Bartlesville Vitrified Brick Co. v. Barker

1910 OK 117, 109 P. 72, 26 Okla. 144, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 10, 1910
Docket483
StatusPublished

This text of 1910 OK 117 (Bartlesville Vitrified Brick Co. v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlesville Vitrified Brick Co. v. Barker, 1910 OK 117, 109 P. 72, 26 Okla. 144, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 23 (Okla. 1910).

Opinion

*145 WILLIAMS, J.

This appeal is prosecuted from an interlocutory order of the district court of Washington county, restraining the plaintiff in error from entering upon certain land therein described. The plaintiff’s petition (defendant in error here) alleges that the plaintiff is in possession of a portion of said land, being the owner and entitled to the possession of all of the same. The undisputed facts appear to be as follows:

In the year 1902 one Frank Overlees, a claimant to citizenship by intermarriage, was in possession of the improvements upon 30 acres of land, including the 10 acres of land involved in this action, and the owner of the improvements thereon. Said Overlees placed said company in possessoin of said land, with the- right to erect its plant thereupon, and under a contract to do everything in his power to vest the fee-simple title of said land .in said company when the laws permitted such step to be taken. Said brick plant was constructed upon a portion of said 30 acres, and the 10 acres in controversy, which contained the shale bed, utilized by said company for the purpose of procuring shale for the manufacture of brick. This condition continued until about a year and a half or two years prior to the making of this affidavit, at which time it became apparent that claimants to citizenship in the Cherokee Nation by intermarriage would be denied enrollment. Accordingly, by several transfers, the possessory right to said 30-aere tract, including the land involved in this suit, and the ownership of the improvements thereon, were transferred to other citizens of the Cherokee Nation entitled to hold said possessory right and said improvements. Finally the possessory title to said land and the ownership of the improvements thereon by said series of conveyances became vested in L. C. Eoss, administrator of the estate of) John Eoss, deceased, who caused said 10-acre tract to be fenced) off from all of the other lands. About three years prior to Sep-, tember, 1908, Guy Barker, the husband of Ollie T. Barker, the-defendant in error, was employed as an engineer by plaintiff in-, error. About a year after said employment said Barker was per-- *146 mitted to move a small box bouse, costing about $45, upon said 10-acre tract. This was permitted because of the fact of said Barker’s employment by said company, and at the same time several other employees had houses of the same character upon said land. The only purpose of said company in permitting the occupation of said land by said Barker was for his convenience, and for the purpose of enabling him' to avoid the paying of excessive rents. It was the circumstance of said Barker’s being permitted to move upon said land, with the consent and permission of said company, that enabled her to file on said land. A contest was immediately instituted against her by L. C. Ross, .administrator of the estate ■of John Ross, deceased, who was the actual owner of the improvements upon> the land in controversy, and in the possession thereof ■at the time of- defendant in error’s filing. Thereafter the heirs ■of said John Ross, deceased, executed a quitclaim deed, conveying said land to said company, which said deed is the basis of its title. 'The hearing of said contest was had before the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes at Muskogee, Old a., and the initial decision by said Commissioner was in favor of defendant in error on the ground that the sale of the said land by the heirs of John Ross-, before the decision of said contest case, amounted to an abandonment of said land by L. C. Ross, administrator of the estate of John Ross, deceased. Immediately L. C. Ross, administrator as aforesaid, filed a motion for a rehearing, on the ground that there ■was an error of law in so deciding said case; that an appeal had been prosecuted by L. C. Ross, administrator as aforesaid, from the decision of the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes, which said appeal was undetermined at the time of this hearing; ■and that a further appeal lies therefrom to the Honorable Secretary of the Interior, until the final determination of said contest is had in that department of the government. Said plaintiff in •error is solvent, a going concern, and competent to respond in 'damages in any amount for using shale' from or trespassing upon ■said 10-acre tract for the manufacture of brick, pending the contest before the Department of the Interior.

*147 Section 69 of an act styled "An act to provide for an allotment of the lands of the Cherokee Nation, for the disposition of townsites therein, and for other purposes” (Act July 1, 1902, c. 1375, 32 Stat. 716; EJedsoe’s Indian Land Laws, § 69, at page 463), provides that, after the expiration of nine months after the date of the original selection of an allotment by or for any citizen •of the Cherokee Tribe as provided in this act, no contest shall be instituted against such selection, and as early thereafter as practicable patent shall issue therefor; and contest having been instituted by virtue of this section, it necessarily follows that, as long as an appeal is pending from the decision of the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes, the same is not finally determined.

In the case of Tynon v. Hall et al., 22 Okla. 684, 98 Pac. 895, the court said:

“The defendant, Martha Hall, a Cherokee by blood, was claiming the lot by reason of her purchase from Eden, who was also a Cherokee citizen, and she had been in actual, peaceable possession of the same from the time she purchased it to the' time the suit was brought, at least. She duly filed upon the lot before the Cherokee townsite commission, and the plaintiff filed a contest against her. What the outcome of the contest was does not appear from the record, but it will seem that under the showing made the court below was evidently of the opinion that the possession of the defendant, which was clearly adverse to the right of the plaintiff, ought not to be disturbed while the contest was pending before the townsite commission, a tribunal which had exclusive juris-dction over that class of litigation. It is not unusual for courts to entertain ejectment suits to sustain the possessory rights of a plaintiff against mere trespassers or intruders; but such relief is invariably refused as between adverse claimants to the public domain. We believe there is a similarity in principle between sncb case and the case at bar.”

In Adams v. Couch et al., 1 Okla. 17, 26 Pac. 1009, the thircl paragraph of the syllabus reads as follows:

“The Land Department of the government will not be interfered with by the courts while it has charge of any contest proceedings between adverse claimants of the land.”

In the opinion the court said:

*148 “We have no doubt that the manifest intent of the laws of the United States was to invest in the Land Department exclusive jurisdiction of all questions relating to the sale and disposition of the public lands, up to the time of the issuance of the patent. While we do not wish to be understood as saying that this court, in a proper case, might not, or would not, grant relief on the prayer of a Iona fide

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Bluebook (online)
1910 OK 117, 109 P. 72, 26 Okla. 144, 1910 Okla. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlesville-vitrified-brick-co-v-barker-okla-1910.