Davis v. Harjo's Unknown Heirs

1929 OK 65, 279 P. 306, 137 Okla. 242, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 12, 1929
Docket19234
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1929 OK 65 (Davis v. Harjo's Unknown Heirs) 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
Davis v. Harjo's Unknown Heirs, 1929 OK 65, 279 P. 306, 137 Okla. 242, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 441 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

LEACH, C.

B. F. Davis, plaintiff in error, as plaintiff below, commenced this action June 9, 1923, in the district court of Seminole county, against, and named as defendants, “the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees and assigns, immediate and remote, of Echoihe Harjo, Seminole Roll No. 92, deceased, Hesahoka, deceased, a Seminole Indian, Roll No. 1518, and Wiley Thlocco, deceased, who died before enrollment,” and aleged in his petition that he was the owner of and was and has been in the exclusive possession for the past 18 years of certain described lands (120 acres), which land was allotted and i>atented to Echoille Harjo, a full-blood Seminole Indian, who died intestate and without issue in the year 3902; that the allottee left surviving him his mother, Hesahoka, Seminole Roll No. 1518, who died on August 15, 1904. also his two brothers, Ponluste, Seminole Roll No. 1519. and Tommy, Seminole Roll No. 1543, and two nephews, Jacob Thlocco, Seminole Roll No. 1516, and Whitlow Thlocco, Seminole Roll No. 1517, sons of a deceased brother of the allottee; further alleged that by warranty deeds he had obtained the interest from each of the above-named heirs of Ech-oille Harjo; that the unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees and assigns, immediate and remote, of Echoille Harjo, were claiming and asserting some right, title and interest in and to the land, the exact nature of which was unknown to plaintiff; that such claim was w-ithout legal right, wrongful, and a cloud upon plaintiff’s title, and prayed that defendants be required to plead their right, title, or interest, if any. in and to the lands: that judgment be entered in favor of plaintiff quieting his title, and that defendants he enjoined from asserting or claiming any right, title, or interest therein.

*243 Service and notice of suit was had and given in the cause by publication, and on July 25, 1925, defendants were adjudged in default and judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff barring the defendants of all right ip the land described and quieting plaintiff’s title thereto. The court found and recited in the judgment that upon the death of Eehoille Harjo, the allottee, he left surviving him, as his sole heirs at law, the parties as named and alleged in the petition; that the plaintiff had been in the peaceable and exclusive possession of the land since about January 1, 1907, paid taxes thereon since statehood, and had obtained warranty deeds to the land from the heirs named.

Parties other than the defendants in error in this appeal filed their application to open the judgment, which application was denied previous to the ruling and judgment complained of in this appeal, and they perfected an appeal which was decided in an opinion, Wise et al. v. Davis, 132 Okla. 65, 269 Pac. 248.

The defendants in error in this appeal, Coueharty, Hilly, Annie Murrow, Eliza Wolfe, and David Stamp, filed their several applications in the case to open the judgment, and that they be let in to defend in the cause as provided by section 256, C. O. S. 1921, for opening judgment after default on service by publication, alleging they were heirs of the deceased allottee and owned and held certain title and interests in the land involved. The plaintiff, Davis, filed a response to the application to open the judgment, in which he denied that the applicants had no actual notice of the pendency of the action in time to appear and make a defense, and further alleged that, on the 30th day of September, 1925, the county court of Seminole county, which had jurisdiction to settle the estate of the deceased allottee, made and entered its decree of heirship “In the matter of the determination of heirship of Eehoille Harjo, Seminole Roll No. 92, Hesahoka, Seminole Roll No. 1518, and Wiley Thlocco. Seminole Indian not enrolled,” whereby it exercised jurisdiction conferred upon it by the Act of Congress approved June 14, 1918, and wherein said court adjudged that persons other than the applicants, defendants in error, were the sole and only heirs of the deceased allottee and the heirs of his deceased heirs; that the judgment of the county court of Seminole county is conclusive and exclusive evidence of the identity of the heirs of the deceased allottee. A copy of the petition filed by Jacob Thlocco in the county court for the determination of the heirship and a copy of the judgment and decree of the county court entered thereon were attached to and made a part of the response, and plaintiff prayed that the district court hold and decree that the heir-ship judgment of the county court of Seminole county is final, binding, conclusive and exclusive evidence of the identity of the parties to this action as the heirs of Eehoille Harjo, deceased.

The applications to open the judgment were heard and considered by the district court on September 26, 1927, at which time the court found in favor of the applicants, defendants in error, and entered its order that the respective applications to open said judgment of July 25, 1926, be granted, and said applicants were given leave to enter their appearance and defend against the action ; to which ruling and judgment the plaintiff duly objected and gave notice of appeal therefrom and filed his motion for a new trial thereon, which was denied, and he brings this appeal.

Plaintiff states in his brief that: “The only assignments of error we' deem essential to discuss are the third and fourth,” which are presented under the following propositions:

“(a) That the judgment of the county court of Seminole county, rendered and entered September 30, 1925, determining the heirship of the deceased allottee, not having been appealed from and not having been opened within six months thereafter, is conclusive: and (b) that under section 256, O. L. Oklahoma, 1921, the judgment of the district court rendered on July 25, Ü925. can be opened only on the application of an heir found to be such by the county court of Seminole county exercising jurisdiction under said Act of Congress of June 15 (14), 1918.” :

It is the contention of the plaintiff that the judgment of the county court of Seminole county, which was entered on the petition of Jacob Thlocco on September 30, 1925, is conclusive evidence that the applicants, defendants in error here, were and are not heirs of the deceased allottee, and, therefore, were not parties to the suit in the district court, and therefore have no right, being strangers to the action, to have the judgment opened and let in to defend, and that even if the district court judgment be opened, the judgment of the county court is a conclusive defense on the merits, and that the question now sought to be determined in the district court is moot, and that the application should have been denied.

In support of the argument and contentions so made by plaintiff, he quotes liberally from the opinion of this court in the *244 case of State ex rel. Miller v. Huser, 76 Okla. 130, 184 Pac. 113, and asserts that case is sufficient to settle the question, and that it has been consistently followed and approved by this court in the following cases; In re Jackson’s Estate, 117 Okla. 151, 245 Pac. 874; Homer v. Lester, 95 Okla. 284, 219 Pac. 392; Owens v. Kitchens, 105 Okla. 88, 232 Pac. 797; Mainard v. Thompson, 94 Okla. 57, 220 Pac. 880; Arnold v. Willis, 105 Okla. 172, 232 Pac. 15; In re Heirship of Jefferson, 101 Okla. 89, 221 Pac. 247; In re Lewis Estate, 100 Okla. 283, 229 Pac. 483.

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 65, 279 P. 306, 137 Okla. 242, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-harjos-unknown-heirs-okla-1929.