Priddy v. Thompson

204 F. 955, 123 C.C.A. 277, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1369
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 1913
DocketNo. 3,830
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 204 F. 955 (Priddy v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Priddy v. Thompson, 204 F. 955, 123 C.C.A. 277, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1369 (8th Cir. 1913).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

This writ presents two questions: Had a district court of the state' of Oklahoma on March 2, 1908, jurisdiction to avoid, or to change in effect or duration, the restriction upon the alienation of the allotted homestead of a Creek minor, by means of a decree pursuant to section 4955a of Snyder’s Compiled Daws of Oklahoma 1909, that the rights of majority concerning contracts and the leasing of his allotment were conferred upon him; and may a lessee of the oil and gas deposits of a certain tract of land, of the right to prospect for, extract, and use them, and of the right to occupy so much only of the surface of the land as may be reasonably necessary to carry on the work of finding, extracting and removing the oil and natural gas therefrom, who has never been in possession of the land, sustain an action of ejectment therefor against a defendant in possession of the property? The court below answered both these questions in the negative and dismissed the. action of ejectment which had been brought by the plaintiff, an assignee of an oil and gas lease of his homestead allotment made by Fred Saulsbury, a Creek freedman, on March 2, 1908, when he was only 19 years of age.

[1] There was a statute of the territory of Oklahoma enacted in 1895 (Daws 1895, c. 37, art. 2) to the effect that the district courts of its counties might, by decree, empower any resident of the territory under the age of 21 years to transact business in general and to transact any business specified with the same effect as if the business were done by a person above the age of 21 years. Snyder’s Compiled Daws of Oklahoma, 1909, § 4955a. Saulsbury was a citizen of the Indian Territory prior to November 16, 1907, when that territory became a [957]*957part of tbe slate of Oklahoma upon its admission to the Union. The enabling act of that state approved June 16, 1906 (34 Stat. c. 3335, § 13, p. 275), and section 2 of the schedule to the Constitution of Oklahoma (Snyder's Laws of Oklahoma 1909, p. 137), provided that all laws in force in the territory of Oklahoma should be extended, as far as applicable, over the state of Oklahoma upon its admission into the Union, and therefore over what was theretofore the Indian Territory. Saulsbury made the lease under which the plaintiff claims on March 2, 190S, by authority of a decree of one of the district courts of the state of Oklahoma rendered under the law of 1895, to the effect that although he was only 19 years of age he was empowered to make it with the same effect as if it were made by a person more than 21 }'~ears of age. The defendant contends that this law of 1895 was inapplicable to the restriction upon the alienation of the homestead allotment of this minor which was imposed by the United States and the Creek Nation, thát the district court of Oklahoma was without jurisdiction to annul that restriction, or to diminish the term of its duration, and that its decree and the lease thereunder were ineffective, while the plaintiff insists that the Oklahoma law was extended over the former Indian Territory on November 16, 1907, and thereafter applied to and governed all minors in the state of Oklahoma and all their property rights including the restrictions upon the alienation of their allotments.

Saulsbury derived the title to his homestead from the United States and the Creek Nation. They had the right and the power to grant or to withhold it from him and, a fortiori, to fix the conditions and limitations on which he should hold and use it. They provided, by section 4 of the original Creek agreement approved March 1, 1901, that no allotment of any minor should be sold during his minority (31 Stat. c. 676, § 4, p. 863), and by the supplemental Creek agreement approved June 30, 1902 (32 Stat. c. 1323, § 16, p. 503), that the homestead allotment of each Creek citizen should remain nontaxable, inalienable, and free from any incumbrance whatever for 21 years from the date of the deed therefor. By the Act of May 2, 1890, 26 Stat. c. 182, § 31, p. 94, the laws contained in chapter 73 of Mansfield’s Digest of the Laws of Arkansas, so far as they were not locally inapplicable or in conflict with any law of Congress, had been put in force in the Indian Territory, and section 3464 of that chapter provided that males under 21 years and females under 18 years of age should be considered minors. So that Saulsbury was a minor when these restrictions upon the alienation of his homestead allotment were imposed, and he continued to be a minor and his homestead continued to be subject to prohibitive restrictions against its alienatiofi, or in-cumbrance by lease, or otherwise, on Alarch 2, 1908, unless his allotment was relieved from those restrictions by the decree of the district court under the Oklahoma law of 1895. This conclusion has not been reached without consideration of and reflection upon the contention of counsel for the plaintiff that the decree merely fixed the status or domestic social condition of Saulsbury. But the legal and actual effect of the decree, if it was valid, was to shorten the term of restriction upon the alienation or incumbrance of this homestead fixed [958]*958by the United States and the Creek Nation two years, for it permitted him to lease his allotment when he was 19 years of age, although by the Creek agreements and. congressional restrictions he was prohibited from so doing until he was 21 years of age. Was there then no method by which a minor allottee could avail himself of the benefit of a lease of his allotment? The answer is that the United States had prescribed a way and had thereby excluded all others. There was a law in Arkansas which had been in force in that state since. 1869, found in section 1362 of Mansfield’s Digest of the Laws of- Arkansas, from which the law of Oklahoma of 1895 appears to have been copied, which authorized the circuit courts of Arkansas to empower minors to transact business as if they were of age. Congress extended many of the general laws of Arkansas over the Indian Territory, but it declined, to put this law in force in that territory. On the other hand, it granted to the district courts of the Indian Territory the jurisdiction commonly given to probate courts, full, complete, and exclusive jurisdiction of the leasing of the allotments of minors and incompetents (Act of April 26, 1906, c. 1876, 34 Stat. 137, 145, 148, § 20), of the guardianship of minors and incompetents, and of the administration of estates of decedents, whether Indians, freedmen, or otherwise. Act of April 28, 1904, 33 Stat. 573, c. 1824, § 2; Morrison v. Burnette, 154 Fed. 617, 621, 83 C. C. A. 391, 395.

This, therefore, was the situation when the state of Oklahoma was admitted into the Union and the Indian- Territory became a part of it. The United States had prohibited the alienation of their homestead allotments by Creek minors except by means of the probate jurisdiction over them, their allotments, and the leases thereof, which it had vested exclusively in the district courts in the Indian Territory sitting as probate courts, and it had carefully withheld from those and all other courts the power to abolish, diminish, or modify by adjudging that these minors might lease or sell their allotments as though they were adults, the restrictions upon the alienation of their lands which it had imposed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
204 F. 955, 123 C.C.A. 277, 1913 U.S. App. LEXIS 1369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priddy-v-thompson-ca8-1913.