The Act of April 21, 1904, c. 1402, 33 Stat. 189, 204, removing
restrictions on alienation of lands of non-Indian allottees of the
Five Civilized Tribes, did not authorize members of the tribes to
sell future acquired property.
Under Rev.Stat., § 2116, no conveyance of an Indian tribe
shall be valid except as authorized by treaty, and individual
members cannot sell future allotments, as, prior to allotment,
there is no individual interest in tribal lands or vendible
interest in any particular tract.
Gritts v. Fisher,
224 U. S. 640.
While the Act of April 21, 1904, removed some restrictions, it
did not permit either members of the tribes or non-Indians to sell
mere float or expectancy.
One who has applied for and been admitted to membership in an
Indian tribe by intermarriage cannot thereafter claim the rights of
an Indian as to receiving allotment and the rights of a white
non-Indian as to alienation, and all parties dealing with such a
person do so with knowledge of the restrictions on alienation
imposed by the Act of 1902.
As § 642 of Mansfield's Digest, providing that title to
subsequently acquired property conveyed shall inure to the benefit
of the grantee, was only extended to Indian Territory so far as
applicable and not inconsistent with any law of Congress, it has no
effect on titles to allotments which, under the Act of 1902, cannot
be affected by conveyance before patent.
37 Okl. 60 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the effect of the deed of an
intermarried Choctaw to an allotment to be subsequently acquired,
and the construction of acts of Congress affecting the right of
allottees to convey, are stated in the opinion.
Page 233 U. S. 270
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
Emmer Sisney, a white woman and widow of a Choctaw Indian,
applied in 1899 to be admitted as a member of the tribe by
intermarriage. Her application not having been granted, she
employed Franklin & Apple, attorneys at law, to secure her
enrollment. As compensation for their services she, on October 16,
1905, by warranty deed, conveyed to them her
"entire interest in any and all lands, exclusive of homestead,
which might finally be allotted to her by the Commissioners of the
Five Civilized Tribes."
This deed was duly recorded, together with an instrument by
which she agreed to make conveyance when the land was actually
allotted. Thereafter, on November 26, 1906, Emmer Sisney was
enrolled as an intermarried citizen of the Choctaw Nation. She
promptly made her selection, and on December 12, 1906, received a
patent to land, all of which, except the homestead, she, on
December 14, 1906, sold for value to Lynch & Simmons. Thereupon
Franklin, who had acquired Apple's interest under the deed of 1905,
brought this suit to have the deed to Lynch & Simmons cancelled
as a cloud on his title. The District Court of Oklahoma entered a
decree in his favor. That judgment was reversed by the supreme
court, and the case is here on a writ of error to review that
ruling.
Both parties claim title to land allotted in December, 1906, to
a white member of the Choctaw Tribe. The plaintiff has the older
warranty deed, but the defendants contend that, as it was signed
before allotment, the deed was void by virtue of the provisions in
the Supplemental Agreement of July 1, 1902 (23 Stat. 641,
§§ 15 and 16, c. 1362),
Page 233 U. S. 271
that
"lands allotted to members and freedmen [of the Choctaw and
Chickasaw Tribes] shall not be affected . . . by any deed, debt, or
obligation of any character contracted prior to the time at which
said land may be alienated under this Act, nor shall said lands be
sold except . . . (§ 16) after issuance of patent."
To this the plaintiff replies that, as Emmer Sisney was a white
woman, this prohibition against sale by her had been repealed by
the Act of April 21, 1904 (33 Stat. 204, c. 1402), which provides
that
"all the restrictions upon the alienation of lands of all
allottees of . . . the Five Civilized Tribes of Indians, who are
not of Indian blood, . . . are . . . hereby removed."
That statute did not authorize white
members of the
tribe to sell future acquired property, but did permit non-Indian
allottees to sell what had been actually assigned to them in
severalty.
Cf. 34 Stat. § 19, p. 144, c. 1876. The
distinction between a member and an allottee is not verbal, but was
made in recognition of a definite policy in reference to these
lands. The Revised Statutes (§ 2118) declare that no
conveyance from an Indian tribe shall be of any validity in law or
in equity unless authorized by treaty. As the tribe could not sell,
neither could the individual members, for they had neither an
undivided interest in the tribal land nor vendible interest in any
particular tract.
Gritts v. Fisher, 224
U. S. 641. But, in pursuance of the legislation
following the Report of the Dawes Commission (
Choate v.
Trapp, 224 U. S. 665),
provision was made for dividing and distributing the tribal land in
severalty among the members of the tribe. But, recognizing the
probability of improvident and hasty sales being made, Congress
provided that the land could not be sold until after the patent had
actually issued, and even then only one quarter could be sold in
one year, three quarters in three years, and the balance in five
years. The Act of 1904, relied on by plaintiff, removed some of the
restrictions,
Page 233 U. S. 272
and permitted those members of the tribe who were not of Indian
blood to sell land after it had been actually allotted in
severalty. But it did not permit even a non-Indian to sell a mere
float or expectancy, since he would not likely receive the full
value of what thereafter might be patented to him.
The plaintiff further contends that, even if the deed was
inoperative when made, yet, as Emmer Sisney was a white woman, she
had the capacity of a white person of full age to convey an
expectancy, so that, when she acquired title in 1906, it inured to
the benefit of Franklin and Apple, as the grantees under the deed
of 1905. But the trouble with this contention is that Emmer Sisney
cannot be treated as a white woman for the purpose of conveying an
expectancy and an Indian for the purpose of securing an allotment.
When she applied to be enrolled as a citizen of the Choctaw Nation
she,
ipso facto, subjected herself to the restriction upon
alienation of Indian land imposed upon all members of the tribe.
All who dealt with her, as to land thereafter allotted to her, were
charged with knowledge that the Act of 1902 declared that such land
should not be affected by any contract made before allotment. The
deed of 1905 was therefore a nullity, and did not estop her or her
assigns from showing that it had been made in direct violation of
the statute. For, to permit an Indian's deed, void when made, to
operate as a conveyance of title to lands subsequently allotted
would be to disregard the express language of the statute and
defeat the protective purposes for which the law was passed.
Starr v. Long Jim, 227 U. S. 624.
The result is not changed by the provision of § 642 of
Mansfield's Digest that
"if a person, without title, shall convey real estate, and
subsequently acquire title, the legal or equitable estate
afterwards acquired shall immediately pass to the grantee as if the
estate had been in the grantor at the time of the conveyance."
The chapter of Mansfield's Digest of
Page 233 U. S. 273
Arkansas Law containing this section was extended (32 Stat. 841)
to the Indian Territory "so far as the same may be applicable and
not inconsistent with any law of Congress." It has no effect here,
because it is inconsistent with the Act of 1902, which declared
that Indian land should not be affected by a deed made before
patent. The deed to Franklin, having been made before allotment,
was void, and the judgment is
Affirmed.