Miller v. Grayson

1917 OK 345, 166 P. 1077, 64 Okla. 122, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 598
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 10, 1917
Docket6856
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 1917 OK 345 (Miller v. Grayson) 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
Miller v. Grayson, 1917 OK 345, 166 P. 1077, 64 Okla. 122, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 598 (Okla. 1917).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

This case is on rehearing, and for a char understanding of the ques *123 tions involved it is necessary to briefly state the material facts. The parties to the suit will be denominated as in the trial court.

Daniel Miller and Oharlieo Emer were plaintiffs in the district court of Jefferson county, Okla., wherein they instituted this action against the defendants herein, N. B. Grayson and J. M. Bound, to recover for the tise and benefit of one F. E. "Watkins an undivided two-thirds interest in and to 90 acres of land, and damages for the detention thereof. The land in controversy is the surplus allotment of one Isham Nelson, a full-blood Ohoctaw Indian, who was a resident of what is now Pushmataha county, Okla., at the time of his death, in the year 1904. The land was selected by and set apart to him during his lifetime, and certificates of allotment issued therefor, although the patent to the land was not issued until some time in the year 1905. Plaintiffs, Miller and Emer, who were heirs of the said Isham Nelson, deceased, were also enrolled as full-blood Ohoctaw Indians, and some time during the year 1905 • attempted by warranty deed to convey the land in controversy to the defendants, Grayson and Bound, but said conveyances were void and did not pass the title to the grantors, for the reason that the restrictions of one, three, and five years upon the alienation of the surplus land of the allottee, as found in section 16, Supplemental Treaty with the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations (Act Cong. July 1, 1902, c. 1362, 32 Stat. L. 716), ran with the land, and the heirs of the deceased, Isham Nelson, were prohibited from alienating the same before the expiration of said periods. Gannon v. Johnston, 40 Okla. 695, 140 Pac. 430. Ann. Cas. 1915D, 522.

On May 7, 1909, the same plaintiffs executed another deed to Charles R. Allen, which conveyance was approved by the county court of Pushmataha county, as required by law. F. E. Watkins, for whose benefit the action was begun in the district court, was a partner of Allen, and was interested in the land, although the deeds were not taken in his name. Allen later, by a series of quit-claim deeds, conveyed all his interest in the land to Watkins. All of these conveyances, including the approved deed of plaintiffs to Charles R. Allen, are claimed by the defendants to be void, because of the adverse possession of the land by the defendants at the time of the execution of the deeds. During the pendency of the instant action the defendants, Grayson and Bound, while they were still in possession of the land, procured another deed from the plaintiffs, Miller and Emer, to the same land, and the county court , oí Pushmataha county, Okla., attempted to approve this deed. On the' original hearing of this case in this court it was assumed by counsel for plaintiffs and defendants that the deed executed by Miller and Emer in 1909 to Charles R. Allen was champertous, and for that reason void as against Grayson and Bound under the decisions of this court in the cases of Huston v. Scott, 20 Okla. 142, 94 Pac. 512, 35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 721, and Miller v. Fryer, 35 Okla. 145, 128 Pac. 713, and kindred cases. Since our attention has been'called to the fact that counsel were in error in assuming that the deed from plaintiffs to Allen was champertous, we do not think that we are or should be bound, by the action of counsel for the respective litigants inadvertently mistaking the law applicable to the case.

The. deed from plaintiffs to Allen executed in 1909, and approved by the county court of Pushmataha county, Okla., under the decisions of this court in the cases of Ashton v. Noble, 46 Okla. 296, 148 Pac. 1042, and Murrow Indian Orphans’ Home v. McClendon, 64 Oklahoma, 166 Pac. 1101, was not champertous and conveyed a good title to Allen.

The land having been allotted in the lifetime of the said Isham Nelson, the surplus was inalienable on December, 1905, the date of the first deed to Grayson and Bound. Under the provisions of section 22 of the act of Congress of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. L. 137, c. 1876), providing for the final disposition of the affairs of the Five Civilized Tribes in the Indian Territory, the adult heirs of deceased Indians of either of the Five Civilized Tribes whose selection had been made were authorized to sell and convey such lands, but it was provided in said act that:

“All conveyances made under this provision by heirs who are full-blood Indians are to be subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, under such rules and regulations as he may prescribe.”

The act of Congress of May 27, 1908 (35 Stat. L. 312), was a substitute for the act of April 26, 1906, with reference to the alienation of said lands, and it was therein expressly provided:

“That no conveyance of any interest of any full-blood Indian heir in such land shall be valid unless approved by the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of the estate of said deceased allottee.”

From the time of the taking effect of the act of May 27,1908, the surplus allotment of isham Nelson could be conveyed by his full-blood heirs only on approval of their deed by *124 tile county court oí Pushmataha county. The deed from plaintiffs to Allen was executed and approved in conformity to the provisions of said act, and said conveyance, having been made in conformity to the laws of the United States, and by and through its chosen governmental agencies, is valid, and, as was decided in the case of Ashton v. Noble,, supra:

“The statutes of the state, intended to prevent champerty and maintenance, and the state adjudications, rendering inoperative a deed by a grantor out of possession, as against the adverse.holder of the land, are inapplicable, inoperative, and ineffective.”

We have held in the cases of Bell v. Fitzpatrick, 53 Okla. 474, 157 Pac. 334, F. B. Collins Inv. Co. v. Beard, 46 Okla. 310, 148 Pac. 846, Ashton v. Noble, supra, and Murrow Indian Orphans’ Home v. McClendon, supra, that where there is a conflict between the acts of Congress and the state law with reference to the alienation of these lands, the state law fails and the rights of the parties must be determined by the laws of Congress applicable thereto. In the Collins Case we said:

“When the question of the removal of restrictions from allotted lands, or the right of alienation of such lands, or the power of alienation is involved, we must look to the acts of Congress and to those acts and laws alone. In other words, if a state law, by its language, or through its proper construction or its operation, would permit the alienation of a restricted Indian allotment, or. render a deed thereto effective, where the land would not be alienable, or the deed thereto effective, under the acts of Congress dealing with the subject-matter, then the state laws fail; and this because the federal government retained jurisdiction in these Indian matters to the extent stated in the Enabling Act, under the terms of which Oklahoma became a state; and this reservation of jurisdiction was assented to in the Constitution which the people adopted.”

The facts in the case of Ashton v. Noble, supra, are similar to the facts in the ease under consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK 345, 166 P. 1077, 64 Okla. 122, 1917 Okla. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-grayson-okla-1917.