Reynolds v. Fewell

236 U.S. 58, 35 S. Ct. 230, 59 L. Ed. 465, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1813
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 18, 1915
Docket102
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 236 U.S. 58 (Reynolds v. Fewell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Fewell, 236 U.S. 58, 35 S. Ct. 230, 59 L. Ed. 465, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1813 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hughes

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error brought this action to recover certain lánds which had been allotted under the Original Creek Agreement (act of March 1, 1901, c. 676; 31 Stat. 861; 32 Stat. 1971). The allotments described in the complaint had been made on behalf of two deceased Creeks, Minnie Solander and her infant daughter, Hettie L. Solander, that is, the respective allotments ran to ’ the ‘heirs’ of each. The defendant in error claimed under a lease, executed on September 7, 1905, by George A. Solander, the surviving husband of Minnie Solander and father of the other decedent. At the time of the death of his wife and daughter, as for some years previously, George' A. Solander ‘resided in the Creek Nation,’ but he was not a citizen of that Nation. The plaintiff in error claimed under a conveyance from Phoebe B. Trusler, an enrolled Creek, who as the sister of Minnie Solander was the nearest relative of Indian blood. The question was whether George A. Solander was entitled to take as ‘heir,’ despite *60 the fact that he was not a Creek citizen. It was answered by the state court in the affirmative. 34 Oklahoma, 112; 124 Pac. Rep. 623.

While the complaint embraced a portion of the lands allotted on behalf of Minnie Solander, as well as lands allotted on behalf of Hettie L. Solander, it appears from the record that the judgment related exclusively to the latter. According to the agreed statement of facts, Hettie L. Solander was born on February 22, 1899, and died on November 17, 1899, before receiving her allotment and leaving her father and aunt surviving. She was entitled to be enrolled, and was enrolled, as a member of the tribe, and the allotment on her behalf was made to her 'heirs/ without further description, on December 4, 1901, under the second paragraph of § 28 of the act of 1901, supra, and the tribal deed was thereafter executed accordingly. Section 28 is as follows:

"No- person, except as herein provided, shall be. added to the rolls of citizenship of said tribe after the date of this agreement, and no person whomsoever shall be added to said rolls after the ratification of this agreement.
“All citizens who were living on the first day of April, eighteen hundred and ninety-nine, entitled to be enrolled under section twenty-one of the Act of Congress approved June twenty-eighth, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, entitled ‘An Act for the protection of the people of the Indian Territory, and for other purposes/ shall be placed upon the rolls to be made by said commission under said Act of Congress, and if any such citizen has died since that time, or may hereafter die, before receiving his allotment of lands and distributive share of all the funds of the tribe, the lands and money to which he would be entitled, if living, shall descend to his heirs according to the laws of descent and distribution of the Creek Nation, and be allotted and distributed to them accordingly.
“All children born to citizens so entitled to enrollment, *61 up to and including the first day of July, nineteen hundred, and then living, shall be placed on the rolls made by said commission; and if any such child die after said date, the lands and moneys to which it would be entitled, if living, shall descend to its heirs according to the laws of descent and distribution of the Creek Nation, and be allotted and distributed to them accordingly.
“The rolls so made by said commission, when approved by the Secretary of the Interior, shall be the final rolls of citizenship of said tribe, upon which the allotment of all lands and the distribution of all moneys and other property of the tribe shall be made, and to no other persons.”

We are thus referred to the Taws of descent and distribution of the Creek nation’ to asqertain the persons entitled to the property. This explicit and determinative reference disposes of the contention that George A. Solander, although he might be an ‘ heir ’ under the Creek laws, nevertheless could not take the lands in controversy because being a non-citizen he was not entitled to the allotment of a distributive share of the tribal lands in his own right. It is sought to find support for this contention in the concluding paragraph of § 28, above quoted, which provides that the approved rolls shall be the final rolls of citizenship, upon which ‘allotment of all lands . . . shall be made, and to no other persons.’ But this paragraph should be read in the'light of § 3 of the act of 1901, supra, under which all lands were to be allotted ‘among the citizens of the tribe ’ so as ‘ to give each an equal share of the whole in value, as nearly as may be.’ The persons who were to receive these equal portions were those duly ascertained and enrolled, and the rolls approved by the Secretary of the Interior were to be final with respect to membership in the tribe and the corresponding determination of the distributive shares of the tribal lands. Thus, the provision of the last paragraph of § 28 had manifest regard to those who were to receive allotments if living, *62 and to those on whose behalf allotments were to be made if they had died. In the latter case, the allotment of the distributive share which would have gone to the enrolled citizen, if living, was to go to his ‘heirs.' One who took as such ‘heir’ would be none the less entitled because he might have .in addition an allotment in his own right as a member of the tribe; that would not be a disturbance of the principle of equality in distribution which was so emphatically laid down. Nor, on the other hand, would one be excluded from taking, if he were a described ‘heir,’ .by reason of the fact that he could not himself have received a distributive share as an enrolled citizen. The right of such ‘heir-’ to take would not be determined by reference to his status as a citizen or non-citizen, or by his right to a distributive share of the tribal lands as one enrolled, but by the status of the decedent and the fact that he was an ‘heir’ of the decedent within the statutory definition.

We have recently had occasion to review the course of legislation with respect to the distribution of the property of Creek intestates. Washington v. Miller, 235 U. S. 422; Sizemore v. Brady, 235 U. S. 441. The Creek nation, as a ‘distinct political society’, (Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, 5 Pet. 1, 16) had its own laws governing the devolution of the property of its citizens. When Congress put in force in the Indian Territory certain general laws of Arkansas, including Chapter 49 of Mansfield’s Digest relating to descents and-distributions, it provided that ‘the judicial tribunals of the Indian nations’ should retain exclusive jurisdiction in all cases in which members of the nation Should be the only parties and that to such cases the laws of Arkansas should not apply. Act of May 2, 1890, c. 182,. §§ 30, 31; 26 Stat. 81, 94, 95.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 U.S. 58, 35 S. Ct. 230, 59 L. Ed. 465, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-fewell-scotus-1915.