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Appendix B - Laws of Descent and Distribution
Sec. 31. That certain general laws of the state of Arkansas in force at the
close of the session of the general assembly of that state of eighteen hundred
and eighty-three, as published in eighteen hundred and eighty-four in the volume
known as Mansfield's Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas which are not locally
inapplicable or in conflict with this act or with any law of congress, relating
to the subjects specially mentioned in this section are hereby extended over
and put in force in the Indian Territory until congress shall otherwise provide,
that is to say the provisions of the said general statues of Arkansas relating
to descents and distributions, chapter forty-nine."
Act of Congress May 2,
1890, (26 Stat. L. C. 182. P. 81
"That on and after January first,
eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, the
United States courts in said Territory shall
have original and exclusive jurisdiction and
authority to try and determine all civil
cases in law anti equity thereafter
instituted and all criminal causes for the
punishment of any offense committed after
January first, eighteen hundred and
ninety-eight by any person in said
Territory, and the United States
Commissioners in said Territory shall have
and exercise the powers and jurisdiction
already conferred upon them by existing
laws of the United States as respects all
persons and property in said Territory; and
the laws of the United States and the State
of Arkansas in force in the Territory shall
apply to all persons therein, irrespective
of race, said courts exercising jurisdiction
thereof as now conferred upon them in the
trial of like causes; and any citizen of any
one of said tribes otherwise qualified who
can speak and understand the English
language may serve as a juror in any of said
courts."
Act of Congress June 7,
1897 (30 Stat. L. 83)
Sec. 7. "The homestead of each citizen
shall remain, after the death of the
allottee, for the use and support of
children born to him after the ratification
of this agreement, but if he have no such
issue. then he may dispose of his homestead
by will, free from limitation herein
imposed, and if this be not done, the land
shall descend to his heirs according to the
laws of descend and distribution of the
Creek Nation, free from limitation.
Original Creek Agreement
(31 Stat. L. 861
Sec. 28. "No person, except as herein
provided shall be added to the rolls of
citizenship of said tribe after the date of
this agreement and no person whomsoever
shall be added to said rolls after the
ratification of this agreement.
All citizens who were living on the first
day of April, eighteen hundred and
ninety-nine, entitled to be enrolled under
section twenty-one of the Act of Congress
approved June twenty-eight, eighteen hundred
and ninety-eight, entitled "An Act for the
protection of the people of Indian
Territory, and for other purposes," shall be
placed upon the rolls to be made by said
commission under said Act of Congress, and
if any such citizen has died since that
time, or may hereafter die, before receiving
his allotment of lands and distributive
share of all the funds of the tribe, the
lands and money to which he would be
entitled, if living, shall descend to his
heirs, according to the law of descent and
distribution of the Creek Nation, and be
allotted and distributed to them
accordingly.
All children born to citizens so entitled
to enrollment, up to and including the first
day of July, nineteen hundred, and then
living, shall be placed on the rolls made by
said commission; and if any such child die
after said date, the lands and moneys to
which it would be entitled, if living shall
descend to its heirs according to the laws
of descent and distribution of the Creek
Nation, and be allotted and distributed to
them accordingly.
The rolls so made by said commission,
when approved by the Secretary of the
Interior, shall be the final rolls of
citizenship of said tribe, upon which the
allotment of all lands and the distribution
of all moneys and other property of the
tribe shall be made, and to no other
persons."
Original Creek Agreement
(31 Stat. L. 861)
Sec. 6. "Be it further enacted, that if
any person die without a will, having
property and children, the property shall be
equally divided among the children by
disinterested persons; and in all cases
where there are no children, the nearest
relation shall inherit the property."
Laws of Muskogee Nation,
1880, p. 132.
Sec. 8. "The lawful or acknowledged wife
of a deceased husband shall be entitled to
one half of the estate, if there are no
other heirs, and an heir's part, if there
should be other heirs, in all cases where
there is no will. The husband surviving
shall inherit of a deceased wife in like
manner."
Laws of Muskogee Nation,
1880, p. 60.
Sec. 1. "All non-citizens, not previously
adopted, and being married to citizens of
this Nation, or having children entitled to
citizenship, shall have a right to live in
this Nation, and enjoy all the privileges
enjoyed by other citizens, except
participation in the annuities and final
participation in the lands."
Laws of Muskogee Nation,
1880, p. 60.
"That the act entitled "An act to ratify
and confirm an agreement with the Muscogee
or Creek tribe of Indians, and for other
purposes," approved March first, nineteen
hundred and one, in so far as it provides
for descent and distribution according to
the laws of the Creek Nation, is hereby
repealed and the descent and distribution of
lands and moneys provided for in said act
shall be in accordance with the provisions
of chapter forty-nine of Mansfield's Digest
of the Statutes of Arkansas in force in
Indian Territory."
Act of Congress May 27,
1902, (32 Stat. L. 258)
The above provision not effective until June
30, 1902 or July 1, 1902.
Sec. 6. "The provisions of the act of
Congress approved March 1, 1901 (31 Stat. L.
861), in so far as they provide for descent
and distribution according to the laws of
the Creek Nation, are hereby repealed and
the descent and distribution of land and
money provided for by said act shall be in
accordance with chapter 49 of Mansfield's
Digest of the Statutes of Arkansas now in
force in Indian Territory: Provided, That
only citizens of the Creek Nation, male and
female, and their Creek descendants shall
inherit lands of the Creek Nation: And
provided further, That if there be no person
of Creek citizenship to take the descent and
distribution of said estate, then the
inheritance shall go to noncitizen heirs in
the order named in said chapter 49."
Sec. 7. "All children born to those
citizens who are entitled to enrollment as
provided by the Act of Congress approved
March I. 1901 31 Stat. L., 861), subsequent
to July 1, 1900, and up to and including May
25, 1901, and living upon the latter date,
shall be placed on the rolls made by said
commission. And if any such child has died
since May 25, 1901, or may hereafter die
before receiving his allotment of lands and
distributive share of the funds of the
tribe, the lands and moneys to which he
would be entitled if living shall descend to
his heirs as herein provided and be allotted
and distributed to them accordingly."
Sec. 8. "All children who have not
heretofore been listed for enrollment living
May 25, 1901, born to citizens whose names
appear upon the authenticated rolls of 1890
or upon the authenticated rolls of 1895 and
entitled to enrollment as provided by the
Act of Congress approved March 1, 1901 31
Stat. L. 861), shall be placed on the rolls
made by said commission. And if any such
child has died since May 25, 1901, or may
hereafter die before receiving his allotment
of lands and distributive share of the funds
of the tribe, the lands and moneys to which
he would be entitled if living shall descend
to his heirs as herein provided and be
allotted and distributed to them
accordingly."
Sec. 16 "The homestead of each citizen
shall remain, after the death of the
allottee, for the use and support of
children burn to him after May 25, 1901, but
if he have no such issue then he may dispose
of his homestead by will, free from
limitation herein imposed and if this be not
done the land embraced in his homestead
shall descend to his heirs, free from such
limitation, according to the laws of descent
herein otherwise prescribed."
Supplemental Creek Treaty
(32 Stat. L. 500)
"All the laws of Arkansas heretofore put
in force in the Indian Territory are hereby
continued and extended in their operation,
so as to embrace all persons and estates in
said Territory, whether Indian, freedmen, or
other wise and full and complete
jurisdiction is hereby conferred upon the
district courts, in said Territory in the
settlements of all estates of decedents, the
guardianships of minors and incompetents,
whether Indians freedmen or other wise
Act of Congress April 28,
1904 (33 Stat. L. 57:1)
(6) Mansfield's Digest of Statues of
Arkansas for the year 1884.
1. Sec. 2522—When any person shall die,
having title to any real estate inheritance,
or personal estate, (b), not disposed of,
nor other wise by marriage settlement, and
shall be intestate as to such estate, it
shall descend and be distributed, in
parcency, to his kindred, male and female,
subject to the payment of his debts and the
widow's dower, in the following manner:
First—To children, or their descendents,
in equal parts.
Second--If there be no children, then to
the father, then to the mother; if no
mother, then to brothers and sisters, or
their descendant, in equal parts.
Third—If there be no children, nor their
descendants, father, mother, brothers or
sisters, nor their descendants, then to the
grandfather, grandmother, uncles and aunts,
and their descendants, in equal parts, and
so in other cases, without end, passing to
the nearest lineal ancestor and their
children and their descendants, in equal
parts.
Sec. 2523—Posthumous children of the
intestate shall inherit in like manner as if
born in the life-time of the intestate, but
no right of inheritance shall accrue to any
person other than the children of the
intestate, unless they be born at the time
of the intestate's death.
Sec. 2524—Illegitimate children shall be
capable of inheriting and transmitting an
inheritance, on the part of their mother, in
like manner as if they had been legitimate
of their mother (c).
Sec. 2525—If a man have by a woman a
child, or children, and afterward shall
intermarry with her and shall recognize such
children to be his, they shall be deemed and
considered as legitimate.
Sec. 2526—The issue of all marriages
deemed null in law, or dissolved by divorce,
shall be deemed and considered as
legitimate.
Sec. 2527—In making title by descent, it
shall be no bar to a demandant that any
ancestor through whom he derives his descent
from the intestate is, or has been, an
alien.
Sec. 2528.—If there be no children, or
their descendants, father, mother not their
descendants, or any paternal or maternal
kindred capable of inheritance, the share
shall go to the wife or husband of the
intestate. If there be no such wife or
husband, then the estate shall go to the
state.
Sec. 2529 If any of the children of an
intestate be living, and some be dead, the
inheritance shall descend to the children
who are living, and to the descendants of
such children as shall have died, so that
each child who shall be living shall inherit
such share as would have descended to him if
all the children of the intestate who shall
have died leaving issue had been living, so
that the descendants of each child who shall
be dead shall inherit the same their parent
would have received if living.
Sec. 2530—The rule of descent prescribed
in the last preceding section shall apply in
every case where the descendants of the
intestate, entitled to share in the
inheritance, shall be in equal degree of
consanguinity to the intestate, so that
those who are in the nearest degree of
consanguinity shall take the shares which
would have descended to them had all the
descendants in the same degree who shall
have died leaving issue been living, so that
the issue of the descendants who shall have
died shall respectively take the shares
which their parents, if living, would have
received.
See. 2531 In cases where the intestate
shall die without descendants, if the estate
come by the father, then it shall ascend to
the father and his heirs; if by the mother,
the estate, or so much thereof as came by
the mother, shall ascend to the mother and
her heirs; but if the estate be a new
acquisition it shall ascend to the father
for his life-time, and then descend, in
remainder, to the collateral kindred of the
intestate in the manner provided in this
act; and, in default of a father, then to
the mother, for her life-time then descend
to the collateral heirs as before provided (d).
Sec. 2532—The estate of an intestate, in
default of a father and mother shall go,
first, to the brothers and sisters, and
their descendants, of the father; next, to
the brothers and sisters, and their
descendants, of the mother. This provision
applies only where there are no kindred,
either lineal or collateral, who stand in a
nearer relation.
Sec. 2533—Relations of the half-blood
shall inherit equally with those of the
whole blood in the same degree; and the
descendants of such relatives shall inherit
in the same manner as the descendants of the
whole blood, unless the inheritance come to
the intestate by descent, devise or gift, of
some one of his ancestors, in which case all
those who are not of the blood of such
ancestor shall be excluded from such
inheritance.
Sec. 2534—In all cases not provided for
by this act, the inheritance shall descend
according to the course of the common law.
Sec. 2535—Whenever an inheritance, or a
share of an inheritance, shall descend to
several persons, under the provisions of
this act, they shall inherit as tenants in
common, in proportion to their respective
shares or rights.
Advancement
Sec. 2536 —If any child of an intestate
shall have been advanced by him in his
life-time, by settlement or portion of real
or personal estate or both of them, the
value thereof shall be reckoned, for the
purpose of this section, only- as a part of
the real and personal estate of such
intestate descendible to the heirs and to be
distributed to his next kin, according to
law; and, if such advancement be equal or
superior to the amount of the share which
such child would be entitled to receive of
the real and personal estate of the
deceased, as herein reckoned, then such
child and his descendants shall be excluded
from any share of the real and personal
estate of the intestate.
Sec. 2537 —In cases where such
advancement is not equal to the share that
such child or relative, and his descendants,
shall be entitled to receive, they shall be
entitled to receive so much of the real and
personal estate as shall be sufficient to
make all the shares of the heirs in such
real and personal estate and advancement to
be as nearly equal as possible.
Sec. 2538—The value of any real or
personal estate so advanced shall be deemed
to be that, if any, which was acknowledged
by the person receiving the same by any
receipt, in writing, specifying the value;
if no such written evidence exists, then
such value shall be estimated according to
its value at the time of advancing such
money or property.
Sec. 2539—The maintaining, educating or
giving money to a child or heir, without a
view to a portion or settlement in life,
shall not be advancement within the meaning
of this act.
Constructions
Sec. 2540—The term "real estate," as used
in this act, shall be construed to include
every estate, interest and right, legal and
equitable, in land, tenements and
hereditaments, except such as are determined
or extinguished by the death of the
intestate, seized or possessed there as in
any manner, other than by lease for years
and estate for the life of another person.
Sec. 2541—The term "inheritance" as used
in this act, shall be understood to mean
real estate, as herein defined, descended
according to the provisions of this act.
Sec. 2542—Whenever, in any part of this
act, any person is described as living, it
shall be understood that he was living at
the time of the death of the intestate from
whom the descent came; and, when any person
is described as having died, it shall be
understood that he died before the
intestate.
22. Sec. 2543—The expression used in this
act, "where the estate shall have come to
the intestate on the part of the father," or
"mother," as the case may be, shall be
construed to include every case where the
inheritance shall have come to the
intestate by gift, devise or descent from
the parent referred, to or from any relative
of the blood of such parent. Rev. Stat.
Chap. 49."
You will note that I have added numbers 1
to 22 in front of the sections of the
Arkansas Law set forth above. I have done so
in order to make clear that which follows.
The Arkansas law of descent and distribution
was construed as a whole by the Supreme
Court of the State of Arkansas, in the case
of Kelly vs. McGuire, 15 Ark. 555. The
holdings of the court in the case of Kelly
vs. McGuire had become rules of property
before the Arkansas law was extended over
and put in force in the Indian Territory.
The writer of the opinion in this case was
an eminent lawyer of Arkansas and was called
in and made a special Justice of the Supreme
Court and took a great deal of time in
research and investigation before writing
the opinion, and that part of his opinion
that deals with real property is as
follows:
"Whatever may have been the
original foundation of the right of
property, it admits of no question that its
protection, in some shape, is engrafted into
the jurisprudence of every civilized nation.
In most of them, it constitutes an important
feature of their organic law. No government,
however, powerful, and whether free or
despotic, could long command the affections
and allegiance of its members, or preserve
the order and tranquility of civil society,
without respecting and securing this right,
and affording adequate redress for its
violation.
The transmission of
property, whether, by descent succession, or
purchase, depends upon the municipal
regulations of each State, and no duty more
delicate can be imposed on courts of
justice, than to pass upon and enforce
regulations. It is for the judiciary to
construe, not legislate; and when the real
intention of the law maker is ascertained,
it must be declared, regardless of
consequences. If cases are omitted, which
ought to have been included, or hardships
arise not foreseen, the remedy for the evil
rests in the wisdom and discretion of
another department. For us, it is sufficient
to know, ita lex scripta.
This voluminous, and really
difficult case, involves the construction of
our statute of Descents—presenting questions
not hitherto decided in our courts, and we
can safely affirm, that they have been
examined with care, diligence and patience.
We have to thank the respective counsel for
this very able argument in the case.
The facts, as far as they
have a bearing on the present branch of the
subject, are, that, about the year 1810,
Charles Kelly emigrated to what is now
Arkansas; and, in 1815, married Mrs. Craig,
a widow, who had two daughters by a former
marriage, named Elizabeth and Emeline.
Charles Kelly, an enterprising, shrewd
business man, aided by the prudence, skill
and good management of his wife, accumulated
in Arkansas, where he lived, a large estate,
consisting of real and personal property. He
died intestate in 1834, and, by the law in
force, his real estate, descended, and his
personal property was distributed to James
DeWitt Clinton Kelly, who was the only
surviving issue of the marriage with Mrs.
Craig. She died in 1836, and the son above
mentioned called, for brevity, Clinton
Kelly, died intestate in Arkansas, the place
of his domicile, in 1844, at the age of
seventeen years, without having married and
without issue, leaving as claimants for his
property, his paternal grandfather,
Greenberry Kelly, the descendants of Mary
Eikelburner his paternal aunt, and his two
sisters of the half-blood, Elizabeth and
Emeline: the first of whom is the present
Mrs. Marsh, and the second Mrs. McGuire.
The half-blood claim the
entire estate of Clinton Kelly, real and
personal, as his next of kin, and to the
exclusion of all other persons.
We shall say nothing, at
present, of Greenberry Kelly, or the
Eikelburner heirs; because, if the
pretentions of the half-blood to the whole,
realty and personality, should prove to be
well founded, it would be an useless
enquiry.
To form a new system of descents, will
always be found a work of difficulty. Human
wisdom is inadequate to making out and
establishing a perfect one at once. It is
quite impossible to foresee all the
consequences of an attempt so important,
extensive and ramified. Omissions and
imperfections, however, as they are
discovered, must be supplied and remedied by
subsequent laws.
Excepting the first section,
and some minor provisions, our statute of
descents was borrowed from one in New York,
but with additions not calculated to
improve, and with attempts at brevity and
perspicuity, neither happy or successful.
The original was, what it purported, and was
intended to a pure statute of descents,
using appropriate technical terms, regarding
the inheritance of real estate, and not
looking to the distribution of personal
property at all. 2 Rev. Statutes New York,
750; Digest .1:36.
The first section of ours
was extracted from some other statute of
descents, amended by the revisers, by the
interpolation of so much as relates to the
distribution of personal estate; thus
blending two subjects of a totally different
nature, and governed by totally different
rules. And it is this, which produces no
small degree of difficulty in our system. We
must, however apply to it that universal
rule of construction, that a statute should
be so considered as that every clause,
sentence, or part, shall stand, if possible;
or in other words, such construction as will
best answer the intention of the makers. 9
Bac. Abr., Statute J. 2, J. 5. General words
or clauses in a statute. may be restrained
by particular words, or clauses in the same
statute. And when one section in a statute
may be both general and particular or where
there are different provisions for different
purposes, and penned in different words, in
the same chapter, they ought to be so
construed as to avoid inconsistency. Id.
Campbell's case, 2 Bland. 209. The
application of these rules to the case in
hand, will be readily perceived.
The 1st section is general
and comprehensive, embracing all lands,
whether ancestral or newly acquired, subject
to certain exceptions and qualification
hereafter more particularly noticed, and
these exceptions refer to real estate alone.
This section also constitutes the table, by
which real estate is to descend and personal
property distributed. As by its express
language, it relate, to both real and
personal property, it was manifestly the
design of the Legislature, when there were
descendants of the intestate, to send down
both to them per capita, if in equal degree,
and per stirpes, if in unequal degree, with
out any regard to the fact as to how the
property had been acquired. And as to
personal property, where there are no
descendants of the intestate to distribute
it to, collaterals will take in the same way
as descendants, if there had been any; that
is to say without any inquiry as to how it
was acquired, and, per capita, if in equal
degree, and per stirpes, if in unequal
degree. This was manifestly the design of
the Legislature. The sections of the statute
which have reference to both real and
personal property, and expressly name or
allude to both, or embrace them in their
spirit, are the 1st, 4th, 5th, 15th, 16th,
17th, and 18th. The 15th, 16th, 17th, and
18th, touch to subject of advancement. And,
to attain the object in view, it was
necessary to blend real and personal
property together; because the amount
received is the inquiry; and whether in land
or personal property, produces the same
result.
It may not be unworthy of
remark, that neither is the 1st, 4th, 5th,
nor in these sections, is the technical term
"inheritance," used at all.
The 1st, 4th, 5th, 15th,
16th, 17th and 18th sections, are the only
ones designed, in our opinion to apply to
both real and personal estate; All the rest
embrace real estate alone.
The effect of the 1st
section is, to constitute the persons, who
take the personal property, whether per
capita, or per stirpes, and whether the
whole or half-blood, the absolute owners.
Nor is it material whether those persons are
of the paternal or maternal or the lineal or
collateral line. By that section, as already
remarked, real and personal estate goes in
the same channel, and if no subsequent
provisions had been introduced, touching
real estate, the precise bearing of which,
it is probable the rivers did not perceive,
our labors would have been comparatively
easy. At present, nothing further need be
said as to personal property, as we shall
find it necessary to allude to that
hereafter, and shall now speak in reference
to real estate.
The effect of the first
section, subject to the exceptions and
qualifications alluded to, is to vest an
absolute estate of inheritance in lands in
the person who takes. And every estate,
interest and right, legal and equitable, in
lands and tenements and hereditaments,
excepting only leases for years, and estate
for the life of another person, are thus
inheritable and descendible; or, as the
first section expresses it, "having title to
any real estate of inheritance" constitutes
an inheritable estate, thus abolishing the
common law doctrine, derived from feudal
times, of actual seizin in the ancestor.
Whoever claimed by descent, was bound to
show that he was heir to the first
purchaser; and the seizin of the last
possessor, from whom he claimed as heir, was
considered as presumptive evidence of his
being of the blood of the first purchaser.
It supplied the difficulty of investigating
a descent from a distant stock, through a
line of succession become dim by the lapse
of ages. 4 Kent 386.
But, with us ownership, or
title to property, is substituted for
seizin; and maxim seisina facit stipitem, of
such controlling consequence in the English
scheme of descents, is entirely superseded.
By descent or hereditary succession, it is
understood the title whereby a person, upon
the death of his ancestor, acquires the
estate of the latter as his heir at law. 3
Bac. Abr. Descent 104.
We pass now to the more
particular consideration of the 10th
section.
The manifest intention of
the first part of this section was to
preserve ancestral estate in the line of
the blood from whence they came. It was a
partial adoption of recognition of the
common law principle, which invariably
followed the line of the blood, If the
estate comes to the intestate by the father,
or as it may be differently, and as well
expressed, on the part of the father, then
it must ascend to the father and his heirs,
and thus overturning the inflexible rule of
the common law, that an estate could never
ascend; but should rather escheat to the
lord. And so, if it comes by or on the part
of the mother, it goes to the mother and her
heirs, in exclusion of the heirs of the
father. In other words, it remains in the
paternal or maternal line, from whence it
was derived.
The expressions, "come by
the father," or "mother" or on "the part of
the father" or "mother" mean the same thing.
Maftit v. Clark, 6 Watts & Serg, 260. They
are familiar to, and derived from the common
law, having an appropriate, technical
meaning, which we must suppose the
Legislature intended to adopt. They embrace
not only the father, but all of the
ancestors of the father, both paternal and
maternal. Co. Litt. 12 a. When ever, says
Lord Coke, lands do descend from the part of
the mother, the heirs of the part of the
father shall never inherit. And, likewise,
when lands descend from the part of the
father, the heirs of the part of the mother
shall never inherit. Co. Litt. 13a.
The 10th and 22nd sections
must be construed together, although the
exact expressions used in the latter, are
not contained in any part of the statute.
But words of equivalent signification are
employed, and they are embraced within the
spirit of the 22nd section. Any other
exposition would render the section entirely
nugatory; and we must so construe statutes
as that every part may have its proper
effect, if possible.
The expression, then, "come
by the father, or mother," is not limited to
an estate acquired by descent merely, but
includes an estate which comes to the
intestate by gift, devise or descent from
the parent referred to, or from any relation
of the blood of such parent. Such is the
letter and spirit of the statute. In other
words, there are two classes of cases
provided for: One, where the blood of the
person, from whom the estate came, whether
it be by descent, devise or gift, is
regarded; and the other, where the blood of
the intestate form, the stirps, or stock of
descent, without respect to ancestral
blood.
Chancellor Kent says there
is a difference in the laws of the several
states, between the succession to estates,
which the intestate had acquired in the
course of descent, or by purchase. "If the
inheritance," says he, "was ancestral, and
came to the intestate by gift, devise or
descent, it passes to the kindred, who are
of the blood of the ancestor from whom it
came, whether in the paternal or maternal
line." 4 Kent 404.
The portion of the 10th
section, as to new acquisitions, gives the
father and mother a life estate only, with
remainder to the collateral heirs of the
intestate: such as brothers and sisters, and
their descendants, and so on. A new
acquisition, or newly acquired estate, does
not afford of itself, an exact idea if the
mode of acquisition. By the common law,
there were two modes of acquiring an estate,
distinguished by the general appellations of
descent and purchase. In the first, it was
by operation of law; and in the second, by
act or agreement of parties. Devises and
gifts fall in the latter class. An estate by
purchase there became inheritable to the
heirs general of the purchaser, first of the
paternal, and then of the maternal line. 2
Bl. Corn. 243.
It must be understood, however, that a new
acquisition, in the sense intended by the
statute, is one which the intestate has
acquired by his exertions and industry.
(Brewster v. Benedict, 14 Ohio 385), or by
will or deed from a stranger. In other
words, it is an estate derived from any
source other than descent, devise or gift,
from father or mother. or any relative in
the paternal or maternal line. Butler v.
King. 2 Ye•g. 116.
If the son should purchase
land from the father or mother, for a
valuable consideration, it would be a new
acquisition, and descend as such; because
nothing is received by way of bounty at the
hands of ancestors, which is the case as to
lands descended from, or devised, or given
by them to the intestate, and it was thought
reasonable that they should remain in the
blood from which they came.
Land is to be considered as
having come from, or by, or on the part of
the father or mother, when it comes by gift,
devise or descent, either mediately or
immediateiy from them, or from any person in
their respective lines. Shippen v. Isard, 1
Serg. & Rawle, 223.
The 12th section provides
that, "relations of the half-blood shall
inherit equally with those of the
whole-blood, in the same degree, and the
descendants, of such relatives shall inherit
in the same manner as descendants of the
whole-blood, unless the inheritance come to
the intestate by descent, devise or gift of
some one of his ancestors, in which case,
all those who are not of the blood of such
ancestor, shall be excluded from such
inheritance.
It has been contended, with
much ability and inguenity, that the
restriction in the latter clause of the
section applies to the descendants of the
half-blood only, and that in such is the
grammatical and logical construction.
But we are unable to
subscribe to this argument. It would be
unsafe to construe a statute according to
mere grammatical rules, or to rely on any
material aid in ascertaining the true
meaning. Neither bad grammar nor bad
English, will vitiate a statute any more
than a deed. It is well known that ancient
statutes were without sections or
punctuation, and hence the reasonable and
universal rule that the sense must be
collected from the whole set.
It is the clear that the
meaning and intention of this section was to
prohibit the half-blood, and their
descendants alike, from sharing in the
inheritance of an estate which might come to
the intestate by descent, devise or gift
from an ancestor, in all cases where they
were not of the blood of such ancestor. The
reason for excluding the half blood is just
as strong as for excluding their
descendants, and it is impossible to
conceive any well founded distinction
between the two. And whatever opinion we
might entertain as to the hardships of such
a rule in any given case, or as to the
impolicy of establishing lines of blood at
all, in a new country, where almost every
man is the architect of his own fortune and
the stock of descent; yet the Legislature
has spoken its will; the language is too
plain to be doubted, and addresses a
prohibition to the courts not to be
disregarded or evaded.
The half-blood are excluded
from inheritances, and they and their
descendants may inherit even an ancestral
estate, provided they can show they are of
the blood of the ancestor from whom it was
transmitted to the intestate. Gardner v.
Collins, 2 Peters 58. In newly acquired
estates they inherit equally with the
whole-blood in the same degree.
Hilliard, in his Treatise on
Real Property (vol. 5,207) says; "In
Arkansas, if there are no descendants, and
the estate came from the father, it passes
to him and his heirs. The half-blood and
descendants inherit unless the estate is
ancestral, in which case, none inherit but
those of the ancestral blood."
The word "blood," in its
technical and natural sense, includes the
half- blood. Baker v. Chalfant, 5 Wharton
477. In a note in the last edition of his
commentaries, Kent says: "The words in the
laws of the several States, regulating the
descent of ancestral inheritances, require
that the heir should be of the blood of the
ancestor. This would, in the ordinary sense
of the words, admit the half-blood for they
may be of the blood of the ancestor, though
only half-blood to the intestate." The 12th
section of our statute is an exact
transcript of the 15th section of the New
York Revised Statutes, and, in considering
that section, he further said that, not
being of the blood of the ancestor, was the
only ground on which the half-blood was
excluded from ancestral inheritances. 4 Kent
404, note b., and authorities there cited.
In Torrey vs. Shaw, 3 Edw.
Ch. R. 362, the Vice Chancellor, in
commenting on a similar provision, observed
that here is an exclusion as well where
property comes by devise or gift-each of
which is a species of purchase- as where it
comes by descent, unless the parties
claiming be of the blood of the donor. This
proceeds, said he, upon the principle that
the blood of the ancestor is necessary to
enable collateral relations to take, where
the property came from an ancestor by either
of the modes of transmission spoken of.
In Dew v. Jones, 3 Halstead
340, the half-blood of the person dying
seized, was held entitled to inherit an
ancestral estate, because he was of the
half-blood to the person dying seized, as
well as of the blood of the ancestor from
whom the lands came.
Our statute provides for
ancestral and newly-acquired inheritances.
The half-blood may inherit both, and will be
excluded from the first only when lacking
ancestral blood. With that exception, the
half-blood and descendants, stand upon the
same footing with the whole-blood and
descendants.
After carefully considering
each of the provisions of the statute, and
all together as a whole, we have come to the
following conclusions:
1st. That, as to both real
and personal property, it was the design of
the Legislature, when there were descendants
of the intestate, to send down both to them,
per capita, if in equal degree, and per
stirpes, if in unequal degree, without any
regard to the fact as to how the estate was
acquired.
2d. That, as to personal
property, it was the design where there were
no descendants, that it should go to
collaterals in the same way it would have
gone to descendants, if there had been any;
that is to say, per capita, if in equal
degree, and per stirpes, if in unequal
degree, and without inquiry as to how the
property was acquired by the intestate.
3d. That, as to real estate,
it was the design of the Legislature, where
there were no descendants, to point out the
lines of the succession, and that this is to
depend on the fact, whether the inheritance
is ancestral or new; and if ancestral, then
whether it come from the paternal or
maternal line.
4th. If the inheritance was
ancestral, and come from the father's side,
then it will go to the line on the part of
the father, from whence it came. not in
postponement but in exclusion, of the
mother's line: and so on the other hand, if
it come from the mother's side, then to the
line on the part of the mother, from whence
it came, to the exclusion of the father's
line.
5th. If the inheritance be
not ancestral, but a new acquisition, then.
after a life estate, reserved in succession
to the father and mother, if alive, it will
go in remainder, first to the line of the
intestate's paternal uncle and aunts, and
their descendants, in postponement of the
mother's line, until the former becomes
extinct; and then to the line of the
intestate's maternal uncle and aunts, and
their descendants; unless there should be
kindred, lineal or collateral, who, either
in right of propinquity, or by right of
representation, stand in a nearer relation
to the intestate than the uncles and aunts:
in which case, such nearer kindred would
take the inheritance to the exclusion of
both of these collateral lines; and, in
their hands, it would become an ancestral
estate, and always go in the blood of the
relative from whence it came, in the
ordinary course of descent prescribed for
ancestral inheritances Digest, secs. 10, and
11, p. 437.
6th. That, when the
inheritance is fixed, by these facts, in any
given line it will pursue that line until it
becomes extinct, and the objects of the
bounty and the order in which they succeed
one another, and the proportion they take,
are to be ascertained by the 1st section,
which is to be considered as the general
table of descent. The father, mother,
brothers, sisters, and so on, mentioned in
that section, are those who are to be
considered when counting from any
propositus, whether the propositus of a
single line only, or the concurrent
propositus of both lines, as the intestate
is, as to personal property.
7th. In all cases where the
inheritance is in any one line, if it goes
in succession, per capita, if in equal
degree, and per stirpes, if in an unequal
degree, precisely as if the other line was
extinct, and precisely as the inheritance of
a bastard would take a course in his
mother's line, he having no father line at
all.
8th. The half-blood and
their descendants, take personalty, as well
as realty, equally with the whole-blood,
except that they are excluded from real
estate when ancestral, if they lack the
blood of the transmitting ancestor.
Sec. 23. "Every person of
lawful age and sound mind may by last will
and testament devise and bequeath all of his
estate, real and personal, and all interest
therein; Provided, That no will of a
full-blood Indian devising real estate shall
be valid, if such last will and testament
disinherits the parent, wife, spouse, or
children of such full-blood Indian, unless
acknowledged before and approved by a judge
of the United States court for the Indian
Territory, or a United States Commissioner.
Act of Congress April 26,
1906, (34 Stat. L. 137
Provided, That nothing
contain, in the said Constitution shall be
construed to limit or impair the rights of
person or property pertaining to the Indians
of said Territory (so long as such rights
shall remain unextinguished) or to limit or
affect the authority of the Government of
the United States to make any law or
regulation respecting such Indians, their
lands, property, or other rights by
treaties, agreement, law, or otherwise,
which it would have been competent to make
if this Act had never been passed."
Oklahoma Enabling Act June
16, 1906. (Sec. 1)
Sec. 21. All laws in force in the
Territory of Oklahoma at the time of the
admission of said state into the Union shall
be in force throughout said State, except as
modified or changed by this Act or by the
constitution of the State, and the laws of
the United States not locally inapplicable
shall have the same force and effect within
said State as elsewhere within the United
States."
Enabling Act June 16,
1906.
Sec. 2. "All law in force in the
Territory of Oklahoma at the time of the
admission of the state into the Union, which
are not repugnant to this Constitution, and
which are not locally inapplicable, shall be
extended to and remain in force in the State
of Oklahoma until they expire by their own
limitation or are altered or repealed by a
law."
Schedule to Constitution of Oklahoma.
Wilson's Revised and Annotated Statutes
of Oklahoma.
(6893) Succession is the coming in of
another to take the property of one who dies
without disposing of it by will.
(6894) The property, both real and
personal, of one who dies without disposing
of it by will, passes to the heirs of the
intestate, subject to the control of the
probate court, and to the possession of any
administrator appointed by that court for
the purpose of administration.
(6895) When any person having title to
any estate not otherwise limited by marriage
contract, dies without disposing of the
estate by will, it is succeeded to and must
be distributed, unless otherwise expressly
provided in this code and the chapter on
probate court, subject to the payment of his
debts, in the following manner:
First. If the decedent leave a surviving
husband or wife, and only one child, or the
lawful issue of one child, in equal shares
to the surviving husband, or wife, and
child, or issue of such child. 'If the
decedent leave a surviving husband or wife,
and more than one child living, or one child
living, and the lawful issue of one or more
deceased children, one-third to the
surviving husband or wife, and the remainder
in equal shares to his children, and to the
lawful issue of any deceased child, by right
of representation; but if there be no child
of the decedent living at his death, the
remainder goes to all his lineal
descendants; and if all the descendants are
in the same degree of kindred to the
decedent they share equally, otherwise they
take according to the right of
representation. If the decedent leave no
surviving husband or wife, but leaves issue,
the whole estate goes to such issue, and if
such issue consists of more than one child
living, or one child living and the lawful
issue of one or more deceased children, then
the estate goes in equal shares to the
children living, or to the child living, and
the issue of the deceased child or children
by right of representation.
Second. If the decedent leave no issue,
the estate goes in equal shares to the
surviving husband or wife, and to the
decedent's father. If there be no father,
then one-half goes in equal shares to the
brothers and sisters of the decedent, and to
the children of any deceased brother or
sister, by right of representation; if he
leave a mother also, she takes an equal
share with the others and sisters. If
decedent leave no issue, nor husband nor
wife, the estate must go to the father.
Third. If there be no issue, nor husband,
nor wife, nor father, nor mother, then in
equal shares to the brothers and sisters of
the decedent, and to the children of any
deceased brother or sister, by right of
representation; if a mother survive, she
takes an equal share with the brothers and
sisters.
Fourth. If the decedent leave no issue,
nor husband. nor wife, nor father, and no
brother or sisters living at the time of his
death, the estate goes to his mother to the
exclusion of the issue, if any, of deceased
brothers or sisters.
Fifth. If the decedent leave a surviving
husband or wife, and no issue, and no
father, nor mother, nor brother, no; sister,
the whole estate goes to the surviving
husband or wife.
Sixth. If the decedent leave no issue,
nor husband, nor wife, and no father nor
mother, nor brother nor sister, the estate
must go to the next of kin, in equal degree,
excepting that when there are two or more
collateral kindred. in equal degree, but
claiming through different ancestors, those
who claimed through the nearest ancestors
must be preferred to those claiming through
an ancestor more remote. However:
Seventh. If the decedent leave several
children, or one child and the issue of one
or more children, and any such surviving
child dies under age, and not having been
married, all the estate that came to the
deceased child by inheritance from such
decedent descends in equal shares to the
other children of the same parent, and to
the issue of any such other children who are
dead. by right of representation.
Eighth. If, at the death of such child
who dies under age, not having been married,
all the other children of his parents are
also dead, and any of them have left issue,
the estate that came to such child by
inheritance from his parent descends to the
issue of all other children of the same
parent ; and if all tilt issue are in the
same degree of kindred to the child, they
share the estate equally, otherwise they
take according to the right of
representation.
Ninth. If the decedent leave no husband,
wife, or kindred, the estate escheats to the
Territory for the support of common schools.
(6896) Dower and courtesy are abolished.
(6897) Every illegitimate child is an
heir of the person who in writing. signed in
the presence of a competent witness,
acknowledges himself to 1w the father of
such child; and in all cases is an heir of
his mother: and inherits his or her estate,
in whole or in part, as the case may be, in
the same manner as if he had been born in
lawful wedlock; but he does not represent
his father or mother by inheriting any part
of the estate of his or her kindred. either
lineal or collateral, unless before his
death his parents shall have intermarried,
and his father, after such marriage,
acknowledges him as his child or adopts him
into his family; in which case such child
and all the legitimate children are
considered brothers and sisters, and on the
death of either of them intestate, and
without issue, the others inherit his
estate, and are heirs as here in before
provided, in like manner as if all the
children had been legitimate; saving to the
father and mother respectively, their rights
in the estate of the children in like manner
as if all had been legitimate. The issue of
all marriages null in law or dissolved by
divorce, are legitimate.
(6898) If an illegitimate child, who has
not been acknowledged, or adopted by his
father, dies intestate, without lawful
issue, his estate goes to his mother, or, in
case of her decease, to her heirs at law.
(6899) The degree of kindred is
established by the number of generations,
and each generation is called a degree.
(6900) The series of degrees from the
line; the series of degrees between persons
who descend from one another, is called
direct or lineal consanguinity; and the
series of degrees between persons who did
not descend from one another, but spring
from a common ancestor, is called the
collateral line or collateral consanguinity.
(6901) The direct line is divided into a
direct line descending and the direct line
ascending. The first is that which connects
the ancestor with those who descend from
him. The second is that which connects a
person with those from whom he descends.
(6902) In the direct line there are as
many degrees as there are generations. Thus
the son is, with regard to the father, in
the first degree; the grandson in the
second; and vice versa with regard to the
father and grandfather toward the sons and
grandsons.
(6903) In the collateral line the degrees
are counted by generations, from one of the
relations up to the common ancestor, and
from the common ancestor to the other
relations. In such computation the decedent
is excluded, the relative included, and the
ancestor counted but once. Thus brothers are
related in the second degree, uncle and
nephew in the third degree, cousins german
in the fourth degree, and so on.
(6904) Kindred of the half blood inherit
equally with those of the whole blood in the
same degree, unless the inheritance come to
the intestate by descent devise or gift of
some one of his ancestors, in which case all
those who are not of the blood of such
ancestors must be excluded from such
inheritance.
(6905) Any estate, real or personal,
given by the decedent in his life time, as
an advancement to any child or other lineal
descendant, is a part of the estate of the
decedent for the purposes of division and
distribution thereof among his issue, and
must be taken by such child, or other lineal
descendant, toward his share of the estate
of the decedent.
(6906) If the amount of such advancement
exceeds the share of the heir receiving the
same, he must be excluded from any further
protion in the division and distribution of
the estate, but he must not be required to
refund any part of such advancement; and if
the amount so received is less than his
share, he is entitled to so much more as
will give him his full share of the estate
of the decedent.
(6907) All gifts and grants are made as
advancements, if expressed in the gift or
grant to be so made, or if charged in
writing by the decedent as an advancement,
or acknowledged in writing as such by the
child or other successor or heir.
(6908) If the value of the estate so
advanced is expressed in the conveyance, or
in the charge thereof made by the decedent,
or in the acknowledgement of the party
receiving it, it must be held as of that
value in the division and distribution of
the estate; otherwise it must be estimated
according to its value when given as nearly
as the same can be ascertained.
(6909) If any child or other lineal
descendant receiving advancement, dies
before the decedent, leaving issue, the
advancement must be taken into consideration
in the division and distribution of the
estate, and the amount thereof must be
allowed accordingly by the representatives
of the heirs receiving the advancement, in
like manner as if the advancement had been
made directly to them.
(6910) Inheritance or succession by right
of representation takes place when the
descendants of any deceased heir take the
same share or right in the estate of another
person that their parents would have taken
if living. Posthumous children are
considered as living at the death of their
parents.
(6911) Aliens may take in all cases, by
succession, as well as citizens; and no
person, capable of succeeding under the
provisions of this title, is precluded from
such succession by reason of the alienage of
any relative.
(6912) If there is no one capable of
succeeding under the preceding sections.,
and the title fails from a defect of heirs,
the property of a decedent devolves and
escheats to the Territory; and an action for
the recovery of such property, and to reduce
it into the possession of the Territory, or
for its sale and conveyances may be brought
by the district attorney in the district
court of the county or judicial subdivision
in which the property is situated.
(6913) Real property passing to the
Territory under the preceding section,
whether held by the Territory or its
grantees, is subject to the same charges and
trusts to which it would have been subject
if it. had passed by succession.
(6914) Those who succeed to the property of
a decedent are liable for his obligations in
the cases and to the extent prescribed by
chapter 18."
Sec. 9. "Provided, further, That if any
member of the Five Civilized Tribes of
one-half or more Indian blood shall die
leaving issue surviving, born since March
fourth, nineteen hundred and six, the
homestead of such deceased allottee shall
remain inalienable, unless restrictions
against the alienation are removed there
from by the Secretary of the Interior in the
manner provided in section one hereof, for
the use and support of such issue, during
their life or lives, until April
twenty-sixth, nineteen hundred and
thirty-one; but if no such issue survive,
then such allottee, if an adult, may dispose
of his homestead by will free from all
restrictions; if this be not done, or in the
event the issue hereinbefore provided for
die before April twenty- sixth, nineteen
hundred and thirty-one, the land shall
descend to the heirs, according to the laws
of descent and distribution of the State of
Oklahoma, free from all restrictions:
Provided further, That the provisions of
section twenty-three of the act of April
twenty-sixth, nineteen hundred and six, as
amended by .this act, are hereby made
applicable to all wills executed under this
section.
Act of Congress May 27, 1908 (35 Stat. L.
312)
An Act entitled an act to amend section
626, of the Statutes of Oklahoma of 1893
entitled: "Succession."
"Sec. 1. That section 6261 of the
Statutes of Oklahoma of 1893 be .amended so
as to read as follows:
Section 6261. When any person having
title to any estate not otherwise limited by
marriage contract dies, without disposing of
the estate by will, it descends and must be
distributed in the following manner:
First. If the decedent leave a surviving
husband or wife, and only one child, or the
lawful issue of one child, in equal shares
to the surviving husband, or wife and child,
or issue of such child. If the decedent
leave a surviving husband or wife and more
than one child living and the lawful issue
of one or more deceased children, one-third
to the surviving husband or wife, and the
remained in equal shares to his children,
and to the lawful issue of any dressed
child, by right of representation; but if
there be no child of the decedent living at
his death, the remainder goes to all of his
lineal descendants: and if all the
descendants are in the same degree of
kindred to the decedent they share equally,
otherwise they take according to the right
of representation: Provided, if decedent
shall have married more than once, the
spouse at the time Of death shall inherit of
the property not acquired during coverture
with such spouse only an equal part with
each of the living children of decedent. and
the lawful issue of any deceased child by
right of representation. If the decedent
leave no surviving husband or wife, but
leaves issue the whole estate goes to such
issue and if such issue consists of more
than one child living or one child living
and the lawful issue of one or more deceased
children, then the estate goes in equal
shares to the children living, or to the
child living, and the issue of the deceased
child or children by right of
representation.
Second. If the decedent leave no issue,
the estate goes one-half to the surviving
husband or wife ,and the remaining one-half
to the decedent's father or mother, or if he
leave both father and mother to them in
equal shares. If there be no father, then
one-half goes, in equal shares, to the
brothers and sisters of the decedent, and to
the children of any deceased brother or
sister, by right of representation. If
decedent leave no issue, nor husband nor
wife, the estate must go to the father or
mother, or if he leave both father and
mother, to them in equal shares. Provided;
in all cases where the property is acquired
by the joint industry of husband and wife
during coverture, and there is no issue, the
whole estate to go to the survivor, at whose
death if any of the said property remain,
one-half of such property shall go to the
heirs of the husband and one-half to the
heirs of the wife, according to the right of
representation.
Third. If there be no issue, nor husband,
nor wife, nor father, nor mother, then in
equal shares to the brothers and sisters of
the decedent, and to the children of any
deceased brother or sister, by right of
representation, if the deceased, being a
minor, leave no issue, the estate must go to
the parents equally, if living together, if
not living together, to the parent having
had the care of said deceased minor.
Fourth. If the decedent leave no issue
nor husband, nor wife nor father and no
brother or sister is living at the time of
his death, the estate goes to his mother to
the exclusion of the issue, if any, of
deceased brothers or sisters.
Fifth. If decedent leave a surviving
husband or wife, and no issue, and no
father, nor mother, nor brother, nor sister,
the whole estate goes to the surviving
husband or wife.
Sixth. If the decedent leave no issue,
nor husband, nor wife, and no father nor
mother, nor brother, nor sister, the estate
must go to the next of kin, in equal degree,
excepting that when there are two or more
collateral kindred, in equal degree, but
claiming through different ancestors, those
who claimed through the nearest ancestors
must be preferred to those claiming through
an ancestor more remote, however.
Seventh. If the decedent leave several
children, or one child and the issue of one
or more children, and such surviving child
dies under age, and not having been married,
all the estate that came to the deceased
child by inheritance from such decedent,
descends in equal shares to the other
children of the same parent, and to the
issue of any such other children who are
dead, by right of representation.
Eighth. If, at the death of such child,
who died under age, not having been married,
all the other children of his parents are
also dead, and any of them have left issue,
the estate that came to such child by
inheritance from his patent descends to the
issue of all other children of the same
parent; and if all the issue are in the same
degree of kindred to the child, they share
the estate equally, otherwise, they take
according to the right of representation.
Ninth. If the decedent leave no husband,
wife, or kindred, the estate escheats to the
state for the support of common schools.
Section 2. All acts, or parts of acts, in
conflict with this act, be and the same are
hereby repealed.
Approved March 20, 1909."
Session Laws of Oklahoma, 1909. (p.
548-50)
Campbells Abstract
Campbell's Abstract of Creek Indian Census Cards, 1915
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