In declaring the enrollment records of the Commission to the
Five Civilized Tribes conclusive evidence of age, the Act of May
27, 1908, c.199, 3, 35 Stat. 312, 313, does not exclude other
evidence on the subject consistent with the record and enrollment.
P.
249 U. S.
180.
Hence, where the enrollment record purported to how the age of
an Indian at time of application for enrollment, in years only,
evidence that he was several months older was admissible.
Id.
162 P. 178 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thomas Gilcrease, a Creek Indian of one-eighth blood, received
under date of December 15, 1902, an allotment of surplus land under
Act of Congress March 1, 1901, c. 676, 31 Stat. 861, as amended by
Act of June 30, 1902, c. 1323, 32 Stat. 500. On February 8, 1911,
his twenty-first birthday, he executed to McCullough and Martin an
oil and gas lease thereof. Later he brought suit in a state court
of Oklahoma to set it aside, insisting that, under the applicable
enrollment record of Creek citizenship, he must be assumed to have
been under age at the time the lease was executed, although he had
in fact
Page 249 U. S. 179
attained his majority. The trial court entered judgment for the
defendants which was affirmed by the supreme court of the state,
and a rehearing was denied, January 9, 1917. 162 P. 178. The case
comes here on writ of certiorari. 243 U.S. 653.
The only substantial question submitted is this: did the entry
concerning Gilcrease's age made in the enrollment record of Creek
citizenship preclude defendant from showing that he was actually of
age when the lease was executed? The decision of that question
depends wholly upon the construction to be given § 3 of the
Act of May 27, 1908, c.199, 35 Stat. 312, 313, as applied to the
record.
Section 3 provides:
"That the rolls of citizenship and of freedmen of the Five
Civilized Tribes approved by the Secretary of the Interior shall be
conclusive evidence as to the quantum of Indian blood of any
enrolled citizen or freedman of said tribes and of no other persons
to determine questions arising under this act and the enrollment
records of the Commissioner to the Five Civilized Tribes shall
hereafter be conclusive evidence as to the age of said citizen or
freedman."
The enrollment record introduced in evidence, so far as
material, is as follows:
Residence: Leonard. Creek Nation. Creek Roll.
Post Office: Mounds, Ind. Ter.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Relationship
Dawes' to person
Roll No. Name first named Age Sex Blood
------------------------------------------------------------------
1504 1 Gilcrease, Lizzie 25 F. 1/4
1505 2 " , Thomas Son 9 M. 1/8
1506 3 " , Eddie " 7 " 1/8
1507 4 " , Ben " 5 " 1/8
1508 5 " , Lena Daughter 3 F. 1/8
1509 6 " , Florence " 1 " 1/8
Citizenship certificate issued
June 9th, 1899. June 9/99.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Page 249 U. S. 180
Gilcrease insists that the entry "June 9/99," near the lower
right-hand corner of the enrollment card, signifies that the
application for his enrollment was made on June 9, 1899; that, in
giving his age as "9," the roll declared him to be exactly 9 years
old on June 9, 1899, and that, consequently, in the absence of
other evidence to the contrary in the enrollment record, he must be
deemed to have been under age on February 8, 1911.
But there was no declaration or finding of fact by the
Commission that Gilcrease was exactly 9 years old on June 9, 1899.
The declaration that a person is 9 years of age signifies, in the
absence of conditions requiring exact specification, merely that he
has reached or passed the ninth anniversary of his birth and is
still less than 10 years old. There was neither a statute nor a
regulation of the Commission which required an exact specification
of age. Nor did the printed blank used for the enrollment provide a
space either for entering the date of applicant's birthday or for
entering the number of months and days by which his age exceeded a
full year. Furthermore, the enrollment card itself bears positive
evidence that it did not purport to represent the applicant as
being exactly 9 years old on the day of application. For this same
card records, in like manner, on the assumed date of application,
also the ages of his mother, of three brothers, and a sister. Is
the court expected to believe that the Commission found, that the
six members of the family were all born on the 9th day of June?
Gilcrease insists, however, that the act makes the enrollment
record not merely "conclusive," but the exclusive "evidence as to
the age" of the citizen; or, in other words, that Congress has
provided not a rule of evidence, but the following rule of
substantive law: whenever a member of the Five Civilized Tribes is
stated in the enrollment record to be a certain number of years old
and the day of his enrollment is stated therein, he shall be
unable
Page 249 U. S. 181
to convey his lands so long as the rolls do not show
affirmatively that he is 21 years old. For this contention there is
no support in the words of the statute, nor is there any in reason.
As well might it be contended that, where the record states the
number of the applicant's years, but gives only the year and not
the day or the month of the application of enrollment, evidence
could not be introduced to show that the application was made
before December 31st of the year given, or that, if no age whatever
appeared in the enrollment record, the citizen must for 21 years
after the date of enrollment be conclusively presumed to be a
minor. The enrollment record is, of course, conclusive as to that
which it in terms recites or which is necessarily implied from the
words and figures used. But there is no indication of an intention
on the part of Congress that facts not inconsistent with the
recitals of the record shall not be proved whenever relevant. The
roll had already been held to be practically conclusive as to facts
the determination of which was a condition precedent to enrollment.
Compare United States v. Wildcat, 244 U.
S. 111. The purpose of § 3 of the Act of May 27,
1908, seems to have been simply to make the record conclusive as to
age insofar as it purports to state age. The cases in the lower
federal courts, the recent decisions in the Supreme Court of
Oklahoma, and the great weight of all the authorities support the
proposition that, when the age is stated simply in years or
whenever the age is not stated definitely by the addition of the
months or days, other evidence may be introduced to supplement the
record by proving these and thus establish the exact date of birth.
*
Affirmed.
*
Etchen v. Cheney, 235 F. 104;
McDaniel v.
Holland, 230 F. 945;
Cushing v. McWaters, 175 P. 838;
Tyrell v. Shaffer, 174 P. 1074;
Jordan v. Jordan,
162 P. 758;
Heffner v. Harmon, 159 P. 650.
Compare
also Hutchison v. Brown, 167 P. 624, 626;
Jackson v.
Lair, 48 Okl 269. For earlier case,
contra, see Rice v.
Anderson, 39 Okl. 279.
Compare also Linam v. Beck, 51
Okl. 727;
Henley v. Davis, 156 P. 337, 338.
The petitioner, in his brief, sets out a number of letters from
the Land Department on the question of whether, under § 3, the
date of application is to be considered the date of birth when date
of birth not given. In all the communications where the question is
considered, it is stated, in effect, as in that of August 24, 1908,
from Mr. Leupp, Commissioner of the General Land Office, to the
Secretary of the Interior (Land 56330 -- 1908 E. B. H.), that
the
"application for enrollment shall be construed, for the purposes
of the government, as representing the age of the applicant at that
time, and that the date of the application shall be held to be the
anniversary of the date of birth, except where the records show
otherwise."
It is always stated that the act shall be so construed "for the
purposes of the government." This does not purport to be a result
reached on a careful interpretation of the act, but was apparently
adopted simply as a practical working rule of the Department.
McDaniel v. Holland, 230 F. 945, 948-950.