Coker v. Moore

1926 OK 556, 249 P. 694, 121 Okla. 219, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 15, 1926
Docket14440
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1926 OK 556 (Coker v. Moore) 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
Coker v. Moore, 1926 OK 556, 249 P. 694, 121 Okla. 219, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 122 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

HUNT, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Creek county, prosecuted by R. J. Dixon and Colbert Coker, as plaintiffs in error, from a judgment rendered against them in an action wherein said R. J. Dixon was plaintiff, Colbert Coker was inter-vener, and' Lake Moore et al. were defendants. Since the action was filed in this court, to wit, on March 18, 1925, plaintiff in error R. J. Dixon dismissed his appeal with prejudice. leaving said Colbert Coker, in'ervener in the court below, as the sole plaintiff in error.

The title to three Creek allotments is involved; the same being the allotments of Polly Coker, Lucy Coker, and Jipsey Cokex'. all deceased. Colbert Coker is a son of Polly Coker, and a brother of Lucy and Jipsey Coker, and by reason thereof claims an undivided onedialf interest in each of said allotments. The defendant in error Lake Moore claims to be the owner in fee of each of said allotments by reason of conveyances toy certain heirs of the allottees, and by reason of a guardian’s deed from one Fred L. Strough, as guardian of Colbert Coker, purporting to convey whatever interest said Colbert Coker had inherited in the allotment of his mother, Polly Coker.

The assignments of error relied on by plaintiff in error are: First, that the court erred in finding and holding and adjudging that Charley Coker was the lawful husband of Polly Coker at the time of her death and that he, therefore, inherited an interest in the allotment of Polly Coker, Jipsey C'oker, and Lucy Coker. Second, that the court erred in finding and holding and -adjudging that Charley Coker was lawfully separated and divorced from Lizzie Coker, for that said findings and holdings are not sustained by the evidence and are contrary to the evidence. Third, that the court erred in finding and holding that Lake Moore acquired by purchase the interest of Colbert Coker in and to the allotment of Polly Coker by guardianship sale. The issues to be determined herein then are, Were Charley Coker and Lizzie Coker divorced, and was Polly Coker the legal wife of Charley at the time of her death? and, further, Was the guardianship sale of Colbert Coker’s interest in the Polly Coker allotment a valid proceeding?

We will consider the first two assignments of error together. It is admitted that- Colbert Coker .was the son of Polly Coker and as such inherited an interest in her allotment, and it is upon the validity of the probate proceedings that the title to this interest depends, and as to the allotments of Lucy Coker and Jipsey Coker, the title to same depends solely upon the validity of the alleged divorce of Charley Coker from Lizzie 'and ttiis marriage to Polly. The evidence shows that Lizzie and Charley Coker were husband and wife. That at the time of her marriage to Charley, Lizzie had a daughter named Polly. That Polly was just a little girl at that time and lived with Lizzie and Charley in the same house continuously after their marriage until she was about- 15 years of age, when she and Charley moved into another house near by and began living together as husband and wife. However, the evidence on this point is conflicting, especially as to when the relation between Polly and Charley began; plaintiff in error contending that the relation between Polly and 'Charley was illicit and began while Charley and Lizzie were still husband and wife, and- at a time when Charley was incapable of entering into the marriage relation. The evidence further shows that this relation between Po-lly and Charley continued u-p until the date of Polly’s death in the year 1899, and that during this time, this plaintiff, Colbert Coker, and three other children, Gibson, Lucy, and Jipsey, were born to Polly and Charley.

The lower court found there was a separation and divorce between Charley and Lizzie under the Creek customs and a marriage under Creek custom of Charley and Polly, *221 and that the marriage of Charley and Polly was therefore legal and that the 'allo-tment of Polly descended, under the Creek law in equal parts to Charley, her husband, and <Jibson, Colbert, Lucy, and Jipsey, her children by Charley, and that upon the death of Lucy and Jipsey, their individual allotments, together with the interest they had inherited in their mother’s allotment, descended under the Creek law to their father, Charley Coker; rhat R. J. Dixon was the owner of the one-fifth interest of Gibson Coker in his mother’s allotment by virtue of a valid conveyance from said Gibson Coker, and that the defendant Lake Moore was the owner of the remaining four-fifths interest in said allotment by virtue of a deed from Charley Coker covering the three-fifths interest owned toy him and a deed from Fred L. Strougih, guardian of Colbert Coker, covering the one-fifth interest owned toy said Colbert Coker. The court further found that ‘Ciharley Coker was the sole heir of Lucy and Jipsey Coker, and therefore inherited their individual allofmauts, and that the defendant Lake Moore was the owner of same by virtue of proper conveyances from said Charley Coker.

Plaintiff in error Dixon having dismissed his appeal, the -only question left tor determination is as to the interest of plaintiff in error Colbert Coker in said allotments herein referred to. If the relation between Charley Coker and Polly was illicit and meretricious, then Lucy and Jipsey were illegitimate children and their putative father, Charley Coker, would not inherit any interest in their allotments, but same would have descended under the Creek law in force at the time of their death to' Gibson and Colbert, the brothers of Lucy and Jipsey, add likewise Charley Cokjer would have been excluded from inheriting .any interest in the allotment of Polly Coker and same would have descended to Lucy, Jipsey, Gito-son, and Colbert in equal parts, and upon the death of Lucy and Jipsey, they having died intestate, unmarried .and without issue, their interest would have descended to their brothers, Gibson and Colbert.

The record fails to show that Charley ever obtained any divorce from Lizzie other than an alleged custom divorce according to the custom of the Creek Tribe of Indians, and it is upon this alleged custom divorce of Lizzie and Charley and likewise upon a custom marriage of Polly and Charley that defendant in error relies. Divorce according to the custom of Indian tribes has been re/qognized by this court in Cyr v. Walker, 29 Okla. 281, 116 Pac. 931; Buck v. Bran-son, 34 Okla. 807, 127 Pac. 436; Coachman v. Sims, 36 Okla. 536, 129 Pac. 845: Palmer v. Cully, 52 Okla. 454, 153 Pac. 154; James v. Adams, 56 Okla. 450, 155 Pac. 1121. Plaintiff in error, however, contends that on October 2, 1881, the Creek Tribe of Indians approved a statute governing the grancing of divorce, and divorce according to tribal custom was thereby extinguished, and cites in support thereof Davis v. Reeder, first decided by this court on October 2, 1923, and Proctor v. Foster, decided on October 23, 1923. An examination of the record in these cases discloses that rehearings were granted and the opinions upon which plaintiff in error relies were withdrawn and the opinions which ‘became final in said eases are found in Davis v. Reeder, 102 Okla. 106, 226 Pac. 880, and Proctor v. Foster, 107 Okla. 95, 230 Pac. 753, in which opinions marriage and divorce according to Creek custom were recognized though same occurred subsequent to the enactment of the Creek statute of October 2, 1881. The first paragraph of the syllabus in Proctor v. Foster reads as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 556, 249 P. 694, 121 Okla. 219, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coker-v-moore-okla-1926.