as above).
By the terms of article 2182, R. S. 1925, “at any time [quoting] before the jury has retired, the plaintiff may take a non-suit, but he shall not thereby prejudice the right of an adverse party to be heard on his claim for affirmative relief.” So, whether the trial court erred when he overruled appellants’ motion for leave to take a nonsuit and when he rendered the judgment here complained of depends upon whether appellee was in the attitude of seeking affirmative relief-or not. .
There is another theory upon which we are inclined to think the action of the court below in proceeding with the trial was warranted. It appeared, as has hereinbefore been stated, that appellee set up the statutes of limitationof four and five years, and prayed that he be quieted in the title he’claimed to the land. It was held in Jones v. Wagner (Tex. Civ. App.)
A contention, and the only one presented not disposed of by what has been said, is that the judgment was fundamentally erroneous in that no notice of the filing of appellee’s answer containing his cross-action was served upon appellants and it did not appear that they had waived such service or answered such cross-action. A statement of facts was not sent to this court, and there is nothing in the record showing that such a notice was not served on appellants, or, if it was not, that appellants did not waive service of such .a notice. But, if appellants’ contention as to the facts was supported by the record, it would avail them nothing. It appears in the record that said answer was filed April 13, 1931, and that appellants’ motion for a nonsuit was filed and the judgment from which the appeal was prosecuted was rendered on April 14, 1931. The rule applicable is stated as follows in 15 Tex. Jur. 267: “Where the plea for affirmative relief is filed against one who has already taken a nonsuit, citation is necessary to sustain a judgment granting the relief. But the rule is otherwise when the defendant’s claim for affirmative relief has been filed prior to the taking of a nonsuit by the plaintiff. As to such a case it is said that: ‘The plaintiffs having appeared and invoked the jurisdiction of the court thereby challenging the defendants to answer by matters defensive, as well as offensive, they must be held to have had notice of every fact pleaded by the defendants prior to the time they announced their decision to take a nonsuit.’ ”
The judgment is affirmed.
