221 P. 514 | Okla. | 1923
Plaintiffs Gamble and Sewell sued the defendant, Emery, in the county court of Pittsburg county for conversion of fruit from a certain orchard and for the use of one certain house and for the value of certain fences, which fences were alleged to have been destroyed by the defendant, Emery. Plaintiffs alleged that they were the owners of the orchard, the house, and the fences, and that all of same were located on certain segregated coal lands, which lands belonged to the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations. As a muniment of their title to said orchard and house, plaintiffs attached to their petition a purported copy of a decision in a certain contest tried before Honorable J. George Wright, Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes, between the parties thereto. Said decision *168 shows that certain fruit trees, claimed by these plaintiffs to be the ones in controversy, and the three-room house were appraised to and held to be the property of plaintiffs herein. Said decision does not cover the fences in controversy. Plaintiffs alleged, and said commissioner found, that defendant, Emery, held the said improvements by contract with the plaintiffs. The court sustained a demurrer to said petition of plaintiffs, who have appealed to this court.
1. The record shows that plaintiffs in error failed to procure an extension of time to prepare and serve case-made within the time theretofore allowed by the court for preparing and serving case-made, wherefore defendant asks that the cause be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. This contention is not well taken, under the well settled rule of this court that proceedings on appeal may be brought by case-made or by transcript of the record, and the fact that a party takes time to make a case made, and thereafter elects to prosecute his proceedings on a transcript, affords no ground for a dismissal of the appeal. Chicago, R.I. P. R. Co. v. Reese,
2, 3. In Ross et al. v. Wright et al.,
"While a decision of the land department on matters of law are not binding on the courts, they should not be annulled unless they are clearly erroneous."
In such cases, it must be pleaded and proved that either through fraud or gross mistake the court fell into a misapprehension of the facts proved. Gonzales v. French et al.,
Section 300, Complied Oklahoma Statutes 1921, provides:
"In pleading a judgment, or other determination of a court or officer of special jurisdiction, it shall be sufficient to state that such judgment or determination was duly given or made; and the jurisdiction of any such court or officer shall be presumed until the contrary appears."
4. In the instant case, the decision of the said commissioner was attached to the petition in response to a motion of the defendant. The contest before said commissioner was between the same parties as in the instant case. It is well settled that reference may be had to this exhibit in order to determine whether a cause of action has been stated as against a general demurrer. Thomas v. Glenn et al., supra; Long v. Shepherd,
The ownership of plaintiffs in said improvements is based on the act of Congress approved August 24, 1912, 37 Stat. 518-531, and the rules and regulations promulgated by the Department of the Interior dated August 20, 1919. Under said act and rules the right of occupancy and ownership of said improvements is recognized. Under the authorities cited, therefore, the petition, when considered with the exhibit, is good as against the demurrer of the defendant and the court erred in sustaining said demurrer.
Let the judgment of the lower court sustaining the demurrer to the petition herein be reversed and the cause proceed according to law.
By the Court: It is so ordered.