Court Opinion

ID: 6411136
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 11:52:46.778802+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:22.756848
License: Public Domain

Bigelow, J.
It was conceded, at the trial of this cause, that the same evidence which was submitted to the jury, was offered by the plaintiff to the defendants, acting as selectmen of the town of Fall River, at the time he applied to them to have his name placed on the list of voters in November 1853. The case was therefore tried according to the rule laid down in Blanchard v. Stearns, 5 Met. 298. The only question which now arises upon this proof is, whether it sustains the claim of the plaintiff, that his legal domicil was in Fall River in the autumn of 1853, and that he had a right to vote there in the annual election of that year. We think it very clear that it does not. This case differs from any other which has heretofore come before this court, involving a question of domicil. Six months before the time when the plaintiff claimed a right to vote in Fall River, he had removed thence with his family and all his household goods to the town of Tiverton, and there hired a house, in which he lived. All the outward indicia of inhabitancy pointed to Tiverton as his place of residence. The whole case of the plaintiff therefore rested on the fact, that at the time of his removal he declared Ms intention to be to remain in Tiverton only temporarily, and to return to and retain his habitancy in Fall River. If this evidence be sufficient to sustain a claim of domicil, then it must follow that a mere naked declaration of intent to reside in a city or town from which a party has removed, without any proof of other facts with which such intent can be connected, is adequate proof of inhabitancy, under the Constitution and laws of this commonwealth. This cannot be so. It is true that, in cases where the domicil of a party is in issue, *301evidence of his intent may have an important and decisive bearing on the question, but it must be in connection with other facts, to which the intent of the party gives efficacy and significance. Such is the case where a person has two dwelling houses in different towns, in each of which he lives with his family an equal portion of the year. Harvard College v. Gore, 5 Pick. 370. So, too, where a citizen leaves the country to be absent abroad for purposes of business or pleasure, for an indefinite period, still retaining his house and furniture in the place of his previous residence. Sears v. Boston, 1 Met. 250. But no case can be found where the domicil of a party has been made to depend on a bald intent, unaided by other proof. The factum and the cmimus must concur in order to establish a domicil. Harvard College v. Gore, 5 Pick. 370. The latter may be inferred from proof of the former. But evidence of a mere intent cannot establish the fact of domicil.

Hew trial ordered.