Holcomb v. Keliher

59 N.W. 227, 5 S.D. 438, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 80
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 59 N.W. 227 (Holcomb v. Keliher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holcomb v. Keliher, 59 N.W. 227, 5 S.D. 438, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 80 (S.D. 1894).

Opinion

Corson, P. J.

This case was decided at a former term of this court, and the opinion is reported in 3 S. D., 497. A rehearing was granted on the petition of appellants, and the [441]*441same was reargued at the last term. We deem it necessary for a proper understanding of the case to give a somewhat fuller statement of the facts than appeared in our former opinion.

The plaintiffs are the heirs at law of W. T. Holcomb, deceased, who died in Rapid City, Pennington county, in 1886, where he had resided many years prior to his death. The said Holcomb, at the time of his death, was the owner of personal property consisting of thirty head of horses, 1,000 head of cattle, carriages, etc. He was for a number of years prior to his death engaged in raising cattle, which were allowed to run at large during the entire year on what is known as a “cattle range.” These cattle ranges are usually uninclosed, and have no definite or fixed boundaries, but include a large section of country, many square miles in extent. The plaintiffs had what is denominated a “home ranch,” but more properly, in this case, a “home station,” which embraced a house of four rooms, stable, three or more corrals, and necessary outbuildings, at a point in Pennington county near the Cheyenne river, and near the Great Sioux Indian Reservation, of which the Cheyenne river at that time was th'e northerly boundary. At this home station the herders employed by appellants generally made their headquarters. Some of the young stock were branded there, and the horses were generally corralled there when wanted for use, and during the winter one or more herders lived there constantly. During the years 1886 and 1881 the larger part of the plaintiffs’ herd of cattle and band of horses ranged on the south side of the river, on the reservation, the Cheyenne river being at nearly all seasons of the year fordable for horses and cattle, but some of the herd ranged in the vicinity of the home station on the north side of the river. We think the evidence quite clearly shows that the plaintiffs’ range included the home station and the region of country on both sides of the Cheyenne, extending over into the reservation and into the unorganized counties of Zeibach, Nowlin, and Jackson; but the plaintiffs had no station other than the one above described.

[442]*442The case was tried by the court, without a jury, and it found the facts, the material one in this case being as follows: “That the said horses, carriages, and vehicles were on the 1st day of April, A. D. 1887, located, situated, and kept in the said county of Pennington; and in the said year, A. D. 1887, and on the 1st day of April of that year, said neat cattle were located, situated and kept in said county of Pennington, which was their proper home and location, although the said cattle thence strayed into, and ranged and fed throughout, the counties of Nowlin, Jackson, and Zeibach, on the Great Sioux Reservation, in said territory.” And the court stated, as its second conclusion of law, “that on the 1st day of April, A. D. 1887, the situs of all of said personal property, for the purposes of taxation, was in Pennington county, Dakota Territory; and said personal property was by law subject to taxation and assessment in said Pennington county for said year A. D. 1887.” This finding of fact was challenged by appellants, as not supported by the evidence, and as contrary to the evidence. As the case was tried by the court, without a jury, it becomes necessary for this court to review the evidence; but, unless there is a preponderance of evidence in favor of the plaintiffs, the finding of the court cannot be disturbed. The counsel for appellants contend that the evidence shows that the plaintiffs’ cattle generally ranged upon the Indian reservation, and were not therefore assessable in Pennington county. The respondent insists (1) that as the plaintiffs were residents of that county, and had their home station in that county, the' personal property in controversy was properly assessable there, notwithstanding the larger part of the cattle and horses usually ranged outside of the county, on the Indian reservation; (2) that said cattle and horses ranged in the unorganized counties of Ziebach, Nowlin, and Jackson, which were attached to Pennington county for revenue purposes, and were therefore properly assessable in Pennington county; and (3) tbat the plaintiffs’ cattle and horses could have no fixed situs [443]*443upon an Indian reservation, as they could not lawfully range there. •

We are of the opinion that the first position of respondent's counsel is the correct one, and that the trial court was fully justified by the evidence in making his tenth finding of fact, as above quoted. All tangible personal property must necessarily have a situs in some place. As stated in our former opinion, in the absence of statute, the situs follows the owneb. The statute of this state contains the following provision: “All personal property is to be listed, assessed and taxed in the county where said property may be situated and kept on the first day of April of the then current year, and if the owner, his agent or person having charge of such property, neglects to list it, he will be subject to the penalty hereinafter provided. ” This section was evidently intended to apply only to property having a fixed situs in the county, situated and kept there by the owner or some person for him, not there transiently or merely temporarily, but having its home there for the time being, independently of any other locality. In our view of the case at bar, this section does not materially affect the question before us. The question still remains, in what county was this property “situated and kept” for taxable purposes? We think the answer must be, under the facts in this case, Pennington county. These plaintiffs jived and had a range, with house, stable, corrals, and outbuildings thereon, in that county. Their herders made that their home and headquarters. Their stock, in part at least, was branded there; and the plaintiffs had no station or headquarters elsewhere. While this range is called by the witnesses the ‘‘home range,” it was manifestly, from , the evidence, more properly the “home station;” and the plaintiffs’ range included this station, and extended across the rWer into the Indian reservation. There was no dividing line between the home range and the range on the reservation. It is true that the Cheyenne river was at that time the boundary line between Pennington county and the [444]*444reservation, but it, being fordable, constituted no dividing line to the plaintiffs’ range. The horses, when required, were driven to the home corral, and those needed selected out, and the others turned loose. When young cattle were to be branded, they were, in some instances, at least, driven to the home corral and branded. The men, when not riding on the range, made this station their home, and two men were kept there during the winter of 1886-87, to look after the stock and see that the river was kept open, that the stock might obtain a supply of water. A part of the stock ranged on the north side of the river in the vicinity of the station. That place, in law, then, was the plaintiffs’ home, and the home of their herd of cattle and band of horses; and whether they ranged entirely in the vicinity of the home station or further away upon the range in the Indian reservation is immaterial. The plaintiffs’ stock had no other home, nor any other legal situs.

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Bluebook (online)
59 N.W. 227, 5 S.D. 438, 1894 S.D. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holcomb-v-keliher-sd-1894.