Eysenbach v. Naharkey

1924 OK 1129, 236 P. 619, 110 Okla. 207, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 788
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 16, 1924
Docket13931
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1924 OK 1129 (Eysenbach v. Naharkey) 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
Eysenbach v. Naharkey, 1924 OK 1129, 236 P. 619, 110 Okla. 207, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 788 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

RUTH, C.

This action was filed in the district court of Tulsa county, by defendant in error, as plaintiff, against the plaintiffs in error, as defendants, and the parties will be referred to in this opinion as they appeared in -the trial court.

Plaintiff alleges he is the legal and equitable owner of an undivided fchree^fourths interest in the following described lands in Tulsa county. Okla., to wit: “East 14 of the northeast 14 of the southwest 14 and the c-ast % of the southeast 14 of the south-west % of section 26, twp. 19 north, range 12 east I. M. in Tulsa county,’’ and seeks to have all conveyances of the said lands to the defendants by. through or under conveyances from Martha Naharkey, formerly Martha Red. canceled as clouds on the title of the plaintiff, and that he be adjudged the legal and equitable owner of an undivided % interest in the lands. Plaintiff further alleges defendants have been in possession of the lands for a period of five years, and prays judgment in the sum of $600 as the reasonable rental value thereof.

O. K. and Bessie Eysenbach were permitted to intervene ¿nd defend title of W. E. Hardesty, and all the defendants filed demurrers, and upon the same being overruled defendant W. E. Hardesty filed his answer consisting of a general denial, and claiming ownership of the lands.

O. K. and Bessie Eysenbach filed answer consisting of general denial and further answering deraig-ned title through Martha Red Naharkey, who, it is alleged, received the lands as her distributive share of the estate of Moses Naharkey, deceased, husband of Martha. That the lands of which Moses died seised were partitioned by the United States District Court for Indian Territory on suit brought by Sammie Naharkey; that after the decree of distribution. Martha Red Naharkey sold the lands to Ethel Davis, and Hugh Gregg, who sold and conveyed the lands to the Eysen-bachs, who in turn sold and conveyed to the defendant Hardesty.

*209 It appears from the record that Bioses and Blillie Naharkey were Greek Indians, and were husband and wife, and the plaintiff, Sammie Naharkey, was the only child; that as a Greek Indian, Bioses Naharkey had allotted to him 160 acres of land, the same being west Yz of northeast Yi of section 35, and west Yz of the west Yi of the southeast %, section 39, twp. 19 north, range 12 east, and the northeast Yi of the southeast % of section 15, twp. 19 north, range 11, I. Bl., and Blillie Naharkey was allotted 160 acres of land, the same being the N. V> of the S. E. VI, sectil n 2, twp. 38 N., R. 12 E., and east Yz of the east Yz of the S. W. Yi, section 26, twp. 19 north range 12 east, and N. W. Yi of southeast Yi, section 15, tiwp. 19 north. R. 13 east.

That after the death' of' Blillie Naharkey in 1901, she having died intestate, the .lands of which she died seised descended according to the laws of the Greek Nation then in force. Section 8 of said laws of the Muskogee (Greek) Nation 1880 (Perryman) provider as follows:

“The lawful or acknowledged wife' of a deceased husband shall be entitled to one-half of the estate, if there are no other heirs, and a child’s portion if there should be heirs, in all cases where there is no will. The husband surviving shall inherit of a deceased wife in like manner.”

Under the law of the Creek Nation, upon the death of Blillie Naharkey the husband. Bioses, became entitled to !4. or 80 acres, and the son, Sammie, this plaintiff, became entitled to Yz, or 80 acres, of the lands of which Blillie died seised.

The lands, however, were never divided or apportioned of partitioned, and after Blil-lie’s death Bioses married one Bla^Lha Red. and in 1904 a daughter was born to them, whom we shall designate as Little Blillie to distinguish her from Blillie, the mother of Sammie.

After the birth of Little Blillie, to wit, December 22, 1905, Bioses Naharkey died intestate. seized of his orginal allotment of 160 acres and the 80 acres of the estate of Blillie, his deceased wife, making a total of 240 acres.

In Biarch, 1907, Sammie Naharkey, having attained his majority, filed his petition in the United States Court for the Western District of Indian Territory, sitting at Tulsa, in which he prays the court to partition the lands of Moses and Blillie Naharkey and decree him to be the owner of one-half the lands of which his mother, Blillie, died seised, and that the 240 acres of which his father, Bioses, died seized be partitioned, and (hat plaintiff be decreed to be owner of one-half thereof, and Little Blillie b.e decreed to be the owner of the other half, subject, however, to the dower right of Martha Naharkey, to one-third thereof,, as the surviving spouse of Moses Naharkey, and prays that a commission be appointed to make such partition and assignment of dower.

The Laws of Arkansas, then being in force in the Indian Territory. provide as follows: (Blansfielfl Digest of the La'wis of Arkansas) section 2571:

“A widow shal be endowed of the third part of all the lands whereof her husband was seised of an estate of inheritance (a) at any time during the marriage, unless the same shall have been relinquished in legal form.”

Section 2599 provides:

“The widow of any deceased person who shall file in the office of the clerk of the court of probate, or with the probate court of the proper county, a relinquishment of her right of dower in and out of the estate <>f her deceased husband, shall be entitled to receive of the estate, of which her said husband died seised, and possessed, whether real, personal, or mixed, a portion or share thereof, absolutely in her own right, equal to that of a child, which shall be set aside and delivered to her as now provided by the law for dower.”

It appears that after the filing of the suit for partition, by Sammie Naharkey, in the United States Court, Martha Naharkey dulv and regularly filed her waiver of dower lights and elected to take a child’s portion as -provided by law. The proceedings of the United States Court for the Western District of Indian Territory appear to have been regular in all respects..

The commission was appointed upon the prayer of Sammie Naharkey, and made its return ,to the court, and after full hearing had. wherein all parties were represented by able and eminent counsel, the court partitioned the lands, awarding to Sammie Nahankey as his full, just, fair,, and equitable proportion thereof, the following: “North Yz of the southeast Yi of section 2, f\\p. IS north, range 1 east, and the north of the southeast Yi of sec! ion 15. twp. 19 north, range 13 east, being 160 acres more or less according to government survey.”

This gave to Sammie Naharkey 80 acres or one-half of the lands of which his mother. Blillie, died seised, as he was entitled to under section 8, Law of Bluskogee (Creek) Nation 1880 (Porriman) supra, and also vested in him 80 acres or one-third of the lands of which his father, Bioses, died *210

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 1129, 236 P. 619, 110 Okla. 207, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eysenbach-v-naharkey-okla-1924.