1. When a case has been terminated by a nonsuit, dismission, or discontinuance, before the plaintiff can renew his suit he must either pay the costs or file an affidavit as to his inability to pay them. Civil Code, §5043; Acts 1901, p. 80. The rule laid down in the code section and the act just cited is applicable only where the plaintiff in the former suit seeks, as plaintiff, to bring a new suit on the same cause of action. It has no application whatever in a case where the defendant, either as a matter of defense or by way of cross-action, sets up facts involved in the former suit in which he was the plaintiff, which has been nonsuited, dismissed, or discontinued. He can not come into court voluntarily as plaintiff with a renewal of the suit without paying the costs of the for
2. The original petition showed upon its face that' the plaintiffs were not the owners -of the property in controversy, and hence they were not in position to bring a suit which involved title and ownership. The mere fact that it appeared that one of the plaintiffs was formerly the owner, and that she would be bound, on her warranty of the title, to her purchaser, did not constitute a sufficient reason for the interposition of a court of equity in her behalf. ■ If the facts set up in the petition were sufficient to authorize the equitable relief prayed for, they would be sufficient to defeat any action that might be brought against her for the breach of her warranty. By amendment it was, in effect, alleged that the sale -of the property set out in the original petition had been rescinded before the suit was filed, and that one of the plaintiffs was the real owner. This amendment was properly allowed, but the admission made in the original petition could be, and was, used as evidence against her. It is contended that the issue involved in the possessory-warrant case is the same as that which was involved in the other suits. This is not correct. The only question involved in the possessory-warrant proceeding is one of possession, and the question of title is not involved. It is contended that the question of title was adjudicated in the former case. Even if this was true, such an adjudication would not necessarily bar a possessory-warrant proceeding. It is legally possible for one to be entitled to the immediate possession of personalty as against another, although the other may have the legal title to the property. The person to whom the possession of property is awarded in a possessory-warrant proceeding is required, by law, to give bond to have the property forthcoming to answer any suit that may be brought against him by his adversary within four years. Civil ■Code, §4802. The very purpose of this statute is to protect the holder of the legal title in the event his adversary is the one to whom the law allows the immediate possession notwithstanding
Judgment affirmed.