150 P. 701 | Okla. | 1915
This is a controversy between the maternal and paternal kinsmen of Sissie and Lena Jefferson, two full-blood Seminole Indians allottees, who died *782 intestate and without descendants on the 12th day of February, 1903, and the 20th day of July, 1904, respectively, over the devolution of their allotted lands. Upon trial to the court the controversy was decided below in favor of the maternal relations of the decedents, whereupon the paternal relations filed this proceeding in error in the Supreme Court.
The contention of the prevailing parties is stated by their counsel in their brief as follows:
"Our position on the merits of the case is that Sissie Jefferson and Lena Jefferson were enrolled as Seminole citizens for the purpose of allotment, because of the fact that their mother was a Seminole; that because of the fact that the father happened to be a Seminole gave them no status or rights as Seminole citizens, but that they were Seminoles solely because their mother was a Seminole, and for no other reason; that this rule was adopted and followed by the Dawes Commission in preparing the rolls of the Seminoles for allotment; that the rolls so prepared were the rolls upon which allotment of the Seminoles was made; that the Arkansas law of descent was in force at the time of the deaths of these two allottees. Such being the case, applying the rule laid down in the ShulthisCase, 170 Fed. 529 [95 C. C. A. 615], the allotment of a child dying without issue or spouse, as in the case at bar, was in the nature of a maternal ancestral estate, and descended to the maternal heirs of the deceased allottees, to the exclusion of the paternal line. Therefore, Sam Harjo being the only heir in the maternal line, he inherited said allotments in fee simple."
The question for review involves an application to the foregoing facts of that part of section 2531 of chapter 49, Mansf. Dig. Laws Ark., which provides:
"In cases where the intestate shall die without descendants, if the estate came by the father, then it shall ascend to the father and his heirs; if by the mather, the estate, or so much thereof as came by the mother, shall ascend to the mother and her heirs." *783
As we gather the views of counsel from the foregoing excerpt from their brief, they concede the allotments of the decedents were ancestral estates, and that their devolution is governed by the applicable laws of descent and distribution of the state of Arkansas (Heliker Jarvis Seminole Co. v. Peter Lincoln,
A similar question seems to have been settled contrary to the contention of counsel in Pigeon v. Buck,
We cannot agree with this contention. We may assume that what counsel say concerning the laws and customs of the Seminoles is correct, but still the deductions they seek to draw therefrom do not necessarily follow. Strictly speaking, these estates did not come to the *784
allottees either "by the father" or "by the mother." It is apparent at a glance that the foregoing canons of descent, adopted from the laws of Arkansas and extended over and put in force in the Indian Territory for the purpose of supplementing the acts of Congress providing for the allotment of Indian lands in severalty, are not precisely applicable to the situation presented by the record before us. Therefore the court in this as in other instances is called upon to accommodate the laws of Arkansas as nearly as may be to the situation as it finds it in order to effectuate the purpose of Congress. McDougal v. McKay,
Prior to the acts of Congress providing for allotment, the constitutional policy of the Five Civilized Tribes was ownership in common, and when the time came for private ownership and a division of the land among individual Indians, the primary allotment more nearly resembled the partition of real estate among tenants in common than the granting of an estate by a sovereign owner, or the acquisition of one through the blood of a deceased ancestor. In the very nature of things, in the cases where the devolution of the immediate allotment from the government is involved, there can be nopropositus, as the term is generally understood, from whom succession can be traced or degrees of consanguinity reckoned. The best that can be done is to fit as nearly as may be section 2531 of chapter 49, supra, based upon the central idea of the common law of preserving ancestral estates in the line of the blood from whence they came, to conditions in the several Indian Nations wherein the principle of descent of landed estates through the blood of an ancestor was entirely foreign. Viewing the matter in this light, we conclude that Sissie and Lena Jefferson acquired their right to the lands in question by their membership in the *785 Seminole Tribe of Indians; that their allotments came to them by the blood of their tribal parents; and, both being full-blood Seminole Indians, as much "by the father" as "by the mother," that in such circumstances, the allottees dying intestate and without descendants, their allotments ascended equally to the father and his heirs and the mother and her heirs.
This conclusion, we think, accommodates, in a practical manner the rule of descent under consideration to the situation presented by the record. At any rate, it harmonizes with our conception of right and justice in the premises. In our judgment there are no sound reasons to support an exception in favor of the mother's line in the devolution of such estates among the Seminoles, where both parents are full-blood members of that tribe.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the views herein expressed.
All the Justices concur.