Curry v. Browning

1926 OK 834, 251 P. 981, 123 Okla. 106, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 500
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1926
Docket16870
StatusPublished

This text of 1926 OK 834 (Curry v. Browning) 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
Curry v. Browning, 1926 OK 834, 251 P. 981, 123 Okla. 106, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 500 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, 0.

This is an action brought by Moses Lowery, George Lowery, Henry Lowery, Carrie Lynch, Emma Ogjien, and Mary Weeks, as plaintiffs, against J. T. Browning and Mrs. J. T. Browning, as defendants, wherein plaintiffs prayed their title to certain lands be quieted, and that they hare judgment for rents and profits. Plaintiffs claimed as heirs, to wit, brothers and sisters of Ellis Lowery, a full-blood Cherokee Indian, who died intestate in March, 1908, and the land for which the action was brought being the allotment of Ellis Lowery. Two months after filing the action plaintiffs quitclaimed to Rex F. Curry, David E. Martin and the unknown heirs of Ellis Lowery and Clarinda Martin were made parties defendant.

David E. Martin filed his answer and cr.oss-petition, in which he alleges he is the child of Clarinda Blartin, formerly Lowery, and a half-brother of the original plaintiffs, and Clarinda Martin died January 11, 1910, seised of all her inherited interest in the lands of Ellis Lowery; and that at the date of the death of Ellis Lowery, he was entitled to participate in the distribution of the estate of the allottee, and at the death of Clarinda Martin he was entitled to further participate therein. D. A. Martin filed his answer and cross-petition, alleging he was the husband of Clarinda at the time of her death, and is entitled to participate to the extent of a child’s part of that inherited interest which went to Clarinda Martin upon the death of Ellis Lowery. Mrs. J. T. Browning disclaims, and J. T. Browning filed his answer and cross-petition, and alleges D. R. Coody lawfully administered upon the estate of Ellis Lowery, and the lands were sold to J. W. Rackley for $1,100, and the sale was duly confirmed by the county court of McIntosh county on January 11, 1909, and the deed recorded January 21, 1909, and Rackley immediately entered upon the lands, and Browning deraigns title through mesne conveyance through the administrator’s deed, and Rackley and Browning have been in open, notorious, and adverse possession of the lands since January, 1909; that plaintiff or his grantors have never been in possession 'of the lands; that Browning has made permanent and lasting improvements on the lands in good faith, and prays that J. W. Rackley and his wife be made parties as war-rantors of his title, and further pleads the statute of limitations.

Upon trial had the court found Browning had placed permanent and lasting improvements upon the land, such as putting a portion under cultivation and erecting buildings; that Browning or Rackley had been in possession of the lands sineé 1909; that the surviving spouse, David A. Martin, was not of Indian blood. Judgment was entered decreeing Browning the owner of an undivided 53-168ths of the lands, and Rex Curry was the owner of 115-168ths of the lands, and ordered the lands partitioned without regard to the improvements; and that the commis ■ sioners, in partitioning the land, if possible, select for J. T. Browning’ such parts of the' land as contained the improvements. The court further rendered judgment in favor . Browning and against Rackley on their warranty in the sum 'of $684, with interest from 1909. From this judgment Rex Curry, David E. Martin, and D. A. Blartin appeal, and the cause is before this court upon petition in error and case-made

The only ex’ror assigned by plaintiffs in error is:

“Plaintiffs in error allege as error that the coxxrt 'erred, that they were barred by limitations, and that it attempted to separate the improvements from the land itself, and gave them to defendants.”

In plaintiffs in error’s argument the following proposition is presented:

“The probate courts of Oklahoma are without jurisdiction to sell allotted lands of deceased full-blood Indians through an administrator for the purpose of paying debts, and such sale, being prohibited by positive act of Congress, gives no color of title.”

A very careful review of the .whole record fails to disclose that the administrator of Ellis Lowery in 1909, sold these lands for debt. Neither the original petition, the amended petition, nor the evidence makes the slightest mention of the lands being sold for debts of Ellis Lowery, and the case of Dawes et al. v. Brady et al., 112 Okla. 289, 241 Pac. 147, cited by plaintiffs in error, is not applicable to the point contended for by plaintiffs in error. None of the proceedings in the appointment of the administrator, or his .petition to sell the lands, or the sale or Confirmation of the sale, appear in the record, and in the absence thereof it must bo assumed that the proceedings were in ail inspects regular, and full faith and credit will be given to the acts of the courts of record of this state, in the absence of allegations suppoi’ted by pi-oo£ that the court acted without its jurisdiction.

“The probate court is, upon all matters upon which it is authorized to deal and up *108 on which it has jurisdiction, a court oí record and final authority and its final judgments are in these matters absolute unless appealed' from.” Greer v. MeNeal, 11 Okla. 519, 69 Pac. 891; 11 Okla. 526. 69 Pac. 893.

Plaintiffs further contend that no evidence was introduced by defendant Browning as to the age of Mary Weeks and David E. Martin, citing Dawes v. Brady, supra, where it was held:

“That where the date :of majority of an Indian citizen is material in an action by such Indian heir to recover his share in his deceased mother’s allotment, the burden is on the one claiming the bar of the statute of limitations against such Indian heir to prove the date of majority by the enrollment records. ”

While we are in perfect accord with the holding in Dawes v. Brady, supra, it is not applicable to the facts in the instant case, as in the Dawes Case, the fact that the lands were sold for debts of the deceased, and the minority of Sampson Dawes at the time of the purported administrator’s sale of his mother’s estate, were raised by the pleadings, and Sampson Dawes’ age thereby became “material to the action.” There was not even an attempted guardian’s sale as in the instant case.' A careful examination of plaintiffs’ original petition and amended petition, and the defendant Brownings’ answer and cross-petition fails to disclose any mention of the minority of any of the heirs. David E. Martin and D. A. Martin were made parties defendant, but upon whose motion does not appear, and in their several answers and cross-petitions, no mention or suggestions are made of the minority of any of the parties, and the minority of David E. Martin was not in issue, and was not “material to the action,” and no evidence was necessary on a question not in issue.

There is no suggestion that the lands were so'd for the payment of debts of deceased, and there were but two witnesses sworn, to wit: Carrie Lynch for plaintiff and J. T. Browning for defendant. Rex Curry, David E. Martin, or D. A. Martin submitted no testimony on any question. The uncontro-verted testimony was. that J. W. Iiackley acquired the iands on January 11, 1909, and he or J. T. Browning has been in open, adverse, and notorious possession thereof since that date, and this action was not filed until February 23, 1924, or more than 15 years after the sale to Racltley was confirmed by the county court and the deed placed of record.

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1901 OK 58 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1901)
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Greer v. McNeal
1902 OK 25 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1902)
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1924 OK 479 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1924)
Dawes v. Brady
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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 834, 251 P. 981, 123 Okla. 106, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curry-v-browning-okla-1926.