Walker v. Roberson

1908 OK 180, 97 P. 609, 21 Okla. 894, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 186
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 10, 1908
DocketNo. 782, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1908 OK 180 (Walker v. Roberson) 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
Walker v. Roberson, 1908 OK 180, 97 P. 609, 21 Okla. 894, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 186 (Okla. 1908).

Opinion

Hayes, J.

The subject-matter of this action is 160 acres of land, described as the E. y2 of the S. W. % and the S.% of the N. W. y of section 23, township 12 N, range 15 E. This tract cl land was first segregated from the public domain by W. W. Bray, an intermarried Creek citizen, who occupied the same for a period of about 15 years prior to the bringing of this suit. He fenced it, and broke out a portion of same, and placed it in a state of cultivation. .. About January 1, 1900, Bray sold his right to the possession of the land and his interest in the improvements thereon to Edward Walker, the father of plaintiff. Walker simultaneously rented the land to Bray, who continued in possession as his tenant. Edward Walker’s family, at the time he purchased the interest of Bray in the land, consisted of himself and one child, for all of whom he had already taken allotments. Shortly after he had obtained possession of the land in controversy he visited the land office at Muskogee and attempted to file on the land for one Ben Walker, who was an illegitimate child of said Edward Walker and a woman by the name of Leah Kenard. The commission refused to permit Walker to file for this illegitimate child. The exact reason for such refusal is not clearly disclosed by the record. He returned home, and became sick, and was unable to visit the land office for some time. On the 31st day of May, 1900, Bob Eoberson filed on the land for his son, Silas Eoberson. On January 1, 1901, Mineóla Walker, plaintiff, was born to Edward Walker and his wife. Shortly thereafter Ben Walker, the illegitimate child, acting through his uncle, filed upon *896 another tract of land some distance .from the land in controversy Edward Walker was never married to the mother of Ben Walker, and Ben Walker has always resided with his mother, and not with his father. Edward Walker has assisted Ben’s mother in clothing him, and testified that he recognized the boy as his son. After the birth of plaintiff, and after Ben Walker had filed npon other-land, Edward Walker again visited the land office at Muskogee and endeavored to file npon the land in controversy for plaintiff; bnt the commission refused to permit him to do so for the reason that said land had already been filed npon. He endeavored to file a contest for plaintiff against defendant; but the commission refused to enter the contest or permit the same to be filed. The reason for this refusal is not disclosed by the record. The circumstances under which the father of defendant was permitted to file upon the land in controversy for defendant were that on the 30th day of Ma}r, 1900, he went into the locality where this land is located and inspected a tract of land that adjoins this land. The land he inspected was not in cultivation and was unimproved, and a portion of the same was timber land; whereas the land in controversy was at that time improved and consisted of prairie land. He returned to the land office at Muskogee, and on May 31, 1900, attempted to file upon the land he had inspected; but in doing so he by mistake gave the description of the land in controversy. He represented to the commission that the land upon which he was offering to file was unimproved and not claimed by any one, which was true of the land he had inspected and intended to file on, but not true as to the land he described to the commission and did file upon. Edward Walker made several efforts both to file upon the land 'and to enter a contest thereon against defendant, in behalf of his child, plaintiff herein, but was always refused permission by the commission to do so. A patent was issued to defendant for the land in controversy, and the commission arbitrarily filed plaintiff upon other land, which she refuses to accept. Upon- these facts, -which have been here stated substantially as found by the referee, plaintiff contends that de *897 fendant holds said land as a trust for her, and that the court should so decree, and direct that defendant convey all his right, title, and interest therein to her.

The report of the referee on findings of fact and conclusions of law is quite lengthy, and it will serve no useful purpose to set out the same in f-ull. The report was set aside by the court:, and that action of the court is the basis of most of the assignments of error made by appellant; but under our view of the case there is but one question presented by the record that demands our consideration, and that question is: Did Edward Walker, on the 31st day of May, 1901, the day on which defendant filed on the land in controversy, have a right to hold said land for the illegitimate child, Ben Walker? Edward Walker, prior to that time, had taken allotments for himself, his wife, and his only legitimate child. Plaintiff had not then been born.

Congress, by Act June 28, 1898, c. 517, 30 Stat. 495, ¡mown as the “Curtis Act,” provided that as soon as the roll of citizenship of any one of the Five Civilized Tribes should be completed as provided by law, and a survey of the land of said nation or tribe had been made,.the Dawes Commission should proceed to allot the exclusive use and occupancy of the surface of the lands of said nation or tribe among the citizens thereof, giving to each, so far as possible, his fair and equal share thereof. By section 16 of said act it was provided that, where any citizen should be in possession of only such amount of agricultural or grazing lands as would be his just and reasonable share of the lands of his nation or tribe and that to which his wife and minor children were entitled, he might continue to use the same and receive the rents therefrom until allotment had been made to him. It is under this provision of the law that plaintiff claims her father, Edward Walker, was rightfully holding the land in controversy when defendant filed upon same; that he was then holding the same for the illegitimate child, Ben Walker, and continued so to hold it until her birth, after which he held it for her. Does the *898 language of this section;, which authorized the father to hold and receive the rents from the lands to which his children were entitled as their allotments until allotments were _ made to him, include the right to hold and receive the rents for the prospective allotment of an illegitimate son? In other words, do the words “minor children,” in this section of the act, include both- minor legitimate children and minor illegitimate children?

The succeeding section of the same act reads:

“That it shall be unlawful for any citizen of any one of "said tribes to inclose or in any manner, by himself or through another, directly or indirectly, to hold possession of any greater amount of land or other property belonging to such nation or tribe than that which would be his approximate share of the lands belonging to such nation or tribe, and that of his wife and his minor children as her allotment herein provided; and any person found in such possession of lands or other property in excess of his share and that of his family as aforesaid, or having the same in any any manner inclosed, at the expiration of nine months after the passage of this Act shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor.”

The language of this section clearly indicates what children are referred to in this and the preceding sections.

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Related

Sewell v. Setterman
1918 OK 531 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1918)
Thompson v. Haskell
1909 OK 140 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1908 OK 180, 97 P. 609, 21 Okla. 894, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-roberson-okla-1908.