Cannon v. Hum-pah-to-kah

1949 OK 181, 217 P.2d 505, 203 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 509
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 20, 1949
DocketNo. 31037
StatusPublished

This text of 1949 OK 181 (Cannon v. Hum-pah-to-kah) 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
Cannon v. Hum-pah-to-kah, 1949 OK 181, 217 P.2d 505, 203 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 509 (Okla. 1949).

Opinion

O’NEAL, J.

Mo-se-che-he, Osage Indian allottee No. 34, died on the 30th day of June, 1934, while a resident of Osage county, leaving an estate, having a situs in Osage county, Oklahoma, which is a restricted Osage Indian estate, Mo-se-che-he having been a full-blood Osage Indian and never had issued to her a certificate of competency.

Decedent left surviving her no issue, no father, no mother, no brother, no sister, nor any descendants of any deceased child or children.

There was a controversy as to whether or not she left a will and whether or not she left surviving her a husband. Those questions were before this court and it was determined that Mose-che-he left surviving her a husband —Albert Fierro, otherwise known as Jack Rogers, and that she had executed a will while she was single and before her marriage to Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers), and that by said marriage the will was revoked. In re Mo-se-che-he’s Estate, Red Eagle et al. v. Rogers et al., 188 Okla. 228, 107 P. 2d 999.

Pending the litigation above mentioned, joint letters of administration were issued to Leah Duncan and W. C. Tucker.

About May 19, 1938, Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) filed in the county court of Osage county, in a probate proceeding in the Mo-se-che-he Estate, his petition for determination of heirship. Therein he set out or described the property comprising the estate and alleged he was the surviving husband and sole heir of Mo-se-che-he and entitled to inherit the whole estate. He further alleged that there were certain other persons (naming them) claiming relationship to Mo-se-che-he and claiming the right to inherit.

Some seven individual Osage Indians, or groups of Osage Indians, contested the right of Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) to inherit, on the ground that he was not of Indian blood, and under the Act of Congress of February 27, 1925, relating to inheritance from Osage Indians, could not inherit from an Osage Indian of more than half blood who had not received a certificate of competency. Each of said individual claimants, or groups of claimants, claimed to be the next of kin to Mo-se-che-he, and entitled to inherit to the exclusion of all other claimants. Among these individual claimants, or groups of claimants, were: (1) Peter Kenworthy (Osage Indian Allottee No. 316), who was living at the time Mo-se-che-he died. He claimed to be a nephew of Mo-se-che-he. (2) E-ne-op-pe (Osage Indian Allottee No. 428), who was living at the time Mo-se-che-he died. She claimed to be a first cousin of Mo-seche-he. Joseph Cannon (Osage Allottee No. 106), who claimed to be a first cousin, and Alex Cannon (Osage Indian Allottee No. 109), who claimed to be a first cousin of Mo-se-che-he. (3) Hum-pah-to-kah (Osage Indian Allottee No. 70), Ralph Hamilton (Osage Indian Allottee No. 72) and Donnie White-horn (Osage Indian Allottee No. 159). This group claimed to be second cousins of Mo-se-che-he.

The other four individual Osage Indian claimants, or groups of claimants, dropped out of the case, either by withdrawal or failure to appeal, and are not involved in this appeal.

[8]*8While the proceedings were pending, E-ne-op-pe died and the cause was revived as to her in the name of Johnie Mohon, her executor, with the will annexed, and her heirs, legatees and devisees.

Peter Kenworthy died pending the proceedings and the case was revived as to him in the name of L. A. Binkley, his executor and his heirs, legatees and devisees.

Guardians ad litem were appointed for certain minor children of the original claimants who died pending the proceedings. The matter was set for hearing in the county court, but upon objection of some of the claimants, an order was entered continuing the matter until after a final decision in the case of Red Eagle et al. v. Rogers et al., supra.

The mandate of the Supreme Court in the Red Eagle case was received and spread of record in the county court December 31, 1940. Thereafter the joint administrators filed their accounts and the matter of determination of heir-ship was set for hearing March 31, 1941.

After the hearing the county court found and held: (1) that Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) failed to establish that he was of Indian blood, and that he was not an heir of Mo-se-che-he and that he was not entitled to participate in or inherit any part of the estate of Mose-che-he; (2) that E-ne-op-pe (deceased), Ralph Cannon, Alex Cannon, and Peter Kenworthy (deceased) were first cousins and next of kin to Mo-seche-he; (3) that claimants Hum-pa-tokah, Ralph Hamilton and Donnie White-horn, and each of them, failed to show by the evidence any kinship sufficiently close to make them or either of them legal heirs or heir to Mo-se-che-he, as against the first cousins.

The county court found against all other claimants and ordered the estate to be distributed: to the heirs and devisees of the estate of E-ne-op-pe, one-fourth; to Joseph Cannon, a first cousin, one-fourth; to Alex Cannon, a first cousin, one-fourth; and to the heirs, legatees, and devisees of Peter Kenworthy, a first cousin who died subsequent to the death of Mo-se-chehe, according to the terms and conditions of his last will and testament, one-fourth.

Appeals were perfected in the district court by Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers), Hum-pah-to-kah, Ralph Hamilton, Donnie Whitehorn and other claimants. The district court, on appeal, after trial de novo, found and held that Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) is not of Indian blood and, therefore, hot entitled to inherit and that the legal heirs of Mose-che-he are: Hum-pah-to-kah, Ralph Hamilton, and Donnie Whitehorn, second cousins, each to take one-third part.

From this finding and judgment Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) appealed to this court. Joseph Cannon, Alex Cannon, the executor of E-ne-op-pe, her heirs, legatees, devisees, and the heirs, legatees and devisees of Peter Ken-worthy, filed cross-petitions in error. On December . . . , 1948, Albert Fierro (Jack Rogers) dismissed his appeal and the matter is now pending on the cross-appeals of Osage Indian claimants Joseph Cannon, Alex Cannon, and the heirs of E-ne-op-pe and the cross-appeal of the heirs of Peter Kenworthy.

Joseph Cannon and Alex Cannon claim to be first cousins of Mo-se-chehe and the heirs of E-ne-op-pe claim that she was a first cousin of Mose-che-he. They all claim through the father of Mo-se-che-he, and they are referred to as the “Cannon Group.” The heirs et cetera of Peter Kenworthy claim that he was a nephew of Mose-che-he also on the father’s side, but by different name, and they are referred to as the “Kenworthy Group.” Defendants in error claim as second cousins through the mother of Mo-seche-he and they are referred as to the “Hum-pah-to-kah Group.”

There are many assignments of error but the appellants present but one question: that the findings of the trial [9]*9court are clearly against the weight of the evidence and the judgment is contrary to law.

In the district court there was evidence consisting of the testimony of some fifty witnesses and documentary evidence covering about 1,050 typewritten pages in the case-made.

In the contest between the several Indian claimants, the court made separate findings of fact and conclusions of law. The first three findings of fact set forth the groups of claimants and their respective claims as to relationship of Mo-se-che-he and how it arose. These findings are not assailed and the briefs of the respective parties follow these findings.

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Bluebook (online)
1949 OK 181, 217 P.2d 505, 203 Okla. 6, 1949 Okla. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cannon-v-hum-pah-to-kah-okla-1949.