6 Indian Terr. 453 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1906
June 19, 1903, appellant (plaintiff below) filed his amended complaint, in which he complained of J. C. Hunter, W. L. Wills, Lawrence Arnold, J. W. Thrasher, Wilson Weaver, J. P. Plank, J. R. Williams, W. H. H. Keltner, and H. B. Carpenter, alleging that he is a Choctaw Indian by blood, and all the defendants are citizens of the United States, and not members of any tribe of Indians, except said Keltner, who claims to be a member of the Choctaw tribe by marriage. For cause of action he says: That he is the owner of and entitled to the immediate possession of 300 acres of land, describing it. That he claims title by virtue of being a member of said tribe of Indians, on the roll as such, and also that Israel Folsom, a member of said tribe by blood, segregated the said described land from the public Chickasaw and Choctaw domain, took possession by inclosing it with a fence and putting it into a state of cultivation. That said Israel Folsom died, and his representatives conveyed same to his brother, Don Folsom, a member of said tribe by blood, who conveyed it to H. G. McBride, a member of said tribe by blood, and that said McBride conveyed the same to this plaintiff. That at the time of said segregation no other member of either the Choctaw or Chickasaw tribes of Indians had or made any claim to said l^nd, except those herein mentioned. That at the time this action was begun, September 6, 1900, plaintiff had selected said land as his allotment, and was not then occupying, using, or claiming more than the pro rata share of Chickasaw or Choctaw land for himself and family, and at the commencement of the action was the owner and entitled to the immediate possession of said described land. In the year 1898, while said land belonged to said McBride, J. C. Pelton was occupying same as a subtenant of McBride. That his time expired December 31, 1898. December 15, 1898, J. C. Hunter, defendant, entered upon said land under an agreement with Pelton to assist him in gathering his crop for the use of a house, and Hunter's right of occupancy
June 21, 1904, defendant S. H. Butler, special administrator of J. C. Hunter, deceased, filed demurrer to said amended complaint, and same was sustained by the court June 22, 1904, and, plaintiff declining to further amend, the action was ordered dismissed at cost of plaintiff, for which judgment was rendered, to which plaintiff duly excepted. At the commencement of the action plaintiff gave bond in the sum of $1,000, with sureties, whereupon a writ of possession issued, which was executed and possession delivered to plaintiff as shown by return of officer filed in the court. Upon motion of defendant a writ of inquiry was issued after rendition of said judgment, and damages assessed by a jury, finding damages in favor of defendant and against plaintiff and his sureties in the sum of $1,560, for which judgment was rendered, and plaintiff excepted and moved for a new trial, which motion was overruled, and plaintiff excepted.
Appellant assigns a number of alleged errors, all embraced in the following named: Error of court in sustaining
Only three errors are necessary to be considered. First, as to the sustaining of demurrer to the amended complaint; second, as to the admission of, and refusal to admit, certain evidence over objections of appellant; and, third, as to the instructions of'the court to the jury. The action sought to be brought was forcible detainer, under the statute. At common law forcible entry and forcible detainer were distinct actions —criminal and not civil. The statute providing for their trial as civil actions confined them to two conditions of fact— the one when a tenant wrongfully held over after the expiration of his term and refused to surrender after demand, and the other where a stranger by force and violence wrongfully and unlawfully gained possession. The question of title is not involved in this action, and is immaterial, except so far. as tending to show the plaintiff’s right of present possession. Under this action the complaint must necessarily show, by apt pleading, that either the relation of landlord and tenant exists between plaintiff and defendant, or that defendant
There being no error, judgment is affirmed.