Brown v. Denny, Rogers County Treasurer

This suit was brought November 3, 1913, by Nora A. Brown, and about 60 other persons, asking for an injunction against the county treasurer and other officers against the sale of lands. A temporary order was issued, and later, on motion, was dissolved. This appeal is from the order dissolving the temporary injunction.

No error is shown. The petition was not sufficient in its averments to warrant the relief prayed for, and *Page 381 therefore, the temporary injunction having been improvidently issued, the court properly dissolved it.

The petition sets up that plaintiffs are Cherokee Indians; that their allotted lands have been assessed in the year 1913, and will be sold, unless the officers are prevented. No land is described; no individual status as to quantum of blood is given. Whether the lands are homesteads or surplus was evidently considered too unimportant to mention. Therefore, there was nothing before the court upon which it could decree that any particular tract of land belonging to any one of the plaintiffs was exempt. It may be that some 40-acre homesteads, which were exempt from taxation, were involved; but, if so, the pleader was careful not to mention it. That the lands allotted to Cherokees, other than homesteads, are taxable has been held in Kidd v. Roberts, County Treasurer, 43 Okla. 603,143 P. 862. The syllabus is as follows:

"The grant of non-taxable land to the allottees of the Cherokee Tribe of Indians by virtue of the provisions of Act Cong. July 1, 1902, c. 1375, 32 St. at L. 716, known as the Cherokee Treaty, covers only the homestead of 40 acres; and the lands of such allottees other than homesteads, from which restrictions have been removed by act of Congress, are subject to taxation."

It may be further observed that the above case discusses the cases of English v. Richardson, 224 U.S. 680, 32 Sup. Ct. 571, 56 L.Ed. 949, and Choate v. Trapp, 224 U.S. 665, 32 Sup. Ct. 565, 56 L.Ed. 941, together with the treaties and laws affecting the Cherokees, and also the case by this court ofWhitmire et al v. Trapp et al., 33 Okla. 429, 126 P. 578, and overrules pro tanto the last-named case — *Page 382 "if the language used is deemed sufficiently comprehensive to embrace lands other than the homestead allotment."

The cause should be affirmed.

By the Court: It is so ordered.