Cook v. Harjo

1926 OK 641, 248 P. 651, 118 Okla. 291, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 918
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 27, 1926
DocketNo 16754
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1926 OK 641 (Cook v. Harjo) 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
Cook v. Harjo, 1926 OK 641, 248 P. 651, 118 Okla. 291, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 918 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

• Opinion by

FOSTER, 0.

This was a proceeding brought in the court beLoiw by the plaintiff in error, Wallace C. Cook, against Moses Jefferson, Thomas Jefferson, Señora Jefferson, Henry W. Perryman, Melissa Crow, Jonas Harjo, Tarso Harjo, Thomas Homahta, D. B. Jackson, T. B. Slick, and the heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees, and assigns of Martie, deceased, as defendanrs, pursuant to chapter 261 of the 1919 Session Laws of Oklahoma, to determine the title and ownership of 160 acres of land located in Okfuskee county.

The plaintiff in error claimed title through approved conveyances from the above-named defendants, except L. B. Jackson and T. B. Slick, as heirs at law of Martie, deceased, a full-blood Creek Indian enrolled opposite roll Not 8164.

Notice by publication was obtained upon the unknown heirs of Martie, deceased, pursuant to which various defendants appeared im the case and set up title to said allotment, among them being the defendants in error, Albert Harjo, Alex Harjo, and Martha Harjo. The asserted claims of various oth-' er defendants were denied by the trial court in its judgment, Irom which no appeal has been prosecuted.

The trial court, however, in its judgment determined that each of the defendants in error was entitled to an undivided one-eighch interest in the allotment in question, and rendered judgment accordingly. From this judgment and from an order overruling his motion for a new trial, the' plaintiff in error appeals to this court for review, claiming in the first place that the judgment is against the clear weight of che evidence.

The trial court found that Henry W. Perry-man, Melissa Crow, Thomas Homahta, Jonas Harjo, Tarso Harjo, Alex Harjo, Albert Har-jo, and Martha Harjo were all second cousins of Martie, deceased, and each entitled to inherit* the undivided one-eighth interest in his allocment. The effect of this judg-' meat, as we understand it, is that the plaintiff in error is the owner only of the five-eighths undivided interest in said allotment, the remaining tbree-eighths interest being still owned by the defendants in error.

The question, therefore, for our determination, under the record here presented, is whether the judgment of the trial court to the effect that the defendants in error were entitled to share equally in the allotment in question with Henry W. Perryman, Melissa Crow, Thomas Homahta, Jotaas Harjo, and Tarso Harjo is against, the clear weight of the evidence.

Ic seems to be agreed between the parties that Martie, the allottee, died in 1917, intestate, unmarried, and without issue, leaving neither father, mother, brother, nor sisj ter surviving. The parties appear also to be in agreement that Martie was a son of Fushutche Harjoi, and Peeoher. The evidence relied on by both sides to establish the relationship of the contending parties with Mar-tie was largely a matter of vague reeollec *292 tion by aged witnesses of events transpiring many years ago and of hearsay statements communicated irom one relative to another, and viewed in its entirety the evidence was not very certain and definite.

The contention of the defendants in error that cliey are second cousins of Martie appears to be based upon the theory' that Mar-tie left surviving neither brothers nor sisters nor descendants of brothers or sisters, and that their relationship was craced through .Cinda, an aunt of Martie and the grandmother of the defendants in error; that Lhe father and mother of Martie were Eushutclie Harjo and Peeoher; that Cinda was a sister of Eushutclie Harjo, whose daughter, Lucy Harjo, was the mother of the defendants in error, making Martie, deceased, and the defendants in error second cousins.

This was substantially the testimony of all- the defendants in error, which appears to be corroborated by the conduct and declarations of Martie himself. "When we come bo consider (he claim of 'the plaintiff in error that Henry W. Perryman, Melissa Crow, Thomas ITomahta, Jonas Harjo, and Tarso Harjo were more closely related to Martie than the defendants in envoi, plaintiff in error’s witnesses do not appear to be in agreement: as to the facts relied upon to establish such relationship.

. Some of the witnesses, particularly Thonn as ITomahia, made plaintiff in error’s grantors second cousins Of Martie, tracing the relationship through Hulputta Harjo, a brother of Martie’s father, Eushutclie Harjo, and through certain sisters of Peecher, Martie’s mother, while other witnesses for plaintiff in error, notably Tecumseh Green and Okfus-kee Harjo, repudiated this theory and traced the relationship of some of plaintiff’s grantors through an alleged brother of Martie, Osia Yahola, the admitted father of Melissa Crow.

It developed later, during a hearing in the trial court on plaintiff’s supplemental motion foir a new trial, that plaintiff in error seemed to rely upon the testimony of ’Shawnee Harper and Janies Rabbit to the effect generally that I-Iulputta Harjo was not, as testified to by Thomas Homahta, an uncle of Martie, but on the contrary was a brother of Martie, which would make Thomas I-Iomahta a nearer relation of Mar-tie than he appeared to be according to his own testimony.

• There was, in our view of the case, such a lack of consistency in the sworn testimony of the various witnesses for plaintiff in er-i ror and such vagueness and uncertainty in the stories detailed by some of these witnesses as in our opinion to fully justify the trial court in finding in favor of the defendants in error, establishing them to be second cousins of Martie, and entitled equally with the plaintiff in error’s grantors to inherit' his estate.

. In an action of equitable cognizance it is the duty of the Supreme Court on appeal to review (he entire evidence, weigh the testimony of the witnesses, as well as the facts and circumstances which tend to corroborate or discredit them, and to determine the case accordingly, and if upon such review the judgment and finding of the tria_l court is not clearly against the weight of the evi-' deuce, the judgment of the trial court should be sustained.

It is well settled in this state than in an equitable action the presumption is in favor of the finding of the trial court, and it will not be set aside unless clearly against the weight of the evidence. Simpson v. Schall et al., 110 Okla. 90, 236 Pac. 384; Johnston v. Key et al., 110 Okla. 19, 235 Pac. 211.

Upon a careful survey of the entire evidence we cannot say that the judgment of the trial court is clearly against the weight thereof.

The next proposition relied on by the plaintiff in error for a reversal of the judgment is that the trial court erred in not granting him a new tonal on the ground of newly discovered evidence. This contention is based on two propositions: (1) That it had been discovered, subsequently to the trial, by the plaintiff in error that a judgment had been rendered by the district courc of Creek county in a proceeding for the determination of the title to’ the allotment of one Choelle, that the defendants in error were noc heirs of the said Choelle, and that this, judgment operated to bar the claims of defendants in error in the instant case, by reason of the fact that Martie and Choel-le are in fact the same person.

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 641, 248 P. 651, 118 Okla. 291, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-harjo-okla-1926.