United States v. Whitmire

236 F. 474, 149 C.C.A. 526, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2291
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 13, 1916
DocketNo. 4699
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 236 F. 474 (United States v. Whitmire) 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
United States v. Whitmire, 236 F. 474, 149 C.C.A. 526, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2291 (8th Cir. 1916).

Opinion

TRIEBER, District Judge.

Judge Campbell, in his opinion in this case, set out the facts so fully and correctly that we adopt his statement of facts. His statement is:

“On January 25, 1905, defendant Albert Whitmire was a duly enrolled adult freedman citizen of the Cherokee Nation, entitled to an allottable share in tne lands of said tribe. On that date he applied to the Commission to the Five Civilized Tribes to have allotted to him certain lands, a portion of which was lot 4 of section 31, township 26 north, range 17 east, the land in controversy in this case. By the act of April 21, 1904, the restrictions upon the alienation of allotted lands other than homesteads of adult freedman citizens of the Five Civilized Tribes had been removed. After the passage of this act, the defendant Greenlees engaged in the enterprise of securing certain of these freedmon entitled to allotments to file upon unallotted lands of the Cherokee Nation which he desired to acquire, and after such allotments were made he would take deeds therefor from the allottees. For some time prior to January, 1905, O. E. Holderman had been employed by Greenlees to assist him in the procurement of such l’recdmen to file upon such tracts of unallotted land as he desired. Shortly before the land in controversy was applied for by Whitmire, Greenlees met Holderman and said to him, ‘Now you know that Reinhardt farm up there;’ and Holderman said, ‘Yes, I know the farm; 1 [476]*476haWé-been over the'farln andknow the land;’to which Greenlees responded, ‘If you look on the plat when you go back to Tahlequah, you will find 40 acres of. vacant land on the Reinhardt farm in section 31,. and that is excessive holdings; he cannot hold it, and I want you to get a negro on it as quick ms you can, and buy it.’ Holderman answered, ‘Now, I don’t know exactly what is on that land, but there is some worm fences on there, or old rail fences, and if my recollection is right it has got a growth of this water oak timber on it.’ And Greenlees says, ‘That is the land; that is what I want; you file up and buy it for me as quick as you can:’ Thereupon Holderman got in touch with Whitmire, who agreed to apply for the land as a portion of his allotment, and, when secured, to sell it to Greenlees for $450. Holderman then took Whitmire to the office of the Commission, and on the date first mentioned Whitmire made his formal application for the land. Whitmire had never been on the land and did not own the inu provements thereon. Holderman was sworn by the Commission as a- witness in support of the application, and testified that he had been over the land, as to the character of the improvements, and that Whitmire was the owner thereof, and that no one else owned the improvements or any part thereof, which, was false, and known by him at the time to be false. Thereupon the land was set apart to Whitmire by the Commission, as a portion of his allotment selection, and certificate of allotment issued to him. Thereafter and on the same day Whitmire executed to Greenlees a warranty deed covering the land in controversy.
“On May 3,1905, James M. Coker applied to the Commission to select an allotment of the land in controversy for his wife, Mary ID. Coker, who was and had been for a long time the owner of the improvements thereon, which was refuse'd on account of the prior selection by Whitmire; and on the same day he instituted for his wife, Mary E. Coker, a contest against Whitmire, asserting her right to allot the land by virtue of her ownership of the improvements upon the land. Mary E. Coker’s claim to citizenship in the Cherokee Nation was then pending before the Department of the Interior, she being an intermarried' Cherokee citizen. Her right to such citizenship was determined adverse to her by the Supreme Court of the United States in Cherokee Intermarriage Cases, 203 U. S. 76, 27 Sup. Ct. 29, 51 L. Ed. 96, decided November 5, 1906, and her right to such citizenship was finally denied by the Department on January 26, 1907. On January 1, 1907, Mary E. Coker executed to Charles H. Reinhardt, as guardian of Alma Fay Reinhardt, a bill of sale covering the improvements upon the land in controversy. No further steps seem to have been taken in the matter of this contest until April 13, 1907, when Mary A. Reinhardt, mother and natural guardian of Alma Fay Reinhardt, filed with the Commission in the contest case a. petition to be allowed to substitute the name of Alma Fay Reinhardt as party contestant in lieu of the name of Mary E. Coker, the original contestant, which motion recites the above-mentioned bill of sale and that Alma Fay Reinhardt has taken possession of the improvements and is the owner thereof. This motion was denied by the Commission as appears from the opinion and order of the Commissioner of the Five Civilized Tribes of date May 22, 1907, and made part of the record in this case. The Commissioner says:
“ ‘As will be seen from the above petition, the said Mary E. Coker did not attempt to dispose of the improvements located upon the land in controversy until January 1, 1907, on which date she attempted to assign the same to Alma Fay Reinhardt, who, by reason of said assignment, acquired no preferential right to take the land in allotment as against a citizen of the Cherokee Nation entitled to an allotment and who had, prior thereto, filed on same. Mullen v. Yawter, Chickasaw, No. 1677, and cases cited. Furthermore, the records in the possession of this office show that Albert Whitmire, the contestee, filed on the land in controversy on January 25, 1905, while the petition on behalf of Alma Fay Reinhardt to have her substituted in plaep of Mary E. Coker, the original contestant in Cherokee Allotment Contest No. 3202, was not filed until April 13, 1907, or over two years subsequent to the time that the said Albert Whitmire filed on said controverted- land, and under the provisions of section 2 of the act of April 26, 1906 (34 Stat. 137, c. 1876), to the effect that [477]*477contests most be instituted within nine months alter the original filing thereon by the adverse party, the said Alma Fay Reinhardt would be barred from instituting contest on her own behalf by reason of the expiration of the nine months limitation in such cases made and provided, and it being a general rule of law that the substitution of parties to a cause of action will not bo permitted for the purpose of defeating the statute of limitations, the Commissioner is of the opinion that the petition filed by Mary A. Reinhardt as mother and natural guardian of Alma Fay Reinhardt, to substitute tbe name of tlie latter as party contestant in Cherokee Allotment Contest No. 3202, in lieu of tlie name of Mary 1<3. Coker, the name of the original contestant therein, should bo denied.’
“From this order Alma Fay Reinhardt appealed to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and the papers were duly transmitted to that office on December 14, 3907. Whitmire, having disposed of the land on the day that he allotted it, took no further interest in the matter of the contest, but, at tlie solicitation of Greenlees, authorized Riddle & Clapham, attorneys at Vinlta, and TIowe & Wright, attorneys at Washington, to represent him in the matter before the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, and the appearance of Howe & Wright was entered in the Department on December 19, 1907. Later, at tlie solicitation of relatives of Alma Fay Reinhardt, he authorized James K. Jones, of Washington, to represent him before the Department, and on March 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
236 F. 474, 149 C.C.A. 526, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-whitmire-ca8-1916.