Gillum v. Anglin

1914 OK 227, 145 P. 1145, 44 Okla. 684, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 735
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 12, 1914
Docket2882
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1914 OK 227 (Gillum v. Anglin) 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
Gillum v. Anglin, 1914 OK 227, 145 P. 1145, 44 Okla. 684, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 735 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinon by

HARRISON, C.

This was an ejectment suit brought by W. T. Anglin against H. T. Gillum for possession of certain tracts of land aggregating about 670 acres. The material facts in the controversy are substantially as follows: H. T. Gillum was a noncitizen, but had married a woman of Choctaw blood. They lived together as man and wife for a number of years, during which' time four children were born to them. However, .they finally separated and were legally divorced, and afterwards the wife, Emaline, married a man by the name of Dillbeck. In the meantime the making up of the rolls for the Five Civilized Tribes had taken place, and H. T. Gillum, by virtue of his being an intermarried citizen, was admitted to the rolls and allowed an allotment as other members of the tribe. He chose his allotments, and, pursuant to acts of Congress and provisions of the treaty with the Choctaw Indians, chose allotments for each of his four minor children by his Indian wife. Two of the children had died before allotments were chosen for them, but- same were afterwards selected by their father. Another one of the children died after the allotment had been chosen for it by its father, whom, it is not denied, had been duly appointed administrator for the purpose of selecting allotments for each. After selection and award, the father took charge of the allotments of the deceased children, held possession of them, improved them an4 put them,- at least a great portion of them, in cultivation, something like 500 acres, and held possession of same upon the theory that, under the provisions of chapter 49, Mansfield’s Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, which was then in force in the Indian Territory by act *686 of Congress, he inherited title to the lands in question, or at least an undivided one-half interest in same. After the passage of the act of Congress of April .26, 1906 (34 Stat. 137, c. 1876), removing restrictions from the sale of inherited lands in the hands of mixed blood heirs, Emaline Dillbeck, joined by her husband, S. M. Dillbeck, acting upon the theory that the lands of her deceased children ascended to her by reason of her Indian blood, and that their allotments came to them through and by virtue of their father’s intermarriage with her, and that therefore she inherited their allotments, executed a warranty deed conveying said lands to W. T. Anglin, the defendant in error here. Whereupon, in August, 1909, he, Anglin, brought this ejectment suit against H. T. Gillum and his tenants.

The defendant, H. T. Gillum, answered, maintaining that the land in question either descended to Albert Gillum, the surviving child, and that therefore he would have 'a life estate in same, or that it passed clear to him and his former wife, and that therefore he had an undivided one-half interest in the fee in same as the heir of his three dead children, and set up the further defense that, as he had been in full and complete and undisturbed possession and control of such lands since the allotments had been taken, and had collected all the rents and profits therefrom during all those years from the time of taking the allotments to the date of the execution of the deed by the Dill-becks 'to Anglin, therefore, holding and claiming same upon the theory that he had either a one-half interest in the fee or a life estate in' the same, either of which was adverse to the interests sought to be conveyed to Anglin in the warranty deed from the Dillbecks to Anglin, such deed was ch&mpertous and void as between Anglin and him. The court sustained a demurrer to Gillum’s answer on the theory that it failed to state a defense, and the cause comes here on a transcript.

There are three material propositions of law involved in the case: First, whether the lands of those deceased children descended in part to the father by virtue of his intermarriage, or *687 whether they descended in whole to the mother by virtue of her Indian blood; second, whether the deed was ch'ampertous; third, whether the court erred in sustaining the demurrer to Gillum’s answer.

On the first proposition, as to whether the father or mother, inherited these lands, it appears to us that enough has been said in the case of Shulthis v. M’Dougal, 170 Fed. 529, 95 C. C. A. 615, to make the question clear as to which of the parents would inherit and to settle this phase of the controversy in the case at bar. The same application of chapter 49 of. the Arkansas Statutes was sought to be made in the Shulthis case as in the case at bar; the difference in the Shulthis case and the case at bar being that in that case it was the father who was the Indian by blood and the mother who was a noncitizen, and the controversy was as to who took the lands of their deceased children; also the further difference that these were Creek Indians, while those in the case at bar were Choctaws. The reasoning in that case by Ami don, district judge, who'rendered the opinion; is clear and forceful, but, as both the reasoning and conclusions reached in such case are familiar to the members of the bar who have had to.deal with’ like questions, we shall merely cite such case as authority on this phase of the question in the case at bar. It was held in that case that the allotment of a deceased child went to the father by virtue of the father’s tribal blood, and that a deed to such allotment from the father was valid.

An effort is made by counsel for plaintiff in error to distinguish the case at bar from the Shulthis case because the Shulthis case was. a Creek Indian case, and that under section 6 of the Supplemental Agreement with the Creek Indians (Act June 30, 1912, c. 1323, 32 Stat. 501) non-Creek citizens were expressly prohibited from taking Creek lands by inheritance or otherwise so long as there was a Creek heir to take it, and that no such treaty provision was made between the United States and the Choctaw tribe. But the decision in the Shulthis case is not based upon this ground. It is based solely upon the *688 ground that the lands of the Creek Tribe belonged to such tribe as a tribe — belonged to them in common as a society or tribe— that is, prior to allotments; that when the time for allotment came, the minor children of members of the tribe took their allotments, not by virtue of their being the offspring of an intermarried citizen (mother), but by virtue of their Indian blood which came through their father; and that in case of death of such minor heir its estate ascended to the-parent through and by virtue of whose tribal blood such minor acquired the right to an allotment. This being a federal question, we feel bound by the doctrine announced by the federal courts. It follows, therefore, that the fee in the allotments of her deceased minor children went to the mother, and that after the act of April 26, 1906, took- effect she could convey a valid title to such allotments. See, also, McKee v. Henry, 201 Fed. 74, 119 C. C. A. 412.

Also, in the case of Pigeon et al. v. Buck, 38 Okla. 101. 131 Pac. 1083, this court, in following the doctrine announced in the Shulthis case, supra, wherein the same question of descent and distribution of Indian lands are involved, said:

“Many titles to lands on the eastern side of this state have been acquired on the strength of this decision, and to such an extent that the same has become a rule of property.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 227, 145 P. 1145, 44 Okla. 684, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillum-v-anglin-okla-1914.