3 Indian Terr. 774 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1899
In this case appellees move the court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the record
It is not necessary to pass upon the question as to whether the trial court erred in holding the conveyance from ,T. A. Mays to his wife void. In view of the opinion of this court upon the other branch of the case, that question is immaterial.
This case turns upon the construction which should be given to the latter part of section 31 of the act of congress approved May 2, 1890. See 26 Stat. 95, and Rich. Dig. pp. 123, 124. The provision in question >s as follows: “That no attachment shall issue against improvements on real estate while the title to the land is vested in any Indian nation, except where such improvements have been made by persons, companies or corporations operating coal or other mines, railroads or other industries, under the lease or per
This court has not heretofore been called upon to construe this provision. Attention is first called to the second sentence, which is as follows: “That executions upon judgments obtained in any other than Indian courts shall, not be
It will be seen that the third or nulla bona paragraph of the statute does not conflict with the attachment provision or the execution provision above quoted. If there were an apparent conflict, by an established canon of construction, of universal application, all the provisions of the statute must be construed, if it can be done, so as to let each one stand, and have its full force and effect. Applying this canon of construction, there is no difficulty in permitting all three of these provisions to stand. The nulla bona provision was intended to give an equitable remedy to judgment creditors who had exhausted an execution, and procured a nulla bona return; to subject improvements made upon Indian lands by adopted citizens and noncitizens of the territory. It did not extend the attachment and execution provisions to judgment creditors to improvements upon Indian lands. It simply designated two other and distinct classes, and gave to judgment creditors a separate and distinct remedy, equitable in its nature, as to them; that remedy to be
It is a mistake to confuse this equitable proceeding with what is known as a “bill of discovery. ” A bill of discovery might have been filed without this statute, but it could not reach improvements upon Indian lands. The necessary facts may be embraced in a bill of this kind to make it both a statutory proceeding and a bill of discovery, but the right to subject the land would proceed from the authority given by the statute, and not from the general remedy found in equity to file a bill of discovery of assets belonging to the judgment debtor. It these two ideas are kept in mind, there is no difficulty about the case at all. Let us illustrate: If a bill of discovery had been filed in the state of Arkansas, for instance, to uncover assets belonging to a judgment debtor, based upon a judgment, execution, and
The question involved in the case at bar is whether or not this store could be sold under the decree of the court, not under an execution, because an order of sale is not, strictly speaking, an execution. This depends upon the question as to whether or not it was the judgment debtor’s homestead. If the decisions under the homestead laws of the United States are examined to ascertain what it takes to constitute a homestead, we will find that a man may have his homestead in a house which he runs as a hotel, he may have it above a store, he may have it in any kind of a building, so long as the value and amount of the lands is not in excess of the statutory provision, whatever it may be. Now, a town lot in Ardmore is not in excess of 160 acres, and there is no limitation by the nulla bona paragraph of the act as to value. So that if this appellant occupied this store as a homestead, or set up claim to it as a homestead, the court