McHodge v. Tulsa Street Ry. Co.

1923 OK 637, 219 P. 656, 96 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 18, 1923
Docket14290
StatusPublished

This text of 1923 OK 637 (McHodge v. Tulsa Street Ry. Co.) 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
McHodge v. Tulsa Street Ry. Co., 1923 OK 637, 219 P. 656, 96 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 289 (Okla. 1923).

Opinion

KANE, J.

This was an action involving title to numerous lots or parcels of land situated in the city of Tulsa, commenced by plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, against the Tulsa Street Railway Company and many other parties as defendants.- Originally the various lots or parcels, of land involved comprised the allotment of the plaintiff, a member by blood of the Greet Tribe of Indians, and it was while it was in this condition that the initial conveyance assailed herein was made.

The petition of the plaintiff contains two causes of action: First, an ordinary action in ejectment. Second, a suit in equity, alleging in substance the plaintiff’s citizenship in the tribe; the selection of the land as part of his allotment; the issuance of patents, etc..; the execution and delivery of the initial deed assailed, through which deed all the defendants are now asserting and claiming title; the invalidity of said initial deed on account of the minority of the grantor on the date of its execution. The petition also charges that said deed was made and delivered by the plaintiff without any consideration and without anything of value passing to him for making same, and that the same w-as not approved by the Secretary of the Interior, or by any other authority provided for by the act of Congress. Th'e relief prayed for was a de-®ree declaring the initial deed void and can. celing the same of record, together with all the subsequent conveyances based thereon through which the various defendants claim title.

The defendants by way of answer set up their chain of title, all running back to the initial deed assailed, and further allege that the plaintiff was enrolled opposite roll No. 2282, on August 12, 1S99, as of 11 years old on said date; that plaintiff was born on the 31st day of October, 1887, and became 21 years of age on the 31st day of October, 1908, and therefore, on the 19th day of March, 1909, the date the initial deed assailed was executed, the plaintiff had passed his 21st birthday, and that upon attaining his majority, all restrictions, both personal and running with the land, were removed; that the defendants claiming through other grantors under deeds of later date than the initial conveyance purchased and acquired title to the respective portions of the land claimed by them in good faith, without notice of any kind of the facts alleged by plaintiff, and that they paid a fair cash consideration therefor.

Defendants further pleaded that they went into possession of said land and made valuable improvements thereon many years before the commencement of this action with plaintiff’s knowledge and without any protest or objection on his part, and therefore he is estopped from, questioning their title.

The reply of ’ the plaintiff was a general denial.

Upon trial to the court of the issues thus joined there were findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of the defendants, upon which judgment was duly entered, to reverse which this proceeding in error was commenced.

Prom the foregoing brief summary of the facts, it is clear that the principal ground for setting aside the initial deed made by the plaintiff was that he was a restricted Indian minor at the time it was executed on the 19th day of March, 1909.

Before stating or considering the precise questions presented for review we will first lay out of the way all preliminary questions of law and fact upon which the parties agree. These may be briefly summarized as follows: The plaintiff was a member of the Creek Tribe of Indians of one-half blood; that the initial deed upon which the title of all the defendants rests is void if it appears that the plaintiff was a min- or when it was executed'; and that by section 3 of the act of Congress approved May 27, 1908, the enrollment record of the Five Civilized Tribes is conclusive evidence as to the age of such citizen in so far as it purports to state age.

Now, recognizing the controlling force of section 3, supra, and the foregoing settled *271 principles, counsel for plaintiff in error to make their case introduced in evidence certain public documents marked “Exhibits A-l, A-2, A-3,” duly certified by the Superintendent of the Eire Civilized Tribes as “true and correct copies of entire enrollment record in connection with the application of David McHodge, Roll No. 2228, for enrollment as a citizen of the Creek Nation.” This certified enrollment record shows, among other things, the date of plaintiff’s application for enrollment to be August 12, 1889, and that he was a Creek Indian of the half-blood, eleven (11) years of age. In addition to this documentary evidence, the exact date of plaintiff’s birth not being shown by the enrollment record, counsel was allowed to introduce oral evidence tending to show that David Mc-Hodge, the allottee, was born on the 31st day of October, 1888, which would make him 10 years of age at the date of enrollment and hence a minor when the deed was executed: Later the part of this oral evidence relating to the year of birth was Stricken out on motion, leaving the enrollment record, supplemented by the oral testimony showing that the plaintiff •was born on the 31st day of October as the sole evidence in the case.

It was at this point that the action of the court which counsel for plaintiff in error say constitutes reversible error occurred, substantially as follows: On motion of defendants the trial court struck out the oral evidence tending to show that the plaintiff was born in 1888, and this is the first specific error complained of. Thereupon counsel for plaintiff offered in evidence a document which bore the certificate of the Superintendent of the .Five Civilized Tribes, stating that it is a “true and correct copy of a page of the 1895 Ray Roll, numbers from 1 to 28, inclusive. Big Springs Town, Muskogee Nation.” This document, which was undated, bore a notation to the effect that David McHodge was eight years of age. Objections to the introduction of this document being sustained by the trial court, counsel then offered to show by parol evidence' the date the document was made, and that when this was done this document, in connection with other parol evidence which he was able to procure, would show that the plaintiff was born on the 31st day of October, 1888, and that the entry on the certified enrollment record “age 11,” made on the I2th day" of August, 1899, the date of enrollment, was an error made through inadvertence, mistake, or otherwise, and that is a matter of fact the allottee was only-ten years of age on said date, which would make him a minor at the time of the execution of the deed assailed in this case-The trial court consistently refused throughout the case to admit such parol evidence, holding that the certified enrollment record, in so far as it showed the plaintiff’s age in years, was conclusive and could not be impeached or contradicted by either oral or documentary evidence tending to show that the allottee was a year or more younger than the age in years shown by the enrollment record.

This brief summary of the record presents counsel’s precise grounds for reversal as nearly as we are able to state them.

We are unable to perceive that there is any error in the action of the trial court complained of. The obvious purpose of counsel for plaintiff in offering in evidence the oral evidence and' the rejected document was to discredit the certified enrollment record, also introduced in evidence by them, to such an extent as to permit them to establish the plaintiff’s age by parol evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
1923 OK 637, 219 P. 656, 96 Okla. 269, 1923 Okla. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mchodge-v-tulsa-street-ry-co-okla-1923.