This Court accepts the decision of the highest court of the
state that the state constitution was not violated by any action of
the trial court.
In this case,
held that a decision by the trial court
of Oklahoma, based on demurrer to the evidence of the plaintiff
and, after weighing that testimony for the purpose of determining
the rights of the respective parties, did not abridge immunities
and privileges of the plaintiff as a citizen of the United States
nor deprive the plaintiff of property without due process of law in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment by disregarding the
provisions of § 5039, Rev.Laws Oklahoma, making the provisions
of the statute respecting trials by jury applicable to trials by
the court.
Section 5 of the Act of February 28, 1891, 26 Stat. 794, c. 383,
amending the general allotment act of February 8, 1887, 24 Stat.
388, c. 179, had no effect upon the right of inheritance as to
Creek Indians in Indian Territory inasmuch as, by § 8 of the
Act of 1887, Creek territory was expressly excepted from the
operations of that statute.
The provision in § 38 of the Oklahoma Act of May 2, 1890,
26 Stat. 81, legalizing Indian marriages, relate only to marriages
theretofore contracted and not to those thereafter contracted.
39 Okl. 500 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the inheritance of an allotment to a
Creek Indian, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit to quiet title, brought in the District Court of Hughes
County, State of Oklahoma, and in which plaintiff
Page 239 U. S. 171
in error was plaintiff and defendants in error defendants, and
we shall so designate them.
The case concerns the inheritance of an allotment to one Ben
Porter, a Creek citizen and member of the tribe of the Creek
Nation. Plaintiff contends that she is the daughter and only child
of Porter and Jennie McGilbra, whom he married, it is asserted, in
1893, and with whom he afterwards resided for one and one-half
years as husband in accordance with the usages and customs of the
Creek Nation. He subsequently separated from her, it is alleged,
but never got a divorce from her, and that therefore they remained
husband and wife until the time of his death, which occurred about
November 23, 1906, he dying intestate, and being seised of the
lands in controversy at that time, plaintiff, Nellie Porter, became
entitled in fee simple to all of them.
It is averred that, after Porter's separation from his wife, he
"took up" with another woman by the name of Lena Canard, who, after
the death of Porter, married one William Freeman; that Porter left
surviving him one Sam Porter, a half brother, a Seminole Indian and
so enrolled, and one Nannie Broadnax, a half sister. From this
brother and sister and Mrs. Freeman the defendants in error derive
their title.
Defendants deny the marriage of Porter and Jennie McGilbra, or
that plaintiff was his child or in any way related to him, and aver
that their grantors "were the sole and exclusive heirs of Porter,
and as such inherited the lands from him."
The judgment recites that the cause coming on, upon hearing upon
the pleadings and upon evidence offered on the part of the
plaintiff, and upon the plaintiff resting her cause with the court
upon the evidence offered, the defendants demurred to the evidence
and the court sustained the demurrer, and found
"that the alleged marital relation between Ben Porter and Jennie
McGilbra was
Page 239 U. S. 172
not established by the proof and did not exist, either by reason
of customs or the laws of the Creek Nation; that the relation was
illicit; that the plaintiff, Nellie Porter, was the illegitimate
child of this illicit relation."
The court entered a decree dismissing plaintiff's bill and
forever quieting the title of defendants against plaintiff. The
decree was affirmed by the supreme court.
The supreme court sustained the action of the trial court in
rendering judgment upon the evidence, saying: "It is obvious from
the record that the court passed upon the entire case," and
that
"it would be too subtle a refinement to say that the court
should have overruled the demurrer and thereupon, on the same
evidence, have found for the defendant; otherwise a reversal must
follow."
And further:
"Ultimately plaintiff's right to recover involved a question of
fact for the court's determination. That the court did consider the
testimony and determine the insufficiency is clearly established
from the language of the journal entry. The burden of proof rested
upon the plaintiff to prove not only the Indian customs of the
Creek Nation pertaining to marriage, but to establish her rights
thereunder. There was more or less conflict in the testimony of
plaintiff's witnesses, from which different conclusions might be
drawn, and there being testimony reasonably tending to support the
judgment of the court, the same will not be weighed by this Court
to ascertain whether the court's decision is against the
preponderance of the testimony."
For which conclusion the court cited a number of Oklahoma
cases.
Against the action of the trial court and its affirmance by the
supreme court, it is contended that the Constitution of the state
and the Fourteenth Amendment have been violated in that the
plaintiff's privileges and immunities have been abridged and her
property taken without due process of law. The foundation of the
contention is § 5039 of the Revised Laws of Oklahoma. It
provides
Page 239 U. S. 173
that "the provisions of this article respecting trials by jury
apply, so far as they are in their nature applicable, to trials by
the court." The argument is that, under that section,
"a citizen of the said state and of the United States is
entitled to the same protection and enforcement of the law, on a
demurrer to the evidence where their causes of action are tried by
the court, as when tried to a jury."
And, it is further argued, if there be any evidence,
"conflicting evidence cannot be weighed or considered by the
court," and the demurrer should have been overruled. These
contentions are attempted to be supported by citation of many cases
and elaborate comment made upon them to sustain the assertion
"that a demurrer to the evidence presents a proposition of law,
and not of fact, and that conflicting evidence in the case is not
to be considered, if there be evidence even tending to support the
claims of the demurree."
The contention is difficult to handle. It seems to confound so
completely the purpose and various qualities of evidence and the
functions of a court.
Whether, however, there be a technical difference between the
final submission of a case to the court and its submission upon a
demurrer to the evidence we need not dwell upon. The difference has
been made unimportant -- indeed, removed from the present case --
by the decision of the supreme court. The court decided, as we have
seen, that the trial court
"did not render its judgment alone upon the demurrer to the
evidence, but, after a consideration of the proof submitted by
plaintiff, made its findings of fact, thereby necessarily weighing
the plaintiff's testimony for the purpose of determining the rights
of the respective parties to a recovery."
And the court pointed out that
"even though it were conceded that technical error was
committed, the substantial rights of the plaintiff were not
affected, as she had introduced her evidence and rested her case.
She was not caused to change
Page 239 U. S. 174
her position, nor did she suffer any disadvantage in the
procedure adopted."
The court added that it was required by the statutes of the
state and its decisions to disregard errors or defects in the
pleadings or proceedings which did not affect the substantial
rights of the parties.
It is manifest, therefore, that the action of the trial court
was in full exercise of the power entrusted to it under the laws of
the state, and the contention of plaintiff that the Constitution of
the United States is violated is untenable. We, of course, accept
the the decision of the supreme court of the state that the state
constitution is not violated.
The next contention of plaintiff is that she inherited that
lands by virtue of § 5 of the Act of Congress of February 28,
1891, 26 Stat. 794, c. 383, which amended the general allotment act
of February 8, 1887, 24 Stat. 388, c. 119. By this section it is
provided "that, for the purpose of determining the descent of land
to the heirs of any deceased Indian under the provisions of the
fifth section of said act" of February 8, 1887, the issue of
Indians cohabiting as husband and wife "according to the custom and
manner of Indian life" shall be
"taken and deemed to be the legitimate issue of the Indians so
living together, and every Indian child, otherwise illegitimate,
shall, for such purpose, be taken and deemed to be the legitimate
issue of the father of such child."
But by § 8 of the Act of February 8, 1887, "the territory
occupied by the . . . Creeks . . . in the Indian Territory" was
expressly excepted from the provisions of that act. It was hence
concluded by the supreme court of the state that § 5 of the
Act of 1891,
supra, "was without effect upon the right of
inheritance, as to the Creek Indians in the Indian Territory."
Plaintiff attacks this conclusion by citing § 38 of the Act
of May 2, 1890, 26 Stat. 81, 98, c. 182, which organized the
Territory of Oklahoma. It provides
"that all marriages
Page 239 U. S. 175
heretofore contracted under the laws or tribal customs of any
Indian Nation now located in the Indian Territory are hereby
declared valid and the issue of such marriages shall be deemed
legitimate and entitled to all inheritances of property or other
rights, the same as in the case of the issue of other forms of
lawful marriage. . . ."
It will be observed that the asserted marriage between Porter
and the mother of plaintiff took place in 1893 -- that is,
subsequent to the Act of 1890, organizing the Territory of Oklahoma
-- and therefore was not a marriage within the meaning of §
38, theretofore contracted, and therefore plaintiff's reliance must
be upon the provision before stated in § 5 of the Act of 1891.
As that section was expressly restricted to lands allotted under
§ 5 of the Act of 1887, and as the lands occupied by the
Creeks in the Indian Territory could not be and were not allotted
under the latter section, it follows that the provision relied upon
had no application to the lands here in question, they being part
of the territory so occupied by the Creeks.
Judgment affirmed.