Carter Oil Co. v. Scott

12 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1127
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Oklahoma
DecidedMay 21, 1926
DocketNo. 10
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 F.2d 780 (Carter Oil Co. v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter Oil Co. v. Scott, 12 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1127 (N.D. Okla. 1926).

Opinion

KENNAMER, District Judge.

This is an action to quiet "the title to certain land which had been allotted to Louisa Fulsom, a Creek Indian, enrolled opposite roll No. 3917, by the Muskogee or Creek Nation.. It is undisputed that Louisa Fulsom was the daughter of Co-wok-o-ehee and Hoktee, who were members of Artusse town, a Creek town; that she was the wife of Thomas Fulsom; and that she had no children. Louisa, the allottee, was survived by a sister, Jemima Fulsom, who died a short time after the death of the allottee, leaving a daughter, Lena Edwards. Co-wok-o-ehee, the father of the allottee, was a member of the Creek Tribe of Indians, -while Hoktee, the mother, was a Seminole Indian. The Seminóles were a wandering tribe, having separated at a very early date from the Creek Tribe, of which they were originally a part, and in later years intermarriage between the two tribes became not uncommon. It was not unusual, in a case of intermarriage between members of two different Indian tribes, that the- children of such marriage be enrolled as members of different tribes, and such a situation arose in Co-wok-o-ehee and Hoktee’s family. The allottee, Louisa, was enrolled as a member of the Creek Tribe, her father being a Creek, while her sister, Jemima, was enrolled as a member of the tribe to which her mother belonged, the Seminole Tribe. Lena, the daughter of Jemima and the niece of Louisa, the allottee,', was a Seminole, being enrolled [781]*781as a member of her mother’s tribe. Plaintiff’s grantors secured deeds of conveyance from Lena, and this constitutes the basis of plaintiff’s claim.

Certain defendants, which, for the purpose of convenience, will be designated the Scott claimants, assert a claim to the title of the lands involved, by reason of their relation to the sister of Co-wok-o-ehee. It is their claim that Cheninee was a sister of the allottee’s father, that she was a member of the Creek Tribe of Indians, and that, although they are more distantly related to Co-wok-o-ehee than Lena, they being grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Cheninee, they are entitled to inherit to the exclusion of Lena, because they are members of the Creek Tribe of Indians. This contention will involve a consideration of certain acts and treaties, as well as decided eases, which will be discussed at some length. Other claimants, to be designated the Tiger heirs, base their claim to the lands involved by reason of being descendants of one Leester, or Lizzie Tiger, a sister of Hoktee, the mother of the allottee.

The Anderson heirs, so termed for convenience, from whom Cornelius claims, base their right to the lands in question upon the assertion that the allottee, Louisa, had a sister by name of Betsy, who died subsequent to the death of the allottee, and who was enrolled as a member of the Creek Tribe. The evidence adduced upon the trial of the ease establishes conclusively that Co-wok-o-ehee and Hoktee of Artusse town, the father and mother of Louisa, the allottee, never had a child by name of Betsy. That there were other Indians by name of Co-wok-ochee was clearly established, and there was evidence tending to prove that the father of Betsy was an Indian by this name. However, the evidence disclosed that the father of Betsy was a different Co-wok-o-ehee than the father of Louisa, and that these claimants failed to prove that they were descendants of the Co-wok-o-chee, the father of Louisa, the allottee.

The interveners, Elizabeth Gambrell and Beulah Mingo, claim title as descendants of an alleged sister and brother of the allottee, Louisa Eulsom, whose names are Betsy Fife and Stephen Fife, respectively. Evidence was offered tending to show that the father of one Betsy Fife and Stephen Fife was an Indian by name of Co-wok-o-ehee, who was a member of the Creek Tribe. However, it was established beyond all question of doubt that the Co-wok-o-chee, the father of Betsy and Stephen Fife, was not the Co-wok-o-chee of Artusse town, and the one who was the father of Louisa and Jemima. These interveners failed to prove that they were descendants of the Co-wok-o-ehee, who was the father of the allottee. Others filed pleadings in this cause, setting up claims to the land in question, but did not appear at the trial of the ease.

In addition to numerous witnesses, there was introduced into the case a number of exhibits, consisting principally of records of the Indian Agency, the records of which were established by the Dawes Commission, whose duty it was to make rolls of the citizens of the Five Civilized Indian Tribes. The Commission, by virtue of various acts of Congress, was compelled, in making the rolls of citizens, to make such rolls descriptive of the citizens enrolled, so that any particular citizen could be identified from the rolls so made. It was the duty of the Commission to distribute the lands among the various Indians, and it cannot be doubted that it was indispensable to the proper distribution of the property, there being a number of citizens having the same names upon the rolls, that the rolls be so descriptive of a citizen as to make it possible to distinguish one citizen from another. The Commission employed the use of a census card for each citizen, entered on the rolls of citizenship. This card contains a description of the citizen enrolled upon the final approved rolls of the Five Civilized Tribes. The information set forth on the cards, such as the age, sex, and parentage of the citizen, is descriptive matter, and, considering the fact that these descriptive words were placed upon these records pursuant to a statutory duty, as a matter of evidence, they are entitled to great weight, and cannot and will not be discredited or ignored, in the absence of strong and convincing evidence to the contrary. Page v. Atkins, 86 Okl. 290, 208 P. 807, 818. Certified copies of Creek and Seminole census cards clearly establish the facts above set forth.

By Act of Congress of May 2, 1890, c. 182, 26 Stat. 81, §§30 and 31, chapter 49 of Mansfield’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas were put in force in the Indian Territory, to govern the descent and distribution of lands allotted to Indians. Section 2531 of said Digest provides as, follows: •

“In eases where the intestate shall die without descendants, if the estate come by the father, then it shall ascend to the father and his heirs; if by the mother, the estate, or so much thereof as came by the mother, [782]*782shall ascend to the mother and her heirs. * # * 1J

The land and estate involved in this action came to Louisa as a member of the Creek Tribe of Indians, her father’s tribe. It is clear that the estate came to her by her father, Co-wok-o-ehee, since her mother was a Seminole. The whole estate must he said to have “come by the father,” so that the estate, by reason of the above section of Mansfield’s Digest governing the descent and distribution of lands at the time of the death of the allottee, ascends to the father, Co-wok-o-ehee, and his heirs. Under this “ancestral estate .doctrine,” none of the inheritance will go to the heirs of the allottee’s mother, since she is a Seminole, for the reason that no part of the estate can be held to have come by the mother. The Tiger heirs claim the estate as descendants of a sister of the allottee’s mother; but, under the doctrine above announced, I am of the opinion that they are not entitled to the estate.

Thus the controversy is narrowed down to the plaintiff’s claim and the claim of the. Scott heirs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 F.2d 780, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-oil-co-v-scott-oknd-1926.