Tirey v. Darneal

1913 OK 415, 133 P. 614, 37 Okla. 606, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 251
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 11, 1913
Docket2808
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 1913 OK 415 (Tirey v. Darneal) 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
Tirey v. Darneal, 1913 OK 415, 133 P. 614, 37 Okla. 606, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 251 (Okla. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

ROBERTSON, C.

Elias Darneal, the defendant in error, is a Choctaw Indian by blood, and received as a *607 part of his allotment as such Choctaw citizen the southeast quarter (S. E. *4) and the southeast quarter (S. E. %) of the southeast quarter (S. E. %) of the southwest quarter (S. W. %) of section 2, township 8 north, range 19 east of Indian base and meridian in Haskell county, Okla., to which a patent had been duly executed .and delivered him; on July 28, 1908, he, being then under the age of 21 years, but at the time a married man .and the head of ‘a family, joined by his wife, Ida Darneal, executed to L. C. Tirey, one of' the plaintiffs in error, his warranty deed to the premises above described. On August 7, 1907, Tirey sold a portion of the land to W. M. Shelton, and the balance to Ike Wheat. On December 2, 1909, the defendant, Elias Darneal, by his guardian, C. T. Mitchell, filed a petition in the district court of Haskell county, praying for the possession of the land above described, and for the cancellation of the deed; after several preliminary motions had been disposed of Tirey, on the 20th. day of August,'1910, filed his separate answer to plaintiff’s petition, which, besides being a general denial, alleged that at the time Darneal and his wife executed the deed to him they were husband and wife, living together as such; that the contract was made and entered into in good faith by all parties concerned; that they were legally authorized to make and enter into the same; that he paid Darneal $1,500 for thp land; that since receiving the deed as aforesaid he had conveyed the same to W. M. Shelton and Ike Wheat; that improvements to the value of $1,500 had been placed thereon, and prayed that the plaintiff be required to reimburse them to that ■extent before he should be entitled to ask relief in equity. Shelton and Wheat, the grantors of Tirey, answered by general denial. The cause was tried to the court, aided by a jury, and ■on December 6th a judgment was entered canceling the deeds hereinbefore referred to, and finding that the defendants had placed improvements on said land since the purchase thereof, which had enhanced the value of said land exclusive of the value of rents thereof, in the sum of $1,210, and it was therefore ordered and adjudged, that the defendants, have and re *608 cover from the plaintiff the sum of $1,210, and the same was declared a lien on the rents and property.

After a motion for a new trial had been overruled, the defendants took time to make and serve a case-made, and com-, plain here of the judgment: First that the court committed error in refusing to require of plaintiff to refund the purchase price of $1,450; and, second, that the court erred in refusing to require the plaintiff to return to the defendant Tirey certain property that he received from him as a consideration for the land in controversy. The defendant in error in his brief answers these allegations by insisting that at the time the deed was made to Tirey, he (being under the age of 21 years) had no power or authority to sell the land without proceedings in, and sanction of, the county court, neither of which was had, and that therefore the deed, so made to Tirey, was absolutely void; and, second that even though Darneal should have been required to refund the property received by him for the land, the answers contain no allegation that the plaintiff had any of the money, or the property received by him for the land in his possession at the time the answers were filed, and the only proof in the case on) this point showed that he did not have any of the money or property received for the land, and that therefore there was no error in the judgment'óf the lower court.

The deed was void; of that there can be no doubt. Section 6 of the Act of Congress approved May 27, 1908 (35 St. at L. 313, c. 199), which deals with the subject of the removal of restrictions from lands of allottees of the Five Civilized Tribes, provides that the persons and property of minor allottees of said Five Civilized Tribes shall, except as otherwise specifically provided by law, be subject to the control and jurisdiction of the probate courts of the state of Oklahoma. This provision of that act is in the nature of a restriction, by Congress, on the alienation of land belonging to minor allottees, and can be removed only by a regular proceeding, provided by statute, through the instrumentality of the county court. It has long been the policy of Congress, upheld universally by the courts, that the aliena *609 tion of restricted Indian 'allotments was not only prohibited, but all such attempted conveyances were absolutely void. As was said above, this conveyance by Darneal to Tirey, by reason of the provision of the act of Congress, supra, was not voidable, but absolutely void. Plaintiffs in error admit this, and urge this appeal, not on the grounds that they are entitled to an interest in the land by reason of a voidable transfer, but on the theory that an infant is liable for necessaries furnished him and his family, and urge that the consideration paid Darneal for the land was used by him for this purpose and that therefore he should have been compelled to return the purchase price before asking the removal of the cloud from his title, cast thereon by the void deed to Tirey. The doctrine that an infant is liable for necessaries is one recognized by this court, and well established by reason and precedent (Muskogee Development Co. v. Green, 22 Okla. 237, 97 Pac. 619, and cases therein cited), but it has no application to this case, and it is sufficient to say that this case does not come within the reason or purpose of that rule, for .that the consideration was not paid for the purpose of procuring or providing necessaries for DarneaFs family. Neither is it shown, at the time the answers were filed, or the case was tried, that Darneal had in his possession anji- of the consideration paid him for the land. This in. itself would -have been sufficient reason for not requiring him, in this action, to refund the purchase price or property received by him from Tirey.

But it is unnecessary to give further consideration to that theory for the reason that this deed was absolutely void, and as was said by Justice Hayes, in Simmons v. Whitting, 27 Okla. 356, 112 Pac. 1018:

“If the deeds made before' the removal of restrictions were only voidable, there might be some support for this contention, but they are absolutely void, because prohibited by law. They bind no one. In legal effect they are nothing; and knowledge ■of their existence conveyed no notice of the rights of any one, because no one can claim any rights under them.”

*610 The interpretation of the Act of Congress of May 27, 1908, supra, is also found in Jefferson v. Winkler, 26 Okla. 653, 110 Pac, 755, where in the syllabus it is said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1913 OK 415, 133 P. 614, 37 Okla. 606, 1913 Okla. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tirey-v-darneal-okla-1913.