192 F. 427 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Oklahoma | 1911
At the hearing of this case, certain questions of law arose which it appeared to the court should be determined before taking up the questions of fact involved, for the reason that it appeared that the ultimate facts necessary to be determined would depend somewhat upon whether the court should find the law as contended for by the plaintiffs or the defendants. The court, having heard the argument of counsel, and having considered the briefs filed upon both sides, has reached certain conclusions as to the law of the case, which will be briefly stated in this memorandum, not filed as a formal opinion in the case, but merely, a memorandum so that in the future progress of the case counsel may understand the court’s conclusions as to the law involved.
“The provisions of the act of Congress approved March 1, 1901, * * * in’ so far as they provide for descent and distribution according to the laws of the Creek Nation, are hereby repealed, and the descent and distribution*429 of land and money provided for by said act, shall be in accordance with Chapter 49 of Mansfield's Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas, now in force in the Indian Territory.”
While the land in this case cannot be said to “descend” from Garfield Colbert to his heirs because the title never vested in him, still it was no doubt used advisedly by Congress and the Creek Nation, with intent that the title should pass as if the deceased member of the tribe had survived to receive his allotment. As said by Judge Amidon in Shulthis v. McDougal, 170 Fed. 529, 95 C. C. A. 615:
“The word ‘descend' is. of course, inapplicable to the actual contingency provided for by ihe statute, because that contingency contemplates the death of the child before he had actually become seised of any interest: in the land. The word ‘descend’ is a word of art, and indicates the transference of property by inheritance. If any significance is to be given to it, as used in this section, it must be held that the intent of the parties to the agreement was that the land should pass to the same persons and in the same proportions as it would have passed if the child had died seised of it. Any other construction simply obliterates this word, and makes the land pass to the parj ties who are heirs directly by. allotment from the tribe. The statute itself not only declares that it shall ‘descend,' but also declares that it shall be ‘allotted and distributed’ to the heirs. It is manifest, therefore, that both ideas were in the minds of the parties to the agreement. This construction receives further support by the general scheme which the federal government and tlie Creek Nation formed for the disposition of the tribal property. The first requisite for the partition of the tribal estate in severalty among its members was to ascertain and legally establish who were members of the tribe. By reason of the many intermarriages between members of the tribe and members of the white and negro races, and by reason ol' the fraudulent claims to membership, the ascertainment of the particular persons who were in fact entitled to such membership proved a much more difficult task than' was at first anticipated. The commission was empowered and directed to prepare such a roll. This work not only required much investigation on its part, but resulted in voluminous litigation. Instead of being the work of months, it proved to be the work of years. In the meantime, however, the membership of ihe tribe was constantly undergoing change by birth and death. In order to provide for all members of the tribe who were born subsequent to the beginning of the enrollment, the date of right to enrollment was twice ser forward, the statute last quoted fixing the latest date. By reason of these facts, when the roll was completed, it contained more names than there were members in being. The roll, however, furnished the basis for the division of the tribal estate. Every person whose name was entered on the roll was entitled to an equal proportion of the tribal lands and funds; but by reason of the fact that before actual distribution could be made, and even while the enrollment was in progress, some persons whose names were on the roll would die. Ihe statute made provision for the disposition of the share of tribal property which would go to them if living. Such a provision was necessary. Otherwise, there would have been a portion of the tribal property undistributed. It was never ihe intent, however, either of the tribe or the federal government to grant to parties having a kinsman who had died before the actual making of the allotment additional lands as a bounty. These kinsmen got all their right to additional lands under and through the enrolled member who had died. Whether the ancestor was actually seised of the property or not in his lifetime was immaterial. It was the intent of the statute that the property should pass by the same right and in the same maimer as it would have passed if the person enrolled had survived to receive his allotment. The tribe was not bestowing such land as a bounty, but was simply providing for the right of inheritance.”
It is contended by counsel for plaintiffs that the Original Creek Agreement, wherein it provided for enrollment and the allotment of
“But these were public lands, and, while the enrolled members of these tribes undoubtedly had a vested equitable right to their just shares of them against strangers and fellow members of the tribe, they had no separate or individual right to or equity in any of these lands which they could maintain against the legislation of the United States or of the Indian Nation.”
The same court, in Wallace v. Adams, 143 Fed. 716, 74 C. C. A. 540, speaking of the act creating a citizenship court, say:
“When it was passed, the Dawes Commission, to whom Congress had delegated the power to distribute the lands of the tribe, had not allotted the land in dispute to the defendant. He had, therefore, acquired no vested right in it as against subsequent legislation of the United States, because, until such an allotment was made, all the proceedings determinative of citizenship and of distribution which derived their force and effect from the legislative power of the United States alone were necessarily subject to the further exercise of that authority.”
See, also, Woodbury v. United States, 170 Fed. 302, 95 C. C. A. 498; Muskrat v. United States, 44 Ct. Cl. 137.
It follows that in this case, where the deceased member was not enrolled, and the actual enrollment did not take place until after the supplemental Creek Agreement became effective, no rights had become vested in any individuals as the heirs of Garfield Colbert at the time of the adoption of the supplemental agreement, so as to preclude Congress from changing the test of heirship from that outlined in the' Creek law, to that outlined in the Arkansas law. The title therefore passed by the allotment and patenting of the land, to the heirs of Garfield Colbert, as determined by the Arkansas law. It is as if the original agreement had provided that the land should descend and be allotted to the heirs of Garfield Colbert as provided by the Arkansas law, for, before the allotment and distribution of the laird,
I have not overlooked the case of Irving v. Diamond, 23 Okl. 325, 100 Pac. 557. It is urged that this case announces a doctrine contrary to the foregoing* conclusions. I do not find that it clearly appears from the opinion whether or not the allotment was selected and set apart to the heirs of the deceased member of the tribe before August 8, 1902. the date of the taking effect of the supplemental agreement. It does state that he was duly enrolled upon the freedman roll of the Creek Nation, and died intestate on August 16, 1900, and that after his death, and on October 6, 1902, there was allotted in liis name and a deed or patent executed to the tract of laird involved. In view of the uniform practice of the commission in issuing the allotment certificate a number of months at least in advance of the patent, it may fairly be assumed that such was the case here, and that the allotment was in fact selected and set apart prior to August 8, 1902, in which event the heirs according to the Creek law would have acquired a vested interest in the land prior to the supplemental agreement. I am informed through brief of counsel for defendants in the case at bar that the records of the commission in fact show that the land involved in the case of Irving v. Diamond, supra, was selected and set apart as the allotment of Edward Irving on October 20, 1899, and prior to his death, so that it is not clear that on the facts involved the holding in that case is at variance with the conclusions I have reached.
“Illegitimate children shall be capable of inheriting and transmitting the inheritance, on the part of their mother, in like maimer as if they had been legitimate of their mother.”
This provision of the Arkansas law had been construed by the Supreme Court of that state in the case of Gregley v. Jackson, 38 Ark. 487, prior to the time the law was adopted by the supplemental agreement, and in that case it was held that children of the same mother, whether legitimate or illegitimate, may transmit an inheritance to any and all collateral relations on the mother’s side, who are of her blood.
It therefore follows that, Gertrude Grayson and Garfield Colbert having a common mother, the former could inherit from the latter, regardless of her illegitimacy.