212 Mass. 434 | Mass. | 1912
It could not have been ruled as matter of law that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. It could be found that after the death of her husband the defendant resumed her domicil of origin in Milton, and had not since changed her domicil. She had inherited from a parent an undivided interest in a large estate in Milton, and afterward acquired the whole title therein. Upon this estate she built a large and costly house, furnished it completely, and appears to have resided there when she was not travelling or temporarily sojourning in other places. She paid without objection taxes assessed upon her general personal estate in Milton during the years 1901 to 1905, inclusive. She paid no taxes upon her general personal estate in Webster, which she now alleges to have been her domicil, until the year 1908, and only during the years 1905, 1906, and 1907 a small sum on furniture and horses, which seem to have been assessed to her with real estate which she owned in that town. R. L. c. 12, § 23, cl. 3. She made only rare and brief visits to her house in that town. She went to Webster on March 18, 1905, to arrange for the opening of her house for occupation in the early spring, and she then caused herself to be registered as a voter in that town. Her stay however was very short, apparently only for that day. Soon after the middle of the next April she again went to Webster, and remained there until about May 13, when she returned to Milton, and there abode until about the first day of June, when she went to Bar Harbor. From that summer resort she returned to Milton, and remained there until about January 30, 1906, when she went to Washington, remaining there until May 16, 1906. In April, 1905, she was elected a trustee of the public library in Webster for the term of three years, and she accepted this office and acted as such trustee. She testified however that she never had voted in Webster, and never had attended a meeting of the trustees of the library.
Manifestly upon this evidence, if there were nothing more, the trial judge was warranted in finding that Milton was her domicil on May 1, 1906. Her payment of personal taxes in Milton was, as against her, some evidence that her domicil was there. Harvard College v. Gore, 5 Pick, 370, 374. Lyman v. Fiske, 17 Pick. 231, 235. Mooar v. Harvey, 128 Mass. 219, 220. Mitchell v. United States, 21 Wall. 350, 353. Her acceptance of deeds describing her as of Milton had the same tendency. Weld v. Boston, 126 Mass. 166. The apparent fixity of her residence at Milton as her regular home tended strongly to support the finding which was made.
The judge found specially that about the middle of' April, 1905, while she was actually in her Webster house, she had the intention of making Webster her home, but that she did not by her acts make it her home. This finding does not help her. To establish a change of domicil, fact and intent must concur. Holmes v. Greene, 7 Gray, 299, 300. The mere desire to have a domicil in a certain place with the intention that it shall be so is not enough, where, as here, there is no actual change of abode and apparently no intention of performing any of the acts which are necessary to constitute such a change. Jennison v. Hapgood, 10 Pick. 77. Chicopee v. Whately, 6 Allen, 508. Viles v. Waltham, 157 Mass. 542. Olivieri v. Atkinson, 168 Mass. 28, 29. Dickinson v. Brookline, 181 Mass. 195. Barron v. Boston, 187 Mass. 168. The purpose to change is not enough, unless carried into execution. Thorndike v. Boston, 1 Met. 242, 247. Thayer v. Boston, 124 Mass. 132. Pickering v. Cambridge, 144 Mass. 244, 245, 246, 248. Gardiner v. Brookline, 181 Mass. 162, 165.
The decision of the board of appeal is not decisive in this case. That decision is by the statute “final and conclusive” as to the
As there was no erroneous ruling of law at the trial and the findings made were warranted by the evidence, we cannot interfere with the result which was reached. Thayer v. Boston, 124 Mass. 132, 143. Coffin v. Grace, 198 Mass. 104.
Exceptions overruled.