Hatch v. Luckman

64 Misc. 508, 118 N.Y.S. 689
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 64 Misc. 508 (Hatch v. Luckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatch v. Luckman, 64 Misc. 508, 118 N.Y.S. 689 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

We deem it proper to dispose of each of the above entitled actions in one opinion, as the main questions up for decision are the same in each case, and grow out of the same general transactions.

Thomas Skye was a Tonawanda Indian, living at the time of his death on the Tonawanda Reservation in this State, lie owned by allotment or Indian title four parcels of real estate on the Tonawanda Indian Reservation. Thomas Skye died on October 19, 1907; hut, on March 4, 1907, by formal deed of conveyance, he conveyed the lands in question to his son-in-law William Hatch. On the same day Hatch gave back to Skye a lease of the lands in question for the term of five years.

Thomas Skye had been legally married to Martha George who was an Indian woman belonging to the Cattaraugus tribe of the Seneca Ration of Indians. The only issue of [510]*510that marriage was a daughter, the plaintiff Phoehe Hatch. Skye also left him surviving an illegitimate son named James Skye, and three nephews, Stephen Skye, Cornelius Carpenter and Simon Parker, three of the defendants in the second entitled proceeding.

It further appears that, on the tenth day after the death of Thomas Skye, to wit, on the 29th day of October, 1907, certain members of the elan to which Thomas Skye belonged met at his last place of residence on the reservation and held what is known as the “ Tenth Day ” or “ Dead Feast,” at which time the members of the clan present proceeded to appoint the said James Skye, son of Thomas Skye, Cornelius Carpenter and Simon Parker, nephews of said Thomas Skye, administrators of his estate, with power to pay his debts by renting his lands, and proceeded to distribute his lands to certain persons.

The parcel concerned in the action against Luckman went to Stephen Skye, Cornelius Carpenter and Simon Parker, nephews; another tract to the same persons; a third tract to James, his illegitimate son, and a fourth parcel to Eliza Hiram, with whom Skye had been living at the time of his death in meretricious relations.

It will be noticed that, in this attempted distribution of Skye’s real property, the rights of his legitimate daughter and natural heir at law, Phoebe Hatch, were ignored. It is claimed by the defendants that this course was justified by reason of an Indian custom prevailing and having the force of law on the Tonawanda Indian Reservation, and that the laws of the State of Hew York do not control in the distribution and disposition of the estates of deceased Indians. We shall have occasion to refer later in our opinion to these Indian customs.

On the same day the Tenth Day ” or “ Dead Feast ” was held, two of the members of the clan, together with one Poodry, a witness of the proceedings at the feast, went to the house of the clerk of the tribe, and then and there informed the clerk.of the disposition made of the decedent’s lands, and the clerk thereupon recorded them upon the book of record of the tribe in the names of the several distributees. [511]*511The so-called administrators thereupon proceeded to lease one of the parcels to the defendant Luckman, by a written lease approved by the council and attorney of the reservation," for the purpose, as claimed, of raising money to pay the debts and funeral expenses of the decedent.

William Hatch, the grantee of Thomas Skye, on ¡November 16, 1907, took his deed of conveyance to the clerk of the reservation, and secured its record.

Subsequently to the death of Thomas Syke, his daughter, Phoebe Hatch, instituted proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court of Erie county, seeking the appointment of administrators of the estate of the said Thomas Skye, deceased. The surrogate thereupon caused citations to issue and be served upon the said Carpenter, Parker and James Skye, advising them of the filing of the petitions for letters, and directing them to show cause why such letters should not be issued. They appeared in obedience to such'mandate and filed objections to the issuing of such letters, and contended before the surrogate that the Surrogate’s Court had no jurisdiction to act in the premises.

After a careful consideration of the questions raised, the Surrogate’s Court decided it had jurisdiction and authority to take jurisdiction over the estate of the said Thomas Skye, deceased, and issued letters of administration thereon to the plaintiffs Phoebe Hatch and Edwin E. Ford.

The defendant Willis Luckman, acting under the lease given him by the Indian administrators, entered upon the premises described in the lease and planted crops thereon, which he subsequently harvested and took away. The plaintiffs in the first above entitled action thereupon brought said action, alleging an'unlawful entry on the land and a coBversion of the crops, and asked damages for his so doing.

Subsequently to the commencement of this action, proceedings were instituted before the Peacemakers’ Court of the Tonawanda tribe by the said Cornelius Carpenter, Simon Parker and Thomas Skye, in which the complaint set forth in substance the facts as above stated, and demanded judgment awarding possession of the several parcels to the plaintiffs in accordance with the distribution made by the Tenth [512]*512Day Feast. We shall refer particularly to these proceedings hereafter.

Thereupon the relators, William Hatch and Phoebe Hatch, instituted proceedings in this court, praying for a writ of prohibition enjoining and restraining the defendants from further proceeding in that action in the Peacemakers’ Court.

This is the second of the proceedings above entitled, and is to bo disposed' of at this time in connection with the action for conversion of crops brought against Luckman.

The contention of the defendants in'both of these actions or proceedings, in brief, is:

First-. That the customs prevailing on the Tonawanda ^Reservation are superior to the laws of the State; or, to state the proposition in other words, that the laws of the State do not extend or apply to the matters in controversy, but that the Indian customs prevail.

Second. That the Surrogate’s Court of Erie county had no jurisdiction to grant letters of administration upon the estate of Thomas Skye, deceased, and its decree is, therefore, void.

Third,. That, by the Indian custom, the deed given by Thomas Skye to William Hatch is void, and consequently the lease given back to Thomas Skye is equally void.

Fourth. That the distribution of the lands of Thomas Skye at the Tenth Day or Dead Feast is valid and legal.

Fifth. That the plaintiff Phoebe Hatch, by the laws and customs of the Indians, cannot be deemed a member of the Tonawanda tribe, but is in law a Oattaraugus-Seneca Indian, and therefore incapable of holding land on the Tonawanda Peservation.

Sixth. That the Peacemakers’' Court of the reservation has jurisdiction and authority to decide the questions brought before it, and the writ of prohibition should not be issued.

The disposition of the questions involved is of great importance to the State as well as to the individual litigants. It involves the whole question of the relation of the State and of its laws to Indians residing on the reservation, and their duties and obligations to the State and its laws.

The Tonawandas are not a separate and distinct Indian' [513]*513nation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Misc. 508, 118 N.Y.S. 689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatch-v-luckman-nysupct-1909.