City of Wilburton, Oklahoma, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Deno Maggi and Mike Hugo v. Alex Swafford

253 F.2d 479
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 14, 1958
Docket5663_1
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 253 F.2d 479 (City of Wilburton, Oklahoma, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Deno Maggi and Mike Hugo v. Alex Swafford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Wilburton, Oklahoma, Magnolia Petroleum Company, Deno Maggi and Mike Hugo v. Alex Swafford, 253 F.2d 479 (10th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

*481 MURRAH, Circuit Judge.

This suit involves the title to the abandoned right of way of the M. K. & T. Railway Company within the limits of the City of Wilburton, Latimer County, Oklahoma. The parcels were originally Indian lands of the Chickasaw and Choctaw Tribes, and the first and principal question is whether, upon abandonment, title thereto reverted to the City of Wil-burton, or to the successor to the paten-tee from the tribes. The answer turns on a construction of federal law relating to disposition of Indian lands. Exercising its jurisdiction based upon a federal question and requisite amount in controversy, the trial court quieted the title of the successor to the patentee, and the City of Wilburton and those claiming under it have appealed.

The decisive facts are undisputed. The M. K. & T. Railway acquired the right of way in 1906 from the Choctaw Indian Tribe under Section 13 of the Enid-Anadarko Act of February 28, 1902 (32 Stat. 43), which authorized railroads to condemn rights of way for railroad purposes across Indian Territory. The right of way in litigation thus acquired was upon segregated coal and asphalt tribal lands reserved from allotment under Sections 26(d) and 58 of the Choctaw-Chickasaw Agreement, approved July 1, 1902, 32 Stat. 641. About the time the Railway came into possession of the right of way Congress passed the Act of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. 137) to provide for the final disposition of the affairs of the Five Civilized Tribes, including the sale or disposition of all unallotted surplus tribal lands and assets.

Section 13 of the latter Act continued the reservation of all coal and asphalt lands, whether leased or unleased, until the expiration of the existing leases, or until otherwise provided by law. And, Section 14 of the Act provided in effect that all lands theretofore reserved from allotment for the use and benefit of any person, corporation or organization should be conveyed to such person, corporation or organization entitled thereto; provided that if, before conveyance, such reserved lands be abandoned for the use for which they were reserved, they would revert to the Tribe for disposition as other surplus lands; provided further, however, with respect to railroad rights of way or easements in the nature of right of way for railroad purposes, the railroad could acquire title thereto under rules and regulations to be prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, at a valuation to be determined by him. But, if any railroad company failed to acquire the title to its right of way in accordance with the prescribed regulations, or ceased to use the land for the purpose for which it was reserved, title would thereupon vest in the owner of the legal subdivision of which the land so abandoned was a part, “except lands within a municipality, the title to which, upon abandonment, shall vest in such municipality.” The adjudicated purpose of Section 14 was to avoid the evils arising from the retention in the tribe, as remote dedicators, strips or small tracts reserved for right of way purposes for railroad use. And see United States v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 10 Cir., 110 F.2d 212; United States v. Drumb, 10 Cir., 152 F.2d 821. The Railroad did not acquire title to the land as provided in the regulations, and in 1912, Congress passed an act to provide for the sale of the surface of the reserved segregated coal and asphalt land of the Choctaw-Chickasaw Nations, said surface to “include the entire estate save the coal and asphalt reserved.” 37 Stat. 67, § 1. The Act specifically provided that when the full purchase price of any such segregated land had been paid as provided in the Act, the chief executives of the two tribes would execute and deliver, with the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, to each purchaser “an appropriate patent or instrument of conveyance, conveying to the purchaser the property so sold, and all conveyances made under this Act shall convey the fee in the land with reservation to the Choctaw and Chickasaw Tribes of Indians of the coal and asphalt in such land * * * ” § 7.

*482 In pursuance of the 1912 Act, supra, a plat of Latimer County, Oklahoma, Township Addition Number 4, was filed in the office of the Secretary of the Interior as a part of the segregated coal and asphalt lands of the Tribes. Among the lots surveyed and platted therein were lots 69 and 70, and delineated thereon was the north 1.15 acres of lot 69, and the north 5 acres of lot 70, then occupied by the M. K. & T. Railway Company for railroad purposes. In August 1930, the Secretary of the Interior approved a patent issued by the Choctaw-Chickasaw Nations, conveying to the Degnan-Mc-Connell Coal and Coke Company, among other lands, “ * * * Lot No. Sixty-nine (69), including one and 15/100 (1.15) acres subject to right of way for the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway * * * and Lot No. Seventy (70) including five and no/100 (5.00) acres subject to right of way for M. K. & T. Railway * * and subject to all reservations, restrictions, covenants and conditions contained or provided for in the Act of February 19, 1912, under which the above mentioned surface was sold. By mesne conveyance, the appellee, Swaf-ford, acquired by executor’s deed, “Lot 69 * * * less that part conveyed by deed recorded in Book 25, page 521; * * * Lot 70 * * * less that part conveyed by deed recorded in Book 32, Page 85 * *

Thereafter, and in 1948, the City of Wilburton extended its boundaries to include for the first time the lands involved here, and in the following March 1950, the M. K. & T. Railway officially abandoned the right of way and removed its tracks and improvements therefrom. It now disclaims any interest therein. The appellee has paid ad valorem taxes on the lands since the year 1953.

No one denies that the servient estate in the right of way remained in the Tribe until the surface estate was conveyed by patent in pursuance of the Act of 1912, apparently to the Coal Company-lessee of the underlying coal and asphalt. Nor does any one doubt the legislative power under the Act of 1912 to authorize and direct the Tribe to convey the surface of the said lands, subject to the right of way, by patent deed under prescribed regulations, or that the conveyance to the Coal Company was pursuant thereto and in accordance therewith.

The City of Wilburton and those claiming under it take the position, however, that the right of vesture upon abandonment as provided in Section 14 of the Act of 1906, ran with the land, and was contingent only upon abandonment of the right of way within the city limits of Wilburton, in which event it vested absolutely in the City. They argue, therefore, that the tribal patent under the Act of 1912 was “necessarily subject to the applicable provisions of such law for the final disposition of the right of way strip.” The essence of this contention must therefore be that vesture upon abandonment under the second proviso of Section 14 overrides and renders invalid the tribal patent executed pursuant to the Act of 1912.

The reversionary and vesture provisions of Section 14 were here for consideration in United States v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., supra; United States v. Drumb, supra; Oklahoma City-Ada-Atoka Railway Co. v. City of Ada, 10 Cir., 182 F.2d 293

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253 F.2d 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-wilburton-oklahoma-magnolia-petroleum-company-deno-maggi-and-ca10-1958.