Bruner v. Oswald

1919 OK 33, 178 P. 693, 72 Okla. 42, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1919
Docket8654
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1919 OK 33 (Bruner v. Oswald) 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
Bruner v. Oswald, 1919 OK 33, 178 P. 693, 72 Okla. 42, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 301 (Okla. 1919).

Opinion

PITCHFORD. J.

Robert Bruner, plaintiff *43 iii error, commenced this action in the district court of Creek county against the defendants, for the purpose of quieting title to certain lands- The land in question was the allotment of Susie-Grayson, an enrolled Creek freedman. Susie Grayson was born September 1, 190(1 and died March 23. 1902. The allotment was made in her name to her heirs on July 9, 1900. Susie Grayson was the daughter of Alice Grayson, an enrolled Creek freedman, who died on March 16, 1901. The defendants deraigned title through conveyances from the heirs of Alice Gray-son ; that is, the heirs of Susie Grayson o.n her maternal side. The plaintiff is an enrolled Seminole freedman, and claims to have been the lawfiul husband of Alice Grayson and the father of Susie Grayson, 'and', tlbereforie, under thie Arkansas law, found in chapter 49 of Mansfield’s. Digest, as modified by the provision to section 6 (f the Supplemental Creels Treaty (Act June 30, 1902, c. 1323, 32 Stat. 501), is entitled to inherit an undivided one half interest in the allotment of his deceased child.

The defendants’ conlention is that Robert Bruner was not the lawful husband of Alice Grayson, and that Susie was her illegitimate child, and therefore plaintiff could not inherit.- Defendants further contend that, regardless of the illegitimacy of the allottee, Susie Grayson, her putative father, Robert Bruner, could not inherit from her, because he was not a Creek citizen, or a descendant of a Creek citizen, and further, that the plaintiff, never having been in possession of the land, could not maintain an action solely to quiet title thereto.

When the case .came on for trial .on the 14th day of April, A. D. 1916, the plaintiff, Robert Bruner, and the defendants, by their respective attorneys, expressly agreed to waive a jury trial, and agreed to try the cause to the court, and, the parties having announced ready for trial, said cause was heard by the court. The court, having heard the evidence offered and introduced by the respective parties, found, among others, the following facts: (1) That the real estate in controversy was the allotment of one Susie Grayson, enrolled as a citizen of the Creek Tribe -of Indians; that she was 'born September 1, 1900, died March 23, 1902. (2) That said Susie Grayson was the illegitimate daughter of one Alice Gi’ayson, having been born out of wedlock; that said Alice Grayson died on March 16, 1901, and left surviving her no husband and no child or descendant, except the said Susie Gray-son ; and the said Alice Grayson never married; that the said Alice Grayson is the lawful child of Island and Sylla Grayson, husband and wife.' (3) That the plaintiff, Robert Bruner, is a duly enrolled member and citizen of the Seminole Nation, enrolled opposite No. 2011 upon the freedman roll of said nation, and was so enrolled in the month of July, A. D. 1898; that Rachel Bruner, his mother, is a duly enrolled citizen of the Seminole Nation, enrolled opposite No. 2217 upon the freedman roll thereof; that she died in the month of February, 1915; and the plaintiff’s father, Benjamin Bruner,1 died in the year 1885 or 1886; that the plaintiff was born before the war between the states, and the plaintiff’s ancestors formerly were Creak slaves, to which findings the plaintiff duly excepted, and filed his motion for a new trial, which was overruled by the court and exceptions noted.

The main points relied upon by the plaintiff to secure a reversal of the judgment in the court below are that the court erred in overruling the motion of the plaintiff in error for a new trial, and holding that the lands in question were not in possession of the plaintiff, and were in the possession of the defendants; that Robert Bruner- was not capable of inheriting the lands, and the failure of the court to find specifically that the plaintiff was not the husband of Alice Gray-son. Were the findings of the court justified under the evidence in the case?

We have examined the briefs prepared by counsel for plaintiff and defendants, respectively, have carefully considered the evidence, and conclude that there was ample evidence to sustain the findings of the court below. The trial court could reasonably find, under the evidence, that the plaintiff was duly enrolled as a Seminole: his mother was also enrolled as a Seminole; his father died in the Seminole country some time between 1885 and 1886; further, that the plaintiff, prior to the birth of Susie Gray-son, was living with a woman by the name of Annie, .who was generally known to be his wife; that he is the father of several children by Annie prior to the birth of Susie; that after the death of Alice Gray-son, the mother of Susie, the plaintiff was still found living with his Seminole wife, Annie.

The plaintiff attempts to prove that prior to the birth of Susie, he left the Seminole country and lived among the Greek Tribe; that he and Alice contracted the relation of man and wife under the customs prevailing among the Greeks; that he lived with Alice for some time as his wife^ and that just prior to her confinement, she went to the home of her father and mother, Island and *44 Sylla Grayson; tliat soon after she returned to the home of her father and mother, she was confined; that he and Alice never lived together after that. This contention on the part of the plaintiff is attempted to he sustained hy certain witnesses. Their evidence, as would naturally he expected, being given many years after the occurrence of the event about which they testified, would, in many particulars be vague and hazy. The uncon-troverted evidence shows that the plaintiff had previously been married and was the father of several children by his former wife, and in order to find that the relation of man and wife existed between the plaintiff and Alice, we would be forced to indulge a mere presumption, which, under the circumstances of this case, would be extremely violent.

We have carefully read the authorities cited by plaintiff in error relating to common-law marriages, but under the evidence we hold there was not even a common-law marriage between Robert and Alice shown to exist. Placing the most favorable construction upon the testimony of plaintiff’s witnesses as to the relations between Robert and Alice, we are irresistibly drawn to the conclusion that all that is: established is the fact that Robert left Annie and her children and went out for a summer’s vacation, and simply poached on others’ preserves. If the plaintiff indulged-the pleasing thought that Alice had been bis wife, and that he was the father of Susie, he was grossly lacking in either marital or parental solicitude: he failed to appreciate the claims that Alice had upon him, who-, broken in health-, returned to the home of her father and mother and there gave birth to Susie. It is true that one witness testifies that he went with the plaintiff to see Alice during her confinement, and that this witness testifies to the generosity of the plaintiff, in that he gave Alice at the time a dollar or such matter; at least he testifies that he was so informed by plaintiff. The plaintiff -never contributed anything towards the burial of Alice or Susie, and waited almost 12 years after the death of Susie before making any claim to her estate. Another significant fact disclosed -by the- evidence is that the mother of Alice was never able to ascertain from her daughter who was -the father of her child. So far as the evidence discloses, Alice never complained, never indicated to any one the father of Susie.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1919 OK 33, 178 P. 693, 72 Okla. 42, 1919 Okla. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruner-v-oswald-okla-1919.