He-Ah-To-Me v. Hudson

1926 OK 661, 249 P. 138, 121 Okla. 173, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 7, 1926
Docket16906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1926 OK 661 (He-Ah-To-Me v. Hudson) 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
He-Ah-To-Me v. Hudson, 1926 OK 661, 249 P. 138, 121 Okla. 173, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 97 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

PHELPS, J.

Tilton Entokah was a full-blood noncompetent Osage Indian, and there was allotted to him as a homestead the real estate constituting the subject-matter of this action. He died intestate on or about the 3rd day of March, 1909, leaving surviving his wife, Grace Entokah (she having remarried and appears in the record in this case as Grace Entokah Abbott), a daughter, He-ah-to-me, about four years of age, and a son, Louis Entokah, about one year of age. Grace Entokah and He-ali-to-me were both allotted Osages. A certificate of competency was never issued to either Tilton Entokah, Grace Entokah, or to He-ah-to-me. The surviving son, Louis Entokah, was an unallotted child, and died about one year after the death of his father, when said child was about two- years of age. On May 6, 1914. the surviving widow, Grace Entokah Abbott, filed her petition in the county court of Osage ■ county, praying for the appointment of an administrator of the estate of Tilton Entokah. On the same date she also filed her petition praying for the appointment of an administrator of the estate of Louis Entokah, and at ,tb.e close of the administration proceedings the court found that Tilton Entokah died intestate, leaving surviving as his sole heirs his widow, Grace Entokah, his daughter, He-ah-to-me, and his son, Louis Entokah, and ordered his allotment distributed in equal shares to such three survivors. At the close of the administration proceedings of the estate of Louis Entokah, the court found that Grace En-tokah Abbott, the mother of said child, was his sole surviving heir and entitled to inherit his entire estate, arid distributed his one-third of his father’s allotment to her, which two orders of distribution left the title to Tilton Entokah’s allotment vested, an undivided two-thirds interest in Grace Ento-kah Abbott and an undivided one-third interest in He-ah-to-me.

■Grace Entokah Abbott conveyed by warranty deed an undivided one-third interest in the lands in question to one H. N. Gook, such deed specifically reciting that the in-terefet conveyed was that inherited from Louis Entokah, and Cook in turn conveyed to Myrtle Cock Colombe, and she in turn conveyed the same to J. L. Hudson, defendant in error herein. Hudson filed his action in the district court of Osage county, basing his claim of title upon the county court’s decree distributing the undivided one-third interest of Louis Entokah, deceased, to his mother, Grace Entokah Abbott, and prayed for judgment partitioning said real estate. Plaintiff in error, He-ah-to-me, answered and filed cross-petition attacking the validity of the county court’s decree of distribution and setting up title in herself to an undivided two-thirds interest in the real estate in question, claiming that at the death of her brother she was the sole heir to his interest in this property, which should have been distributed to her, and prayed that her title to an undivided two-thirds interest in the land be quieted.

With the issues thus joined, with but little dispute as to the facts upon trial, the court rendered its judgment decreeing title to the real estate in question, one-third each in defendants Grace Entokah Abbott and He-ah-to'-me. and plaintiff, J. L. Hudson, and orderdcí the same partitioned, to reverse which this appeal is prosecuted by He-ah-to-me.

Plaintiff in error contends that the district court erred in refusing to render judgment finding her entitled to a two-thirds interest in the real estate in question, it being her contention that when her father died, an undivided one-third interest in this land went to her, one-third to her mother, Grace Entokah Abbott, and one-third to her infant brother, Louis Entokah, and that when Louis Entokah died an infant, intestate, unmarried, and without issue, that his one-third interest in the land went to her.

The second subdivision of section 11301, Comp. Stats. 1921, provides that:

“* * * If decedent leave no issue, nor husband nor wife, the estate must go to the father or mother, or if he leaves both father and mother, to them in equal shares. * *

*175 It was, doubtless, upon this provision of the statute that the county court of Osage county predicated its finding that the deceased child’s interest in the land went to its surviving mother, overlooking subdivision 7 of section 11301, Comp. Stats. 1921, which provides:

“Seventh. If the decedent leave several children, or one child and the issue of one or more children, and any such surviving child dies under age, and not having been married, all the estate that came to the deceased child by inheritance from such decedent, descends in equal shares to the other children of the same parent, and to the issue of any such other children who are dead, by right of representation.”

This section of the statute is identical .with the California statute governing descents and distribution, and the question here' presented was before the' California court in De Castro v. John Barry, 18 Cal. 97, wherein the wife died leaving surviving her husoand and two infant children, goon thereafter one of the children died, and the court held that the estate of the wife and mother descended in equal shares to- the husband and two children, but that when one of the children died in infancy its share went, not to the father, but to the surviving child. And in commenting upon the contention there presented, the court said:

“The respondent’s counsel 'contends that this case falls within the seventh clause of the statute, and such is our opinion. The language of the clause iscunequivocal. The act is carel nlly_ drawn, and, we must suppose, embodies the deliberate meaning of the Legislature. TVe must give effect to this meaning without interpolating any new terms or qualifications, unless this be necessary to reconcile conflicting and contradictory expressions. The clause in question provides for a specific and peculiar state of facts; therefore, there is no contradiction between it and the general provisions going oefore, for these last provide the usual rule, while the latter clause provides the unusual rule, or the rule governing the particular case recited. This is not a contradiction, but only an exception. It is as if the second clause read: ‘If the intestate shall leave no issue, or husband, or wife, the estate shall go to his or her father: provided, that if any person shall die leaving several children. and any one of them shall die unmarried, etc., the share of such decedent child coming from such deceased parent shall go to the surviving children of the same parent.’ ”

In Crouthamel v. Welch, 53 Okla. 288, 156 Pac. 302, this court discussed with approval the application of this statute, although held that this case was not applicable to the facts in that case. And in Maroney v. Tanneyhill, 90 Okla. 224, 215 Pac. 938, this section of the statute was under consideration by this court, wherein the mother had died leaving surviving her husband and several chilaren; later two of the children died intestate, unmarried, and without issue, and the oourt held that under subdivision 7 of section 11301, Comp. Stats. 1921, the interest which the deceased children inherited from their mother went to their surviving brothers and sisters rather than to their father.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 661, 249 P. 138, 121 Okla. 173, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/he-ah-to-me-v-hudson-okla-1926.