Tenorio v. Tenorio

1940 NMSC 002, 98 P.2d 838, 44 N.M. 89
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1940
DocketNo. 4435.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1940 NMSC 002 (Tenorio v. Tenorio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenorio v. Tenorio, 1940 NMSC 002, 98 P.2d 838, 44 N.M. 89 (N.M. 1940).

Opinion

■ SADLER, Justice.

Julian Tenorio, a Santo Domingo Pueblo Indian, while still residing at the Pueblo, and on January 20, 1920, was lawfully married to Maria Chavarilla, a San Felipe Indian girl, then residing at the San Felipe Pueblo. The ceremony was performed by a Catholic priest at the,Village of Pena Blanca in Sandoval County, in which county both Indian Pueblos' indicated are located, although Pena Blanca is not within the boundaries of either Pueblo. The- officiating priest performed the ceremony pursuant to a license theretofore. secured by the parties to the marriage from the.County Cleric of Sandoval County at Bernalillo. Following their marriage they went to the Pueblo of "Santo Domingo to' reside and there resided as husband and wife, barring intermittent and temporary separations, until December, 1934, when the wifé,: Maria, went again to her own Pueblo of San Felipe' from which she has never returned to reside with the husband, Julian.

The separation continuing, the husband instituted this suit for divorce against the wife by filing a complaint in the district court of Sandoval County-.orí--February 1, 1938, charging abandonment.- It set' forth also that there were no children of ,the marriage and that there was no community property. The wife,, as defendant,, first-filed a' pleading, denominated a. plea in abatement, challenging jurisdiction of the court upon the ground that-the-parties were members of Pueblo Indian tribes* residing within their Pueblos, wards of-the United States of - America, and that the Pueblo Indian Tribal Council had exclusive .jurisdiction of the subject matter of the-..suit and over the personal and domestic. ■ affairs of its members. No pleading responsive to the plea in abatement was filed, nor was any testimony adduced at the hearing on the plea. Cf. National Liberty Insurance Company v. Silva, 43 N.M. 283, 92 P.2d 161, on rehearing. Nevertheless, the trial court, “having examined the pleadings and heard arguments of counsel”, overruled the plea,. Thereupon, the defendant answered, entering a general denial, except to admit the marriage and separation, but by way of further answer alleging:

“1. That the parties hereto are Indian Members of the San Domingo and San Felipe Pueblo Indian .Reservation respectively, and wards of the United States of America.

“2. That the parties hereto live together under tribal relation and tribal government,' and are subject only to the exclusive jurisdiction of the Congress of the United States of America.”

The plaintiff’s reply denied the new matter set up in defendant’s answer and upon the pleadings thus framed the cause was tried. The trial court, although finding the plaintiff and defendant to be Pueblo. Indians residing in their respective Pueblos, both at the time of marriage and of trial, found also that they were bona fide residents of Sandoval County in which said Pueblos are located, and concluded that the court had jurisdiction both of the parties and of the subject matter. It rendered judgment on the merits denying plaintiff’s prayer for divorce based upon a finding that defendant’s abandonment of Plaintiff was not voluntary but due rather to his mistreatment of her. He appeals assigning error incident to the trial on the merits. The defendant, although prevailing below in the trial on the merits, assigns cross-error upon the denial of her challenge to .the jurisdiction. Her right thus to complain being unquestioned, despite her position as appellee (Davidson v. Enfield, 35 N.M. 580, 3 P.2d 979), we must proceed first to dispose of this claim of fundamental error. If sustained, the review is ended.

Thus we have presented in new guisé the anomolous position occupied by the American tribal Indian in our national society. It is a question that has afforded the subject of innumerable judicial decisions, both state and federal, as well as to furnish a popular theme for legal essayists and text-writers. In but one instance, however, so far as our research discloses, has there reached the reported page, a decision upon the jurisdiction of a court, other than the tribal court or council of the parties, to entertain a suit in divorce between members of an Indian tribe still living upon Indian lands and maintaining tribal relations. In this case the challenge to the jurisdiction was sustained and the parties relegated to the judi-. cial tribunals of their tribe. The case mentioned is that of Raymond v. Raymond, 8 Cir., 83 F. 721, 723. The opinion was written by the late Circuit Judge Sanborn. It is instructive and unquestionably correct. The more important inquiry is whether it be decisive..

The appeal was from a decision rendered by the United States territorial court for the Northern District of Indian'Territory, reported in 1 Ind.T. 334, 37 S.W. 202. The appellee, a white woman and citizen of the United States, had intermarried with a Cherokee Indian and lived with him in the Cherokee Nation. A few months after marriage a decree of divorce was rendered in the husband’s favor in a suit between them in the circuit court of the Canadian district, “which was one of the established courts of the Cherokee Nation”. Thereafter, the wife, appellee, before the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, procured a certificate of naturalization before the United States Court in the Indian Territory. Two days later she brought this suit in equity against the appellant for divorce and alimony. Two defenses were interposed: First, that the court had no jurisdiction of the parties or the suit, “because the parties to it were both members of the Cherokee Nation”; and, next, that the decree of the Cherokee Court was conclusive and rendered res adjudicata the questions sought to be presented in the United States Court. The first defense being sustained, the second was not considered.

A mere reading of the opinion shows a wide difference in the political status of the Cherokee Indian Nation, two of whose members were before the court, and the Pueblo Indians of New Mexico, two of whose members furnish the actors in the case at bar. The court denominated the Cherokee- Nation as “a domestic; dependent nation”. Mention is made of the fact that for more than a century the United States had maintained treaty relations with this tribe of Indians “as such a nation”. Quoting treaty provisions and congressional acts reserving to the Cherokee Nation exclusive jurisdiction in its judicial tribunals of all civil and criminal matters arising within their territory and expressly excluding from the United States Court in the Indian Territory jurisdiction in such matters, the court said: “This relation of the United States to these Indian tribes thus uniformly maintained by the treaties between them and the United States, and by the express enactment of this act of congress, leave no doubt that the United States court in the Indian Territory is expressly excluded from the right to hear and determine civil suits to which members of the Cherokee Nation are the sole parties. It is conceded that under the laws of that nation the appellee became a member of that tribe, by adoption, through her intermarriage with the appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 NMSC 002, 98 P.2d 838, 44 N.M. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenorio-v-tenorio-nm-1940.