Martin v. Carman

183 Okla. 177
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 10, 1938
DocketNo. 28175
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 183 Okla. 177 (Martin v. Carman) 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
Martin v. Carman, 183 Okla. 177 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

GIBSON, J.

This case is here from a judgment of the district court of Osage county rendered after trial de novo on appeal from certain orders of the county court entered in the matter of final settlement and distribution of a decedent’s estate. The case involves the question of the devolution of the real and personal property of a deceased Osage Indian of the half blood, and the rights of certain heirs to occupy his homestead allotment as a statutory homestead.

Cecil Martin, the aforesaid half-blood Indian, died intestate in Osage county in the year 1933, leaving surviving as his heirs at law a son, Howard Benjamin Martin, an Osage Ind’’an of the quarter blood, and two adopted daughters. Helen Virginia Martin and Patricia Harlepe Martin, neither of whom is of Indian blood, and his wife, Elma Martin, who was also without Indian blood. The daughters assert that they and the son take the entire estate in equal shares, while the son, by virtue of his Indian blood, claims all the restricted estate, and equal share with each of the daughters in the unrestricted estate. The wife is not a party to the appeal, and apparently claims no interest. The children are all minors.

The trial court sustained the daughters in their contention, and further held that they were entitled to share and occupy the deceased’s allotted homestead with the son as their statutory homestead, and rendered judgment accordingly.

From the , aforesaid judgment, Howard Benjamin Martin has appealed.

Upon request of the parties, the trial court in its final judgment entered its conclusions of law classifying the property of deceased with reference to its character as restricted and unrestricted estate. A portion of these conclusions were excepted to by Helen Virginia Marlin and Patricia Har-lene Martin, and they have filed a cross-appeal.

The first and paramount question for determination is whether, in view of section 7, Act of Congress of February 27, 1925, 43 Stat. L. 1008, the adopted daughters, not being of Indian blood, may inherit any portion of the restricted lands, moneys, or mineral interests of the said Cecil Martin. That section reads as follows:

“Hereafter none but heirs of Indian blood shall inherit from those who are of one-half or more Indian blood of the Osage Tribe of Indians any right, title, or interest to any restricted lands, moneys, or mineral interests of the Osage Tribe; Provided, that this section shall net apply to spouses under existing marriages.”

It is conceded that the devolution of the restricted estate of a deceased Osage Indian is controlled by the laws of descent and distribution of the state of Oklahoma, subject entirely, however, to the acts of Congress.

For convenience, the adopted daughters will be hereafter referred to as plaintiffs, and the son as defendant.

Defendant says section 7, supra, clearly reflects the intention of Congress that none but heirs of Indian blood may inherit the restricted properties of a deceased member of the Osage Tribe of one-half or more Osage blood. The case of In re Thompson’s Estate, 179 Okla. 240, 65 P.2d 442, is cited in support of this contention.

Plaintiffs take the position that Congress did not have in mind and did not intend that the act should apply to adopted white children, maintaining that the proviso clearly so indicates. It is here urged that said proviso would show that Congress had in mind only the white spouse, and that the section was designed wholly for the purpose of discouraging future mercenary marriages between the Osages and the whites. They say that defendant’s contention may be supported by the letter of the act, but that the matter contended for is not within the spirit thereof, nor’was it within the intention of the makers.

To apply the strict construction sought by defendant would, say the plaintiffs, prove illogical and bring about an absurd situation, the denial in future of the right of the white parent to inherit the restricted property of his or her half-blood child born prior [179]*179or subsequent to the passage of tbe act. They urge that no logical reason could exist why Congress would be more solicitous of the welfare of the spouse under an existing marriage than it would be of the welfare of the white parent of a deceased half-blood child born prior to the act, or of the welfare of adopted white children whose adoption took place prior thereto.

Plaintiffs assert that the aforesaid alleged absurdities, together with the circumstances surrounding the enactment of the measure as revealed in the record before us, fully sustain their contention, rendering unreasonable the belief that Congress intended that any heirs other than white spouses of future marriages should by said legislation be denied the right of inheritance.

In the Thompson Case above, we said that section 7 was not ambiguous, and that Congress had said therein that in order for heirs to inherit the restricted property of those who are of one-half or more Osage Indian blood must themselves be of Indian blood. There we were attempting to arrive at the legislative meaning of the words “heirs of Indian blood”; whether or not those words should be so construed as to mean “heirs of Osage Indian blood.” The language used in arriving at our conclusion may have been too general and the ease may furnish, as plaintiffs say, “a good illustration of the danger in attempting to make a general statement in an opinion applicable to all cases involving a statute concerning which such general statement was made.” But an inspection of the Thompson Case will reveal that, so far as the question presently involved is concerned, we confined our rule of law, as the syllabus will show, to the question whether a spouse of Indian blood, though not of the blood of the Osages, could inherit. We merely held that the act was not ambiguous to the point of rendering obscure the intent of Congress in the use of the words “heirs of Indian blood.”

The Thompson Case did not involve white heirs. Therefore plaintiffs are in no way bound by the interpretation there placed upon section 7. But we do say that by said section Congress did, in effect, express itself in the language as we there said it did, “that such persons in order to inherit the restricted property of those who are of half or more Indian blood of the Osage Tribe shall themselves be of Indian blood.” Such is the apparent meaning of the language employed by Congress: “none but heirs of Indian blood shall inherit.” Plaintiffs say, however, that the proviso has clouded the meaning of the section sufficient to permit of judicial construction by the employment of means outside the act itself. It is contended that the surrounding circumstances as appear in evidence are sufficient, when considered in connection with said proviso, to show an intent on the part of Congress to restrict the section to white spouses of subsequent marriages, and to negative the idea that Congress intended to interfere with the rights of adopted white children.

If we are to examine into the history of the legislation and contemporaneous circumstances, we are compelled to admit that the act is ambiguous. McCain v. State Election Board, 144 Okla. 85, 289 P.2d 759. We held there as follows:

“Where the language of a statute is plain and unamlnguous, and its meaning clear and unmistakable, there is no room for construction, and the courts are not permitted to search for its meaning beyond the statute itself.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 Okla. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-carman-okla-1938.