The statement is False. While some Indigenous cultures in North America had communal land-use practices and viewed the land as a shared resource, the concept of land ownership varied widely among different tribes. Many Indigenous groups did have their own systems of land stewardship and use, which did not align with European notions of private property but did involve a sense of individual and communal rights to land.
In many cases, these cultures centered around the use and management of land rather than outright ownership as understood in a Western context. Therefore, it is not accurate to universally state that Indians did not have any concept of owning personal property.