An action of ejectment was brought to recover of the defendant lot No. 144 in the 19th district and fourth section of Dade county. The defence was that defendant was not guilty; and a special plea to the effect that he was not in possession of No. 144 in that district and section, but of
1. The first assignment of error is, that the court erred in not-striking all the pleas except the general issue. In our judgment, all defences set up in them could as well have been set up on the plea of not guilty. Therefore the plaintiff's were not hurt. If the object of having them stricken was to force the defendant, under the rule of court, to admit that he was Repossession of No. 144, as it seems to have been, so as to .prevent the defendant from proving that he had title to the lot he occupied as No. 128 under an older grant than •plaintiffs’, or that plaintiffs’ title did not cover the premises occupied by him as No. 128, then the court was right not to strike the pleas but to let the issue be made and go to the jury. The admission of possession under the rule of court was never designed to force defendants to admit possession, if that admission prevented or estopped them from setting up a better title, or from requiring plaintiffs to show that their title covered the premises in dispute. If so, the rule is void to that extent. But it is unnecessary to go into that question further; because the plea of not guilty means that he is not guilty because the plaintiffs’ title does not cover the land in dispute, and because the defendants’ title is the better by reason of. being derived from an older grant, or for any other legal ground. Surely aman is not guilty of the trespass charged in ejectment, if the person suing him has no title that covers the premises alleged to be trespassed upon, or where the trespasser has the title older and better than his own.
Judgment affirmed.