Chancey v. Whinnery

1915 OK 123, 147 P. 1036, 47 Okla. 272, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 141
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 2, 1915
Docket5928
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 1915 OK 123 (Chancey v. Whinnery) 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
Chancey v. Whinnery, 1915 OK 123, 147 P. 1036, 47 Okla. 272, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 141 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

SHARP, J.

This case presents error from the district court of Okmulgee county, and involves the title to the allotment of Pompey West, a deceased full-blood Creek Indian, who died intestate on April 17, 1911. At the time of his death said Pompey West left surviving him no wife, no children, no issue of any children, no mother, no brother or sister. On April 24, 1911, Mary Barnett, maternal grandmother of said Pompey West, made and executed to the plaintiff, Chancey, a warranty deed to Pompey’s allotment, which deed was duly approved by the county judge of Okmulgee county. On September 19, 1911, Billy West, the putative father of Pompey, executed a deed to said allotment to the defendant, which deed was also approved by the county court. On the part of plain *274 tiff in error it is insisted that Billy 'West and Sissie Barnett (daughter of Mary Barnett), the mother of Pompey West, were never legally married under the laws or tribal customs of the Creeks, for the reason that, at the time Billy and Sissie assumed their relations by living together, Billy had a living, undivorced wife named Sardeeka, and that hence the relations existing between Billy and Sissie were adulterous, and not matrimonial, and that, even though Pompey was the son of Billy, he was an illegitimate from whom Billy could not inherit at his death. Plaintiff in his amended reply pleads and here relies upon sections 308, 309, 311, 312, 313, 314, 315, of the Creek statute on marriage and divorce, approved October 22, 1881. Constitution and Laws of the Muskogee Nation, Compiled and Codified by A. P. McKellop, under Act October 15, 1892, pp. 108, 109; Constitution and Laws of the Muskogee Nation, as compiled by L. C. Perryman, March 1, 1890, pp. 108, 109.

By the undisputed evidence it was established that Billy West and Sardeeka had, for a number of years prior to the passage of the above-named act, sustained toward each other the relation of husband and wife, according to the customs and usages of the Creek people. It was further proven that this relationship continued until during the year after the close of the Spieche or Green Peach Rebellion, which, according to the evidence, occurred during the years 1882 and 1883. Billy testified that during the latter year he and Sardeeka separated and abandoned their marriage relations on account of Sardeeka’s transgressions; that some years thereafter he met Sissie while the two were employed by Jackson Barnett, and that they then agreed to live together; that he first consulted Jim Barnett (presumably Sissie’s father), and obtained his consent to their marriage. Billy and Sissie continued to live and co-habit together, until the latter’s death, which occurred in about the year 1891. While there is some dispute as *275 to the true relationship sustained by these parties toward each other, there is abundant evidence that they recognized and treated each other as husband and wife, and that they were generally reputed to be such among their relatives and acquaintances, and those with whom they came in contact. This we held in Fender, Adm’r. et al. v. Segro et al., 41 Okla. 318, 137 Pac. 103, to be sufficient to give rise to a presumption that the parties had previously entered into an actual marriage. Such was the conclusion reached by the trial court, who found that Pompey West left surviving him, as his sole and only heir at law, his father, Billy West; and “the court finds that Pompey West was the legitimate child of Billy West and Sissie Barnett, who were lawfully married according to Creek custom prior to 1890, and that they lived together as husband and wife up until the death of Sissie Barnett.”

The position of counsel for plaintiff in error is, as we understand, that Billy and Sardeeka not having been divorced as provided by the statutes of the Creek Nation, the former was incompetent to enter into the marriage relation with Sissie. The validity of Indian marriages •contracted between members of any Indian tribe, in accordance with the laws and customs of such tribe, where the tribal relations and government existed at the time of the marriage, is one generally, if not universally, recognized, and is the settled law of this jurisdiction. Cyr v. Walker, 29 Okla. 281, 116 Pac. 931, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 795; Oklahoma Land Co. et al. v. Thomas et al., 34 Okla. 681, 120 Pac. 8; Buck v. Branson, 34 Okla. 807, 127 Pac. 436, 50 L. R. A. (N. S.) 876.

Billy and Sardeeka having, therefore, been lawfully married according to the tribal customs, and having lived together as husband and wife, subsequent to the passage of the Creek statute regulating divorce, it is insisted that, there being no proof of‘a legal divorce, it can only follow that the relationship between Billy and Sissie was meretri *276 cious, and that Pompey was not, therefore, the legitimate son of Billy. But what proof is there that Billy and Sardeeka were never divorced? The statement by Billy that he had never applied for a divorce from Sardeeka in the district court of the Creek Nation is no evidence that Sardeeka had not obtained a legal divorce from Billy. Marriage will not be destroyed on presumption. The law is astute to preserve the sanctity of the marriage relation, the legitimacy of children, and stability of descent and distribution, and therefore presumes innocence and virtue in the absence of proof of the contrary. Coachman v. Sims et al., 36 Okla. 536, 129 Pac. 845; Clarkson et al. v. Washington, 38 Okla. 4, 131 Pac. 935.

In Haile v. Hale, 40 Okla. 101, 135 Pac. 1143, the plaintiff testified that she had never obtained a divorce from her first husband, but did not testify as to whether he obtained a divorce from her and that by such divorce their marriage relations were dissolved. There the defendant introduced depositions of the clerks of the circuit courts of three counties in Illinois and one county in Texas, in which counties the plaintiff’s former husband had at different times resided. It was said by the court that the evidence did not establish that the counties named in the depositions were the only counties in which said former husband resided during said time and that said courts were the only courts that had jurisdiction to grant, him a divorce. It was further said that the stability of descent and distribution, the rendering illegitimate of innocent children upon such facts as were presented by the record in that case, established the wisdom of the presumption that sustains the validity of a marriage contracted under the forms of the law; and it was held that the trial court did not err in his finding to the effect that the presumption had not been overcome. The syllabus in part reads:

*277 “Where a marriage has been consummated in accordance with the form of the law, the law indulges a strong presumption in favor of its validity. One who asserts the. invalidity of such a marriage because one of the parties thereto has been formerly married, and the spouse of such former marriage is still living, has upon him the burden of proving that the first marriage has not been dissolved by divorce or lawful separation.”

In Bishop on Marriage, Divorce, and Separation, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 123, 147 P. 1036, 47 Okla. 272, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chancey-v-whinnery-okla-1915.