Court Opinion

ID: 3825397
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 07:58:39.190963+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:50:58.916727
License: Public Domain

This action was commenced in the district court of Mayes county by Mary England and Ada Hicks, as plaintiffs, against A.C. Baird, M.F. Baird, and S.M. Iund, to recover a certain tract of land located in Mayes county, Okla. There was a trial and judgment decreeing the plaintiffs to be the owners of the land and entitled to the possession and quieting plaintiffs' title against the defendants and each and all of them, and denying the plaintiffs any right to recover for rents and profits. Motions for a new trial were filed by the plaintiffs and the defendants. These motions were all overruled; all parties excepted and gave notice *Page 277 
of appeal to the Supreme Court. Defendants perfected this appeal, filed a case-made and petition in error in this court on April 17, 1919, and they will be designated as plaintiffs in error. Thereafter, and on August 18, 1919, the plaintiffs in the court below filed a cross-petition in error. They will be designated as defendants in error.
The defendants in error filed their answer brief to the brief of the plaintiffs in error, but have not discussed any of the questions raised by their cross-petition in error; neither have they cited any authorities in support of their cross-petition in error; therefore this court will assume they have abandoned their cross-petition in error and waived all questions raised therein.
A brief resume of the undisputed facts out of which this action arises as disclosed by the record is as follows:
Josiah Hicks was a duly enrolled full-blood Indian of the Cherokee Tribe, and the land in controversy was a part of his allotment. In August, 1904, he died intestate without issue and leaving as his sole and only heirs at law two sisters, to wit: Mary England (nee Hicks) and Ada Hicks, both full-blood Cherokee Indians and enrolled as such. At the time of his death he was approximately eleven years of age. During all of his life he had lived with his grandfather, Johnson Downing, in what is now Cherokee county, Okla., his mother having died when he was a small baby and his father's death preceding that of his mother.
On August 31, 1904, letters of administration on the estate of Josiah Hicks, deceased, were issued to Andy Dick by the United States Court for the Northern District of the Indian Territory. At the advent of statehood the case of the estate of Josiah Hicks, deceased, was duly transferred to the county court of Cherokee county. Thereafter, and on or about August 7, 1908, the defendants in error signed a petition which was filed in the county court of Mayes county, asking for the approval of a deed to convey the land in controversy in this action to W.J. Whitaker, and the county court of Mayes county made an order approving the deed. Whitaker thereafter conveyed the land to the above named plaintiffs in error. At the commencement of the trial of the case in the lower court, Whitaker asked and was granted permission to be made a party defendant in this action. He immediately filed an answer adopting the answer of his codefendants, and in addition thereto asked that he recover the amount of the purchase price paid Mary England and Ada Hicks for the land in controversy, and that this be decreed to be a first lien upon the land.
The plaintiffs in error set out seven specific assignments of error in their petition in error, but in their brief they only argue the fifth and sixth assignments; therefore we will assume the others have been waived. The assignments of error presented are as follows:
"Fifth. The said court erred in rendering judgment canceling said deeds.
"Sixth. The said court erred in overruling motion of defendants for a new trial."
In their brief plaintiffs in error make this statement:
"In the beginning of the argument the plaintiffs in error are aware that the Supreme Court of Oklahoma has decided some of the questions in this case adversely, but under different facts and circumstances."
We agree with the above statement, but the facts and circumstances in this case conclusively preclude the plaintiffs in error from any right to recover. During all of his lifetime Josiah Hicks resided in and died a resident of the particular territory now embraced within Cherokee county. His estate was being administered upon through proceedings in the county court of Cherokee county, and that court had jurisdiction of his estate at and prior to the time the petition for the approval of the deed of the full-blood heirs was filed in the county court of Mayes county.
The county court that first acquires jurisdiction to administer on the estate of a deceased person has jurisdiction to the exclusion of the county court of every other county. Section 6195, Revised Laws of Oklahoma 1910. When the county court of Cherokee county acquired jurisdiction to administer on the estate of Josiah Hicks, deceased, that being the county of his residence at the time of his death, its jurisdiction excluded every other county court from acquiring jurisdiction to administer upon or settle his estate. Parmenter v. Rowe, 87 Okla. ___, 200 P. 683; Hathaway et al. v. Hoffman et al.,53 Okla. 72, 153 P. 184; Welch v. Focht et al., 67 Oklahoma, 171 P. 731, L. R. A. 1918D, 1163; State ex rel. Cynthia Monahawee et al. v. Tom Hazelwood, County Judge of Okfuskee County, et al., 81 Okla. 69, 196 P. 937.
During the lifetime of Josiah Hicks the land in controversy, being a part of his allotment, was inalienable, but by Act of Congress of May 27, 1908, the death of the allottee removed all restrictions upon the *Page 278 
alienation of his land; provided a conveyance thereof, to be valid, must be approved by the court having jurisdiction of the settlement of his estate. See section 9, act of May 27, 1908 (ch. 199, 35 Stat. 312); Mills' Lands of the Five Civilized Tribes, sec. 797, page 544.
The order made by the county court of Mayes county approving the deed executed by the full-blood heirs was a nullity, because that court was without jurisdiction in the premises.
"A deed by the mother of a minor full-blood Creek Indian, who inherited an allotment of land from her daughter, was of no effect, where approved by the county court of a county of Oklahoma in which the daughter was not a resident when she died; the court not having had jurisdiction." Barnett et al. v. Kunkel et al., 259 Fed. 394.
See Okla. Oil Co. v. Bartlett, 236 Fed. 493; Bartlett v. Okla. Oil Co. et al., 218 Fed. 380; Tiger et al. v. Creek County Court et al., 45 Okla. 701, 146 P. 912; Cochran et al. v. Blanck et al., 53 Okla. 317, 156 P. 324; Hope v. Foley et al., 57 Okla. 513, 157 P. 727; King v. Mitchell, 69 Oklahoma,171 P. 725.
The plaintiff in error next contended that defendants in error should have been required to do equity before they were entitled to a cancellation of the deeds, and a restoration should be made. The two very able and exhaustive opinions of this court by Hardy. J., in McKeever v. Carter et al.,53 Okla. 360, 157 P. 56, and Bell v. Fitz-patrick, 53 Okla. 574, 157 Pac 334, are a complete answer to these contentions made by the plaintiffs in error. See, also. Oates v. Freeman, 57 Okla. 449,157 P. 74; Hawkins v. Corbit et al., 83 Okla. 275,201 P. 649.
Finding no reversible error in the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
HARRISON, C. J., and KANE, JOHNSON, and KENNAMER, JJ., concur.