Fulsom v. Mason

1924 OK 948, 229 P. 1072, 107 Okla. 70, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 610
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 21, 1924
Docket12525
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1924 OK 948 (Fulsom v. Mason) 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
Fulsom v. Mason, 1924 OK 948, 229 P. 1072, 107 Okla. 70, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 610 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

BRANSON, J.

This action was instituted in the district court of Atoka county by Johnson Fulsom, an incompetent person, through his guardian, against J. S. Vanden-berg and others, to recover an undivided interest in certain tracts of land, his alleged interest therein having vested in him by operation of law in the following manner:

That one tract of said land was allotted and patented to Neles Camp, a citizen by blood of the Choctaw Nation. That Neles Camp died intestate in the Choctaw Nation on ór about the 16th day of May. 1907, owning said land in fee, and that he left surviving him as his sole heir at law his father, Amos Camp, and the unnamed heirs of his mother, and that an undivided half interest in said land, upon the death of said allottee, vested in the said Amos Camp, and that he continued to own same' until the year 1915, when he departed this life, leaving the plaintiff surviving as one of his children and heirs at law. That the other tract of land was allotted and patented to one Ellen Camp, who departed this life in Atoka county, Okla., about the 19th of February, 190S, seizefi and possessed of the fee-simple title thereto. And that her sole heir at law was the said Amos Camp, and that upon the death of the said Amos Camp, in 1915, still seized and possessed of an undivided interest in said last described tract, the plaintiff, as the son of the said Amos Camp, inherited an undivided interest in said real estate.

The record discloses that the said Amos Camp, the alleged father of the palintiff, was also a full-blood citizen of the Choctaw Nation, and at the time of his death, in 1915, in addition to an interest in the land above mentioned, left his individual allotment, and that the plaintiff herein, on the 4th day of April, 1917, instituted a suit in the district court of Atoka county to recover an interest in the individual allotment of his said father as against Charles E. Moreland, who is also one of the defendants in the instant suit, and the grantor of Mason, who owns one tract sued for, and grant- or of Vandenberg, who owns the other.

The land involved in this former suit was the allotment of the father, Amos Camp.

On the 30th day of July, 1917, a judgment was entered in this action, finding and decreeing that Johnson Fulsom was not entitled to any part of the allotment of the said Amos Camp, deceased, and that he take nothing by his action. This judgment became a finality, and is pleaded as a prior adjudication by the defendants, as against the right of the plaintiff to recover an interest in the first two described allotments, which the said plaintiff seeks to. do in the instant suit, and it was upon this plea of res adjudicata that the trial court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants as shown by the record—

“By the Court: The motion of the defendants for a directed verdict is sustained, for the reason that the court is of the opinion and so holds that the plea of res judicata of the defendants is good, and should be sustained.’’

The plaintiff, by way of reply to the defendants’ answer pleading res judicata, set up that the judgment as to the father’s land was a consent or agreed judgment for *71 settlement of the litigation, and that the plaintiff in the instant suit was paid a reasonable amount agreed upon as the value of his interest in the allotment of Amos Camp, and to: obvhning the trouble incident to conveyance by an incompetent, but there is no evidence introduced by the plaintiff on this question. We cannot agree with the oontentii u of the plaintiff that, because this allegation in the reply was not traversed or denied by the defendants, it is tasen as admitted, as shown in this declaration in the plaintiff’s brief: “No issue was taken by the defendants, on this reply, and the statements were taken as true.” By the statute governing pleadings in this jurisdiction, allegations in a reply are treated as denied, as a matter of law. and no reply or answer to a reply is required.

So the real issue arises here as to whether or not the trial court committed reversible error hi holding as a matter of law that the plea of res judicata, as interposed by the answers, precluded the plaintiff’s recovery of an interest in the real estate sought.

In authorizing the erection of the state of Oklahoma out of the Indian Territory and Oklahoma Territory, Congress expressly reserved to itself the sole and exclusive power to legislate as to citizens of the Indian Tribe.

In passing on questions touching Indian land titles, the bar and the courts are confronted with the enforced recognition that there are two distinct jurisdictions, one of the state, and the other of the federal government. The laws of the former, or the rules governing property ordinarily, are not always applicable to the rights of Indian litigants in the courts of the state, which might otherwise be controlling, were the rights sought to be asserted by them derived from a source other than the acts of Congress dealing with lands of an Indian Nation. In accepting the Enabling Act, the Constitution of Oklahoma subordinates the laws of the state to the express will of the national Congress touching all such Indian titles, in so far as there may be a conflict. Referring again to the recitation of facts, supra, plaintiff pleads that his father. Amos Camp, died in 1915, seized of an undivided half interest in the land of Neles Camp and Ellen Camp, who pre-deceased Amos Camp, and that the plaintiff became seized and possessed by operation of law, in 1915. of an undivided interest in said land. The judgment pleaded as a bar to this recovery was entered in 1917, and the practical effect of the plea of adjudication would be to divest the plaintiff of the alleged interest in the two allotments described in his petition.

The alleged rights of Indian citizens and their properties arising by virtue of the al-io ment acts touching the Five Civilized Tribes are subject to the same rules of adjudication as other citizens of Oklahoma, in ali particulars drawn in question and in issue here. The defendant Moreland, who was the grantor of the defendant Mason and the defendant Yandenberg, respectively, of the two tracts of land here in litigation had been theretofore sued by the plaintiff, Johnson Fulsom, for that part of the landed estate of his alleged father, Amos Camp. In said first named suit, which went to judgment in 1917, and which judgment is p!ead-ed as res ad judicata in the instant suit the real issue raised by the pleadings was whether the plaintiff was the son of Amos Camp, and if the son, whether he was the legitimate son of Amos. The judgment entered in said first suit, among other things, recited:

“It is therefore ordered and adjudged by the court that the said Johnson Fulsom is not a son or heir of the said Amos Camp, deceased, and that he is not entitled to any part of the allotments of the said Amos Camp deceased, and that he take nothing by this action, and that the defendant have and recover of and from the plaintiff all of his costs herein laid out and expended.”

The instant suit sought to recover an interest in other lands owned by the said Amos Camp, which had been inherited by him from two of his children who had predeceased him, and as a basis for the recovery of an interest in such inherited land, plaintiff pleaded he was a son and heir of the said Amos Camp.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 948, 229 P. 1072, 107 Okla. 70, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulsom-v-mason-okla-1924.