McIntosh v. Dill

1922 OK 35, 205 P. 917, 86 Okla. 1, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 7, 1922
Docket11865
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1922 OK 35 (McIntosh v. Dill) 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
McIntosh v. Dill, 1922 OK 35, 205 P. 917, 86 Okla. 1, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 93 (Okla. 1922).

Opinion

ELTING., J.

This is an action in ejectment tried on an agreed statement of facts in the district court of Okfuskee county. A jury was waived. Judgment by the court was rendered in favor of the defendants in error, and the plaintiff' below, plaintiff in error herein, has appealed. The parties herein will be designated as plaintiff and defendants, as in the trial court.

The plaintiff is a three-fourths Creek Indian by blood, and is an allottee of the Creek Nation, and the land for which she sues is a part of her surplus allotment and described as follows: The north half of the southeast quarter of section 12;, township 11 north, range 9 east, Okfuskee county, Okla. Plaintiff was born in June, 1898, and on the 23rd day of June, 1906, Bunny McIntosh, her father, was duly appointed her guardian by the United States Court for ,the Western District of the Indian Territory. He filed a petition in said court for authority to sell the land in question, and on the 9th day of July, 1907, the court made an order directing the guardian to make the sale. The sale of the land was sought as an addition to the town of Oke-mah, winch is now the county rent of Ok-fuskee county, anff the guardian caused the land to be platted into lots and blocks, streets, and alleys, and on the 27th and 28th days of September, 1907, the property was sold; in which sale divers and many persons became purchasers. Prom said sale plaintiff received more than $16,000, and the property has been improved and many homes placed thereon, and said property, including said improvements, has become of great value, estimated at $300,000. Defendant W. H. Dill declares no claim to any interest in the property, but defendant M. E. Dill asserts ownership of lots 4, 5 and 6 of block 19. which are a part of the tract heretofore described, and upon which lots improvements have been placed to the value of $4,000 or more, and she deraigns her title back to the guardian’s sale, and only those lots are involved in this particular action.

The plaintiff attained her majority on the 18th day of June, 1916, and brought this action on the 21st day of July, 1919, and as the gravamen of her suit contends that at .the time the court ordered the sale to be made the alienation of the land was restricted, and the order, therefore, being void, conferred no authority upon "the guardian whatever to make said sale, and that hence the conveyance was a nullity.

Against this contention of the plaintiff, the defendant insists upon three grounds that the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed: First. That the Congress cured any defects in said title and vested the title in the purchasers by a special act of Congress passed June 25, 1910, and that said act had the effect of validating the title in the purchasers at said sale; said provision being section 26. volume. 3, Kappler on Indian Laws and Treaties, page 4S2, and providing as follows:

“That all sales and conveyances made bS Bunny McIntosh, legal guardian of Mildred McIntosh. a minor, mixed-blood Creek Indian, under decree of the United ' States Court of the Western District of Indian Territory, sitting at Wewoka, rendered on the 9th day of July, 1907, and sold on the 27th and 28th days of September, 1907, and conveying various portions of the north half of the southwest quarter of section 13, township 11 north, range 9 east,' of said lands and adjoining the town of Okemah, be and the same are hereby validated and all restrictions upon said lands heretofore placed by act of Congress are removed.”

Second. The defendant contends that the plaintiff, Mildred McIntosh, after reaching her majority and on the 28th day of June, 1916, made a final settlement with her legal guardian and received from said guardian the proceeds from the sale of said lots, and that she thereby ratified the sale of said property and by said action estopped herself from setting up her claim to said property.

Third. The defendant invoked the statute of limitations, or that the plaintiff had delayed beyond the statutory period in filing *3 said suit, after tiie accrual of lier cause of action.

Our holding in this case is such that it becomes necessary for us to consider but one of .these contentions of the defendant in error. We hold that the • act of Congress had the effect of validating the title of the defendant in and to said lots, as contended by the defendant, and that holding is decisive of this case and results in an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court.

We will now, as briefly as possible, give the reasons that have led us to this conclusion. There have been a great number of briefs filed in this case.. Numerous authorities are cited pro and con and numerous and extensive quotations cited to this court relative ,to and bearing upon the power of Congress to pass a special validating act in an attempt to legalize this conveyance.

The contention of the attorneys for the plaintiff is that our governments, both federal and state, are divided into three coordinate departments; legislative, ■ judicial, and executive; and that each is independent of the other, and that neither can infringe upon the functions of the other. That it is the function of the legislative to make laws; of the judicial to define and interpret ; and of the executive to enforce; and that the effort of Congress to validate this transaction, being, as they contend, a judicial act, would be an ac.t in excess of the authority of Congress and an infringement upon the judicial functions of the government in contravention of the “law of the land,” which guarantees freedom of contract, and in contravention of the Fifth Amendment, which prohibits the depriving of private property without due process of law, and hence the act was unconstitutional.

We think ithe above is a fair statement of the contention of the attorneys for the plaintiff. At the outset we will state that if this act of Congress had the effect of doing the things contended by tire attorneys for the plaintiff, we would be under the necessity of conceding their contention and disaffirming the judgment of ithe trial court; but we are unable to agree with the contention. The trouble with the contention of the plaintiff is that it is like many other general abstractions of the law; when considered in the light of the many and numerous exceptions that limit and narrow its effect and scope, it is often found. not to apply to the particular facts and situations in the particular case. We will now undertake to show, first, the exceptions and limitations to said rule; and, secondly, after we have defined the scope and limitation of this proposition, we will then show that the instant case does not come within the contention of ¡the plaintiff.

The legislative departments have the power to take private property for public uses, and in so doing are exercising what is called a sovereign power, and are unlimited unless restricted by constitutional' provisions. The power is inherent in the people and the Legislature, and the limitation is that it must be taken for a public use. The Legislature may provide by general laws the method and procedure as to condemnation, and the acts may become, all, or in part, judicial, but it is nevertheless faking property without the consent' of the owner; or, we are at least safe in saying it is taking property either with or without consent. Consent is not necessary. In the exercise of police power, property is often taken without consent.

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Bluebook (online)
1922 OK 35, 205 P. 917, 86 Okla. 1, 1922 Okla. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-dill-okla-1922.