Court Opinion

ID: 3824770
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:58:15.314364+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:39:49.855002
License: Public Domain

Alice Shields in her lifetime was an enrolled freedman citizen of the Creek Nation. Prior to her enrollment she was legally married to John Shields, a citizen of the United States and a noncitizen of the Creek Nation. She had two children by a former husband, Beulah Brown (now Beulah Brown Foster) and Ada Brown. After her enrollment she selected the land involved as her allotment, and on the 1st day of August, 1901, died, leaving her husband and these two children by a former marriage as her heirs. Both of these children were enrolled freedman Creek citizens. On April 23, 1904, a *Page 739 
deed was executed by the Principal Chief of the Creek Nation to the heirs of Alice Shields, and delivered on the 8th day of February, 1905. In March, 1907, Beulah Brown Foster and her husband conveyed by warranty deed an undivided one-half interest in the land to John R. Thomas and Grant Foreman, who subsequently conveyed this interest to John S. Bilby. The Iowa Land   Trust Company, by conveyance from John Shields, became the owner of an undivided one-third interest in the land. The court below held that the husband and two children of Alice Shields inherited the land, each taking a one-third interest. This judgment of the trial court was correct under the following decisions of this court: De Graffenreid v. Iowa Land  Trust Co., 20 Okla. 687, 95 P. 624; Sanders v. Sanders,28 Okla. 59, 117 P. 338; Hooks v. Kennard, 28 Okla. 457,114 P. 744; Barnett v. Way, 29 Okla. 780, 119 P. 418; Divine v.Harmon, 30 Okla. 820, 121 P. 219; Morley v. Fewel,32 Okla. 452, 122 P. 700.
The judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.