Under the Choctaw-Chickasaw supplemental agreement of July 1,
1902, §§ 11, 12, 15 and 16, 32 Stat. 641, surplus lands,
selected by a member of the Chickasaw Tribe, become alienable only
with the expiration of the respective periods after patent fixed in
§ 16; these restrictions accompany the land when it passes to
a tribal member by inheritance, and a conveyance by him while the
periods are running is void.
Mullen v. United States,
224 U. S. 48,
distinguished.
The Act of April 26, 1906, 34 Stat. 137, in providing that
conveyances of allotments made after selection should not be
declared invalid solely because made prior to patent, was not
intended to validate deeds made before removal of restrictions on
alienation; on the contrary, it expressly declare them null and
void.
40 Okl. 695 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case in the state court was begun in the District Court of
Jefferson County, Oklahoma, in 1911, by D. R. Johnston, against C.
E. Gannon, for the recovery of certain lands, originally allotted
in 1903 to Agnes Wolfe,
Page 243 U. S. 109
a full-blood Chickasaw Indian. Afterwards, by amended petition,
Wilburn Wolfe was made a party plaintiff. To this amended petition,
answer was filed by Gannon, asserting his title, and upon issues
being made up, judgment was rendered in favor of Johnston and Wolfe
as to the "surplus allotment" of said Agnes Wolfe, and of Gannon as
to the "homestead allotment." Upon writ of error, the Supreme Court
of Oklahoma affirmed the judgment (40 Okl. 695), and the case is
here upon writ of error to the last-named court. The decision as to
the surplus lands is all that is called in question.
The lands in controversy were allotted to Agnes Wolfe, the
certificate of allotment bearing date July 7th, 1903; the patent
was signed by the governor September 12th, 1905, and approved by
the Secretary of the Interior October 7th, 1905. Upon her death in
1903, the title passed to her brother and sole heir at law, Wilburn
Wolfe, defendant in error here. The supreme court finds that it
fairly appears from the record that the allotment was selected in
the lifetime of Agnes Wolfe.
Upon October 13th, 1903, for a consideration of $1,050, Wilburn
Wolfe executed and delivered to one A. J. Waldock a warranty deed
for the lands; several transfers of this title were made through
various persons and corporations until, on November 30th, 1907, it
was acquired, by warranty deed, and for a good and valuable
consideration, by C. E. Gannon, plaintiff in error. Since that
date, he has been in possession and control of the lands, and has
received the profits therefrom, either personally or by agents and
tenants.
Upon January 4th, 1909, Wilburn Wolfe executed and delivered to
D. R. Johnston a warranty deed for the lands in controversy, which
deed was approved by the County Judge of Pontotoc County, Oklahoma,
on March 23rd 1909, and by the Secretary of the Interior on July
2nd 1910, in accordance with the laws of Congress,
Page 243 U. S. 110
and it is through this deed that Johnston asserts his title.
The correctness of the decision of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma
turns upon the question whether, when Wilburn Wolfe made his deed
to A. J. Waldock, Wolfe was competent to convey title to the
surplus lands, it being conceded that the title of the plaintiff in
error was derived through the grantee in the Waldock deed.
This inquiry involves a consideration of §§ 11, 12,
15, and 16 of the supplemental agreement between the United States
and the Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians, approved July 1st, 1902, 32
Stat. 641. Section 11 provides for allotting to each member of
these tribes land equal in value to 320 acres of the average
allottable land, and to each freedman land equal in value to 40
acres of the average allottable land. Section 12 provides that, at
the time of the selection, each member of the tribes shall
designate as a homestead out of such allotment 160 acres, which
shall be inalienable
"during the lifetime of the allottee, not exceeding twenty-one
years from the date of certificate of allotment, and separate
certificate and patent shall issue for said homestead."
Sections 15 and 16 are as follows:
"15. Lands allotted to members and freedmen shall not be
affected or encumbered 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 as
herein provided."
"16. All lands allotted to the members of said tribes, except
such land as is set aside to each for a homestead as herein
provided, shall be alienable after issuance of patent as follows:
one fourth in acreage in one year, one fourth in acreage in three
years, and the balance in five years; in each case from date of
patent:
Provided, That such land shall not be alienable by
the allottee or his heirs at any time before the expiration of the
Choctaw
Page 243 U. S. 111
and Chickasaw tribal governments for less than its appraised
value."
The provisions of these sections, it seems to us, lead to the
conclusion that Congress intended to make them binding upon the
surplus lands not only in the lifetime of the allottee, but as well
during the periods named when the lands might descend as in this
case to and be owned by a member of the tribe. Section 15 is
positive in its requirement that lands allotted to members shall
not be sold except as in the act provided. Section 16 makes the
land alienable after the issuance of patent, except as to the
homestead, not involved here, one fourth in acreage in one year,
one fourth in three years, and the balance in five years from the
date of the patent, and provides that the lands shall not be
alienable by the allottee "or his heirs" at any time before the
expiration of the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribal governments for less
than the appraised value.
It seems quite clear that, in thus enacting a statute for the
protection of a dependent people, Congress intended to bind the
surplus lands in the hands of the heirs as well as when in the
ownership of the original allottee, and to make such land
inalienable during the periods named. Congress intended to prevent
improvident sales of the lands, and distributed the right of
alienation over a period of years, giving the right to sell at the
appraised value and in the quantities named. In view of the
positive provision of § 15, and its prohibition of alienation
except as permitted in the act, we think Congress manifested its
intention to make any other alienation void.
Counsel for plaintiff in error rely very much in support of
their contentions upon the case of
Mullen v. United
States, 224 U. S. 448. But
that case dealt with an allotment of lands under § 22, where
provision is made for allotment in the right of a member of the
tribe who has died subsequently to the ratification of the
agreement
Page 243 U. S. 112
and before receiving an allotment. Because of the difference
between § 22 and the other sections, it was held that there
was no restriction upon the right of the heirs to make the
conveyance in question.
The later case of
Bowling v. United States,
233 U. S. 528,
dealt with restrictions like those under consideration now. The
Secretary of the Interior was authorized to make an allotment to
each member of the tribe, subject to the restriction that the land
should not be subject to alienation for the period of twenty-five
years from the date of the issuance of the patents, and that the
patents should recite in the body thereof that the land described
and conveyed should not be alienated for twenty-five years from its
date, and that any contract or agreement to sell or convey such
allotments so patented, entered into before the expiration of said
term of years, should be null and void. Of such restrictions, Mr.
Justice Hughes, who also wrote the opinion in the
Mullen
case, speaking for the court, said at
233 U. S.
535:
"The question, then, is whether the restriction imposed by the
Act of 1889 was a merely personal one, operative only upon the
allottee, or ran with the land, binding his heirs as well. This
must be answered by ascertaining the intent of Congress as
expressed in the statute. The restriction was not limited to 'the
lifetime of the allottee,' as in
Mullen v. United States,
224 U. S.
448,
224 U. S. 453, nor was the
prohibition directed against conveyances made by the allottee
personally. Congress explicitly provided that 'the land so
allotted' should not be subject to alienation for twenty-five years
from the date of patent. 'Said lands so allotted and patented' were
to be exempt 'from levy, sale, taxation, or forfeiture for a like
period of years.' The patent was expressly to set forth that 'the
land therein described and conveyed' should not be alienated during
this period, and all contracts 'to sell or convey
Page 243 U. S. 113
such land' which should be entered into 'before the expiration
of said term of years' were to be absolutely void. These reiterated
statements of the restriction clearly define its scope and effect.
It bound the land for the time stated, whether, in the hands of the
allottee or of his heirs."
We think this principle is controlling here, and that it was the
intention of Congress to make a restriction which should bind the
surplus lands, whether in the hands of the original allottee in his
lifetime or of his heirs after the decease of the original allottee
during the periods named. The restriction was upon alienation of
the lands as such, and was not merely personal to the allottee any
more than it was in the
Bowling case.
In the Act of 1906, validating conveyances made by the members
of the Five Civilized Tribes, 34 Stat. 137, where it was provided
that conveyances made by members of the Five Civilized Tribes
subsequent to selection of allotment and removal of restrictions,
where patents thereafter issue, should not be declared invalid
solely because the conveyances were made prior to the issuance and
delivery of the patents, it was nevertheless provided that deeds
executed or contracts entered into before the removal of
restrictions should be null and void.
A contention that many investments have been made upon a
construction of the law differing from that given in this case by
the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, and that such construction and the
common understanding of the bar have operated to establish a rule
of property which cannot be changed, was denied by the Supreme
Court of Oklahoma, and rightly so. The matters relied upon were
inadequate to overcome the meaning of the statutory provisions in
question.
A contention that the deed from Wolfe to Johnston was
champertous within the statute of the state was considered and
decided by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma
Page 243 U. S. 114
in the light of its own and other decisions, and the holding of
the court did not, in our opinion, involve the denial of a federal
right such as would make that ruling reviewable here.
We think the federal questions involved were correctly decided,
and affirm the judgment of the Supreme Court of Oklahoma.
Affirmed.