Pickens v. Baker

42 S.W.2d 16, 184 Ark. 230, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedSeptember 28, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 42 S.W.2d 16 (Pickens v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pickens v. Baker, 42 S.W.2d 16, 184 Ark. 230, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 180 (Ark. 1931).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This appeal is from a decree which sustained a demurrer to a complaint containing the following allegations. The plaintiff recovered a judgment against defendant, which has become final and absolute, but which he has been and is now unable to collect. Defendant is a resident of the Western District of Carroll County, and the complaint was filed in the chancery court of that district.

The defendant possesses and owns two Osag'e head-rights, one allotted her by reason of her being a member of the Osage tribe of Indians, and the other was acquired under the will of her deceased husband, who was also an Osage allottee.

The defendant is an Osage allottee of less than half-blood, and there has been issued to her a certificate of competency long prior to the incurring of the indebtedness which plaintiff is attempting through this proceeding to collect.

That defendant receives, through such Osage head-rights, an annuity, payable in quarterly installments, amounting to several thousand dollars each year, which, if impounded and applied to the payment of plaintiff’s judgment, would soon discharge it.

It was prayed that defendant be enjoined from selling, assigning or transferring her interest in said head-rights, and that a receiver be appointed to collect and receive the proceeds from such headrights, with directions to apply the same to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s judgment.

The court below was of the opinion, as expressed in the decree, that if a receiver were appointed by the court no authority could be conferred upon him to collect funds that are being administered as a trust in the State of Oklahoma under the acts of the Congress of the United States, without the permission of such law-making authority, and that no such grant of authority had been given. The court therefore refused to appoint a receiver as prayed, and this appeal was prosecuted to reverse that decree.

The “Laws relating to the Osage Tribe of Indians” from May 18, 1824, to March 2, 1929, have been compiled by Mr. B. A. Barney and published in a book under the title of the language above quoted, but a summary of these laws, in so far as they relate to the creation and nature of the headright of an Osage Indian, is contained in the opinion in the case of In re Denison, 38 Fed. (2d) 662.

It is recited in this opinion that at the time of the passage of the Osage Allotment Act of June 28, 1906 (34 Stat. 539), the Osag'e Indians were occupying as a tribe their reservation in Oklahoma Territory containing approximately a million and a half acres of land largely underlaid with oil, gas and other minerals, and 1hat the G-overnment then held in trust for the two thousand or more members of the Osage Tribe a fund of over eight million dollars received and held under various treaties as compensation for the relinquishment of other lands. This Allotment Act reserved the oil, gas, coal and other minerals to the Osage Tribe for a period of twenty-five years from and after the 8th day of April, 1906, as a trust to be administered by the United •States Government, and by subsequent legislation this trust has been extended to April 8, 1958.

Legislation relating to this tribe of Indians removed the restrictions on Indians of less than one-half Indian blood except as to the trust estate held by the Government belonging to the tribe, and provided the manner of payment of quarterly annuities to non-competents and for the payment to those having- certificates of competency of their portion of the fund as it accumulated.

The Denison and other cases defined an “Osage headright” to be the interest which a member of the tribe has in the Osage tribal trust astate, which trust consists of the oil, gas and mineral rights, and the funds which were placed to the credit of the Osage Tribe under Federal legislation relating- to that tribe. The Federal Government has granted leases for the exploration and recovery of oil, upon which royalties are being collected and held in trust for the owners of these headrights.

The complaint alleges that the defendant is an Osage Indian of less than one-half blood and the possess- or of a certificate of competency, which accorded to her full authority to manag-e her own business.

In the Denison case, supra, it was said that: “The only distinction as to alienation of property, between an Osage Indian of half blood or more and an Osage Indian of less than half blood, is that Osage Indians of half blood or more may have certificates of competency issued to them upon application, and in the discretion of the Secretary of the Interior (§ 2, par. 7, act of June 28, 1906, 34 Stat. 542), while all restrictions against the alienation of their allotment selections, both surplus and homestead, of all adult Osage Indians, of less than one-half Indian blood, have been removed. Section 3, Act of Congress, March 3, 1921, amendatory of § 3, Act of Congress, June 28, 1906.”

It was there also said: “An adult Osage Indian of half blood or more, with a certificate of competency has the right to sell and convey any lands deeded to him by reason of the act of June 28, 1906, except his homestead, while an Osage Indian of less than half Indian blood has the right to sell both his surplus and homestead. A ‘competent’ Osage Indian is one having a certificate of competency.

“The word competent has been defined as follows: ‘The word “competent” as used in this act, shall mean a person to whom a certificate has been issued authorizing alienation of all the lands comprising his allotment, except his homestead.’ Section 9, Act of April 18, 1912, 37 Stat. 86; McCurdy v. U. S., 246 U. S. 263, 38 S. Ct. 289, 62 L. Ed. 706.”

The Denison case was one which involved the question whether an Osage headright of an Indian who had filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy constituted an asset of the bankrupt, to be administered by the trustee in bankruptcy as the other assets of the bankrupt. In an opinion reviewing much of the legislation on the head-rights of Osage Indians, it was held in the Denison case that “Nowhere in the Act) of 1906, or by an amendment thereto, does an Osage Indian of less than half blood with a certificate of competency, or with restrictions removed, have the right to dispose of his trust fund or his trust estate. Congress has the right at any time to modify the provisions for holding or disposing of the trust estate of the Osages. The whole purpose of Congress has been to protect the Indian, and provide for his maintenance, his education and his care, and the trust estate cannot be affected by any obligations created by the Indian, even though he has a certificate of competency.”

It was there further said: “This does not, even by implication, empower him to sell his interest in a trust estate. Congress has provided that at the termination of the trust period, whenever it may be, the interest of the individual Indian shall be delivered to him intact. United States v. Thurston County, (C. C. A.) 143 F. 287.

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Related

McCurdy v. United States
246 U.S. 263 (Supreme Court, 1918)
Choteau v. Burnet
283 U.S. 691 (Supreme Court, 1931)
United States v. Thurston County, Neb.
143 F. 287 (Eighth Circuit, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 16, 184 Ark. 230, 1931 Ark. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pickens-v-baker-ark-1931.