Title 25 › Chapter CHAPTER 10— - DESCENT AND DISTRIBUTION; HEIRS OF ALLOTTEE › § 372
When a Native American who has an allotted parcel of land dies during the trust period and before getting full ownership, and leaves no will, the Secretary of the Interior must hold a hearing and decide who the legal heirs are under the Indian Land Consolidation Act or an approved tribal probate code. The Secretary’s decision can be reviewed by a court like other similar decisions. If the heirs are able to manage their affairs, the Secretary must give them full ownership (a fee patent). If one or more heirs are found unable to manage, the Secretary may sell the land. If the land can be fairly split to help the heirs, the Secretary may, if asked, set aside shares and give full ownership to the competent heirs. All land sales follow rules the Secretary makes and require a 10% deposit when sold. If a buyer does not follow the sale terms, the deposit and any payments or interest already made can be forfeited, and those forfeitures go to the original allottee or their heirs. After full payment, the buyer gets full ownership. Sale money goes to competent heirs and is held in trust for any incompetent heirs during the trust period. The Secretary can also issue a certificate of competency, on request, to remove sale restrictions on previously issued patents. Indian agents may deposit Indian funds in banks that give a bond with approved surety; the Secretary must approve those bonds.
Full Legal Text
Indians — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
25 U.S.C. § 372
Title 25 — Indians
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73