Harnage v. Martin

242 U.S. 386, 37 S. Ct. 148, 61 L. Ed. 382, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2200
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 8, 1917
Docket112
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 242 U.S. 386 (Harnage v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harnage v. Martin, 242 U.S. 386, 37 S. Ct. 148, 61 L. Ed. 382, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2200 (1917).

Opinion

Me. Justice Pitney

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an equity action involving the right to an allotment of land in the Cherokee Nation, containing about 77 acres. The plaintiff in error Harnage, and the defendant in error Martin, are members of the Cherokee Tribe, and rival claimants to the allotment. The other parties are two oil companies that claim under Harnage and Martin respectively, and admittedly have no higher rights than theirs. Harnage brought an action in one of the district courts of Oklahoma for the purpose of charging the legal title to the lands in question, which stood in Mrs. Martin, with a trust in his favor, upon the ground that the Secretary of the Interior, through a gross misapprehension of the facts or an error of law, had awarded the land to her, when under the provisions of the Cherokee Agreement and other acts of Congress pertaining to the subject it should have been awarded to him.

By the Agreement (Act of July 1, 1902, c. 1375, 32 Stat. 716, 717) it was provided as follows:

“Sec. 11. There shall be allotted by the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes and to each citizen of the Cherokee tribe, .* . . land equal in value to one hundred and ten acres of the average allottable lands of *388 the Cherokee Nation, to conform as nearly as may be to the areas and boundaries established by the Government survey, which land may be selected by each allottee so as to include his improvements.
* # $ ■ * * * * *
“Sec. 18. It shall be unlawful after ninety days after the ratification of this Act by the Cherokees for any member of the Cherokee tribe to inclose or hold possession of, in any manner, by himself or through another, directly or indirectly, more lands in value than that of one hundred and ten acres of average allottable lands of the Cherokee Nation, either for himself or for his wife, or for each of his minor children, if members of said tribe; and any member of said tribe found in such possession of lands, or having the same in any manner inclosed, after the expiration of ninety days after the date of the ratification of this Act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.”

By §§ 74 and 75 (p. 727) the act was to take effect upon ratification by a majority of the legal voters of the Nation. It was thus ratified on August 7, 1902.

On May 13, 1904, Harnage made application to the Dawes Commission to have the land in controversy allotted to him, and his application was granted. Thirteen days later Mrs. Martin made a similar application, and this was refused on the ground of the prior allotment to Harnage; thereupon she instituted a contest before the Commission against the Harnage-allotment. It came to trial before the Dawes Commissioner in September, 1907, and resulted- in a decision in favor of Mrs. Martin. Harnage appealed to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, who rendered a like decision, and this, on appeal to the Secretary of the Interior, was affirmed; and deeds for the land in contest were made to Mrs. Martin pursuant to the act.

Upon the trial of the equity case plaintiffs in error introduced a certified transcript of all proceedings and evidence in the contest proceeding, and this was the only *389 evidence offered that was at all pertinent to the question we have to decide. Defendants in error demurred to the evidence, and the demurrer was sustained and the bill of complaint dismissed. This judgment was affirmed by'the Supreme Court of Oklahoma. 40 Oklahoma, 341.

Harnage having admittedly filed first upon the land in controversy, Mrs. Martin was entitled to prevail in the contest only by showing that at the timé of the Harnage filing she was the owner of the improvements, within the meaning of § 11 of the Agreement, and for that reason entitled under the provisions of the same section to take this particular , land for her allotment. It was found by the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes who héard the contest and by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior who heard the successive appeals that Mrs. Martin was the owner of the improvements; and the only question for our determination is whether this decision was without evidence to support it or was otherwise the result of some error of law on the part of those officers. Ross v. Stewart, 227 U. S. 530, 535; Ross v. Day, 232 U. S. 110, 117; Johnson v. Riddle, 240 U. S. 467, 474.

■ Each of the departmental decisions was made in writing, but the findings are somewhat informal, each appeal having resulted in adding something to what had been found before, — a fact not surprising since the testimony is very voluminous, occupying more than 500 pages of the printed transcript in this court. The following is an outline of the facts found: Mrs. Martin was the granddaughter of an Indian woman known as Mary Anderson, or Anson, after-wards Mary Thursday, and was the daughter of Wiiliam Bob Anson, otherwise known as Wild Bill. She had a brother known as Sam Bob. All these parties were Delaware Indians, adopted into the Cherokee Tribe, and as such were entitled to certain Delaware payments from the Government. During Mrs. Martin’s childhood she and *390 her brother and their parents resided with the grandmother, who was the head of the family, upon an improved tract of land known as the “old home place,” located south and west of the land in controversy. Wild Bill died in 1889, and his wife about the same time; and, after this, such payments as were due to Wild Bill as a Delaware were paid to Mary Thursday, and also certain small payments that were due to the contestant. About the year 1891 contestant, then a child of about ten years, was removed by force or undue influence to the home of a Delaware named Frenchman, and kept there until the Delaware payments of 1891 and 1893, averaging over $500 each, were paid to the members of the tribe.' The payments due to contestant were collected by Frenchman, who appropriated them to his own úse, this having been his object in assuming control over the child. Later she was sent away to school at the expense of the Government, and afterwards returned to the vicinity of her home, where she supported herself by her labor. In November,. 1898, when she was about eighteen years of age, she was married to George Martin, and shortly after this she and her husband visited Mary Thursday, and the latter then ascertained that contestant had not secured any land for future allotment. (This was after the establishment of the Dawes Commission, and after the passage of the Curtis Act of June 28, 1898 [e. 517, § 11, 30 Stat. 495-497] when the allotment of the Indian lands in the then Territory was in contemplation; Woodward v. DeGraffenried, 238 U. S. 284

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 U.S. 386, 37 S. Ct. 148, 61 L. Ed. 382, 1917 U.S. LEXIS 2200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harnage-v-martin-scotus-1917.