Jones v. Hilderbrand

1929 OK 111, 275 P. 625, 135 Okla. 293, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 110
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 12, 1929
Docket18933
StatusPublished

This text of 1929 OK 111 (Jones v. Hilderbrand) 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
Jones v. Hilderbrand, 1929 OK 111, 275 P. 625, 135 Okla. 293, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 110 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

REID, C.

On January 17, 1927, O. D. Jones filed this suit against H. R. Hilder-brand and B. F. Hilderbrand to recover possession of 100 acres of land in Stephens county, a part of the surplus allotment of Loring Hotinlubbee, a full-blood member of the Choctaw Trib'e of Indians, who will be hereinafter referred to as the allottee. The plaintiff claimed his right of possession under an agricultural leas'e of the land executed and delivered to him by the allottee on December 3, 1926, which lease began of that date and ran for a term of five years. The defendants admitted the ownership of the land in the allottee, as alleged by plaintiff, but denied that plaintiff had any valid leas'e on said land, or any other right of possession thereto, and alleged that they were in the rightful possession of the land.

On May 20, 1927, the case was tried to th'e court without a jury. In the trial, as well as in the pleadings, it was admitted that the allottee was the owner of the fee-simple title, and the controversy between the parties to the suit was whether plaintiff or defendant had the valid lease on the land.

The trial court gave judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiff appeals.

While recognizing the long-established rule that the plaintiff in an ejectment act’on must recover upon the strength of his own title, yet, in view of the situation in this ease, in which each of the parties claims right of possession under leases from a common source, we set out in chrono1ogtcal order the leases each made by the allottee, as well as another instrument affecting the question, as shown in the record, to wit:

(1) Lease executed April 22, 1916, to' *294 R. E. Schoolfield for a term ‘beginning January 1, 1917, and ending December 31, 1920.

(2) A lease executed November 17, 1916, to R. H. Brown, beginning November 17, 1916, ending November 16, 1921.

' (3) A lease executed August 6, 1920, to Warren B. Phillips, beginning on date made, ending August 5, 1925.

(4) A lease made June 12, 1922, to Warren B. Phillips, beginning on date made and ending June 11, 1927. Also, an assignment of this lease made by Phillips to the defendants on the 2nd day of January, 1922.

(5) A lease December 3, 1926, to O. D. Jones, plaintiff herein, for a term beginning on date made and ending December 2, 1931. This is the lease on which plaintiff rests his right of recovery. ,

A quitclaim deed executed August 15, 1920, by R. H. Brown to the allottee covering the lands in controversy.

As stated, plaintiff seeks to recover by force of lease No. 5 made by the allottee to him on December 3, 1926, but if lease No. 4, made on June 12, 1922, to Warren B. Phillips, and assigned to the defendant, was valid, then plaintiff’s lease was void, and therefore the judgment of the trial court was correct. In order to determine the validity of these two leases, all the leases in evidence must be considered.

The applicable parts of the Act of Congress of May 27, 1998, to the questions involved in this case, are as follows:

“Sec. 2. That all lands other than homesteads a*, .'¡ted to members of the Five Civilized Tribes from which restrictions have not been removed may be leased by the al-lottee if an adult, or by guardian or curator under order of the proper probate court if a minor or incompetent, for a period not to exceed five years, without the privilege of renewal. * * *
“Sec. 5. That any attempted alienation or incumbrance by deed, mortgage, .contract to sell, power of attorney, or other instrument or method of incumbering real estate, made before or after the approval of this act, which affects the title of the land allotted to allottees of th'e Five Civilized Tribes prior to removal of restrictions therefrom, and also an" lease of such restricted land made in' violation of law before or after the approval of this act, shall be absolutely null and void.” (Emphasis ours.)

In the case of Cochran v. Teehee, 40 Okla. 388, 138 Pac. 563, this court, in an opinion by Justice Dunn, in defining the power of .Congress to legislate upon the question involved therein, and applying as well to the question herein considered, said:

“Necessarily, no question arising under the act rejates to any property acquired by the allottees otherwise than by and through the allotment of the lands belonging to the tribe, because the act does not purport to deal with any property except that. Originally, all of these allotments were taken with restrictions. So far as they were concerned, restriction was the normal condition under which the members of these tribes took their lands. This is not an ordinary condition in tenure of real property, but an ordinary condition and ordinary people, were not presented on the parceling of this estate; hence rules and regulations out of the ordinary were required to meet the situation. Congress, recognizing the inoompetency of a great majority of the takers to protect themselves and their property from the rapacity of the white men who surrounded and intermingled with them, allotted the lands with certain restrictions upon the right of the allottees to deal therewith. The purpose for which this was done has been stated in many decisions, and it is not necessary to restate it here. Hancock v. Mutual Trust Co., 24 Okla. 391, 103 Pac. 566. Congress retained all of its power and authority, notwithstanding statehood, and its right therein was yielded by th'e state on its organization. Section 1, Enabling Act (section 413, Williams’ Ann. Const. Okla.).’’

It first becomes necessary for us to see whether lease No. 1, 'executed by the allotlee to Schoolfield on April 22, 1916, for a term beginning January 1, 1917, and ending December 31, 1920, was a valid lease. And in solving- this question, it must b'e kept in mind that the lease must be good when executed, and find its authority in said act of Congress, otherwise it is “absolutely null and void.”

We find that th'e opinion by Mr. Justice Van Deventer, in the case of Bunch v. Cole, 263 U. S. 250, 44 S. Ct. 101, 68 L. Ed. 290, is controlling upon the question raised by the Schoolfield lease. That part of th'e opinion of the court applicable to the situation here presented is as follows;

“This was an action by an Indian allottee to recover for a wrongful occupancy and use of his land.
“The plaintiff was an adult Cherokee Indian of the full-blood, enrolled and recognized as a member of the tribe and still a ward of the United States. The land was an 80-aere tract which had been allotted to him in the division of the tribal lands, 40 acres as a homestead and the remainder as-surplus land. He had full title, but his power to alien or lease was subject to restrictions *295 imposed by Congress for bis protection. By three successive instruments, each given for a cash rental of $75, be leased tbe land, both homestead and surplus, to tbe defendants for agricultural purposes.

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Related

Monson v. Simonson
231 U.S. 341 (Supreme Court, 1913)
Mullen v. Pickens
250 U.S. 590 (Supreme Court, 1919)
Bunch v. Cole
263 U.S. 250 (Supreme Court, 1923)
United States v. Noble
237 U.S. 74 (Supreme Court, 1915)
Hancock v. Mutual Trust Co.
1909 OK 170 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)
Haddock v. Worrell
1925 OK 156 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)
Cochran v. Teehee
1913 OK 355 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 111, 275 P. 625, 135 Okla. 293, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-hilderbrand-okla-1929.