Boyd v. Weer

1926 OK 638, 253 P. 988, 124 Okla. 91, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 27, 1926
Docket16763
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1926 OK 638 (Boyd v. Weer) 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
Boyd v. Weer, 1926 OK 638, 253 P. 988, 124 Okla. 91, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 584 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

THREADGILL, C.

The principal question involved in this appeal is the validity and character of che deed' executed by a full-blood Creek Indian in 1917, conveying her inherited interest im allotted lands to another full-blood Creek Indian for the consideration of his inherited interest in other allotted lands amd when said deed is approved by the county court having jur-isdicción of the administration of the deceased allottee’s estate.

The facts in the case are substantially as follows: John McIntosh and Susan McIntosh were husband and wife and full-blood Creek Indians, and each had an allotment of 160 acres of tribal lands, John’s allotment being the S. W. 14 and Susan’s allotment -being the S. E. 14 of the same section, being section 20, T. 16 N., R. 19 E., in Wagoner county. The said John McIntosh died in 1903 leaving his widow, Susan; also, as his only surviving heirs, a son named Commodore McIntosh, and a daughter named An-, netta McIntosh. This daughter died in December of the same year following her iath- or’s death, leaving no husband, but one child, Etta Cox. nee McIntosh, as her sole and only heir. Susan McIntosh died in 1905, leaving as her only heirs said Commodore McIntosh -and said granddaughter, Etta Cox, who were both full-blood Creek Indians. They each inherited an undivided one-half interest in the two allotments. Ou March 30, 1917, the said Commodore McIntosh deeded to said Etta Cox, nee McIntosh, his undivided one-half interest in and to the S. W. 14 of said ■ section 20, and for the consideration of her undivided one-half interest in and to'the S. E. 14 of said section 20, which she deeded to him on the same date for said consideration, and, thereafter, on April 25, 1917. the county court of Wagoner county, by proper orders, approved these deeds and they were recorded according to law. Thereafter Commodore McIntosh died March 2, 1923, in Tulsa county, where he had his home, and left surviving him as his only heirs, his widow, Jamima McIntosh, who was a white woman, and five daughters, *92 namely, the plaintiff, Edna Weer, and Maggie Johnson, Lizzie McKmzie, Iona Hume, and Della Keel, defendants in this action, and the childr'en of a deceased daughter, Arsyno Kerr, who died prior to his death, the said children being. Ethel Baker, nee Kerr, Commodore Kerr, a minor, Dennis Kerr, a minor, and Vera Kerr, also a minor. The said children wer'e enrolled as Creek Indians of one-half blood, and the said grandchildren as Creek Indians of one-fourth blood. Before Commodore McIntosh’s’ death he and his wife placed a mortgage on this southeast quarter section of land, and the validity of this mortgage is not questioned. After his de'ath in May 19, 1923, his widow, Jamima, was appointed administratrix of his estate in the county court of Tulsa county. Lotice to creditors was given and Hunsecker & Company presented for allowance for groceries a claim in the sum of $152.14, J. A. Barth Mercantile Company presented a claim for a burial outfit in the sum of $511, and Dr. C. L. Robertson presented a claim for medical services in the sum of $264, which claims were duly allowed by the ad-ministratrix and approved by the court, and ordered paid, and the administratrix having not funds with which to make payment, upon her application for that purpose, the court ordered this S. E. % of said section 21, the land in controversy, to be sold for the purpose of paying said cíaims, and any other indebtedness, against the estate. The sales proceedings wer'e commenced, but before a sale was consummated and on December 22, 1924, the administratrix filed a petition to be discharged on the ground that the land ordered' sold was not subject to administration or liable for the debts of the estate. Thereupon, the claimants above mentioned .filed a protest and upon a hearing the court denied the petition and sustained the protest and again ordered the land sold and the administratrix appealed from the order to the district court where the appeal was pending at the time this cause was tried and appeal taken to th'e Supreme Court. After the county court denied the petition of administratrix to be discharged, and sustained the protest of the claimants as above stated, and on December 27. 1924, Edna Weer, one of the defendants in error, as plaintiff, commenced this action against the administratrix and the h'eirs above named and the county judge of Tulsa county and the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees and assigns of Commodore McIntosh, deceased, for the purpose of recovering and having partitioned to her a one-ninth interest in said tract of land, and for a decree setting aside the orders of the county -court to sell said land, and for an injunction to prevent the county judge from taking any steps to dispose of said land as assets of the estate of Commodore McIntosh, deceased. The court appointed a guardian ad litem to represent the minors, and all of the heirs, brought into the case as defendants, field answers concurring in the petition of the plaintiff and asking for the same relief. The three claimants against the estate of Commodore McIntosh, deceased, defended in the case as interveners and s'et up their claims, and contended that they were approved by proper orders of the county court and had been ordered paid, and they were legal and binding claims against the said estate, and the land involved in the action, and they further contended that the land was not restricted as alleged by the plaintiff and the heirs of th'e estate, but that the same was nonrestricted land and subject to the payment of their claims. They contended further that the district court was without jurisdiction to partition th'e land or to grant any relief asked for by plaintiff, and the heirs, contrary to the orders of the county court of Tulsa county, which were in full force and effect and un-appealed from. They attached copies of their claims and copies of the orders and judgment of the county court approving them and ordering them paid by sale of said land. Rep’ies wer'e filed to the affirmative allegations of the interplea, and the issues as thus made up were tried to the court on Mhrch 19, 1925, and the court found in fav- or of the heirs and against the contention of the interveners, and rendered judgment accordingly, and the interveners and the county judge have appealed.

It appears from the record that the heirs do not contend that the transaction betwe’en Commodore McIntosh and Etta Oox, nee McIntosh, approved by the county court, was a void transaction, but they do contend that the undivided interest that 'each one transferred to the other by deed, under the approval of the county court, was still restricted th’e same as the interest that was not so transferred. It is not questioned that the one-half interest not transferred was restricted. They say “they agreed to divide or partition the lands” by making the deeds as they did. They quote the Act of Congress of May 27, 1908, section 9, and authorities to show that the transaction was not a partition. and wte agree with them in this. They concede that the county court, under said Act of Congress, had power to approve deeds *93 made in pursuance of a voluntary agreement entered into by the full-blood heirs whereby they agreed that the one-fourth Section should be allotted to one heir in severalty and the •other one-fourth section to the other heir in .severalty. We agree with them in this statement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 638, 253 P. 988, 124 Okla. 91, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-weer-okla-1926.