4 Barb. 504 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
By the act relating to common schools, passed May 26, 1841, (1 R. S. 540, 3d ed.) it is provided (sec. 7,) that every male person of full age residing in any district and entitled to hold lands in this state, who owns or hires real property in such district subject to taxation for school purposes, and every resident of such district authorized to vote at town meetings of the town in which such district is situated, and who has paid any rate bill for teacher’s wages in such district, within one year preceding, or who has paid any district taxes within two years preceding, or who owns any personal property liable to be taxed for school purposes in such district exceeding $50 in value exclusive of such as is exempt from execution, and no others, shall be entitled to vote at any school district meeting held in such district; Section 8 provides that, if any person offering to vote at any school district meeting shall be challenged as unqualified, by any legal voter of such district, the chairman presiding at such meeting shall require the person so offering, to make the following declaration : “ I do declare and affirm that I am an actual resident of this school district, and that I am qualified to vote at this meeting.” And every person making such declaration shall be permitted to vote on all questions proposed at such meeting, &c. Section 9 declares that every person who shall wilfully make a false declaration of his right to vote at a district meeting, upon being challenged, &c. shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and punishable by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not exceeding one year, nor less than six months, in the discretion of the court.
Words charging a person with having wilfully made a false declaration at a school district meeting, of his right to vote at such meeting, upon being challenged as unqualified, by a legal voter of such district, would be actionable in themselves; as they impute a misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, for
But the motion for a nonsuit was properly denied, because the action was clearly maintainable on the 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th counts, which are founded on the libellous letter addressed by the defendant to the father of the plaintiff, without any proof of the facts set forth in the 1st and 4th counts in relation to the school district meeting ; as such counts contain no colloquium concerning such meeting. The defendant, in the libel, states, “ that the inhabitants of the district have manifested a belief that the plaintiff committed peijury by swearing in his vote, by having been taxed and paying a rate bill, &c. and I am the man who will enter a complaint in behalf of the people, against the suspected perjurer.” This is a censorious writing, which the law will infer was made with a malicious intent to blacken the memory of the plaintiff, and to expose him to public hatred and contempt. (People v. Cromwell, 3 John. Cas. 354. Root v. King, 7 Cowen, 613.)
The second ground on which the defendant applied for a. nonsuit was, that if the words could be construed into a charge of misdemeanor, it was incumbent on the plaintiff to show a school district meeting duly organized, &c. at which the offence might have been committed. If the action was sought alone to be maintained on the first count of the declaration, in which the plaintiff sets forth specially the holding of the school district meeting, &c. and alleges that the slanderous words were spoken of and concerning such meeting, proof of such meeting, &c. by the plaintiff, would undoubtedly have been necessary. In Emery v. Miller, (1 Denio, 208,) it was held, where slanderous words are laid as spoken in reference to a particular occasion, that they must be proved substantially as laid; and the remark of Cowen, J. in Jacobs v. Fyler, (3 Hill, 572,) intimating a different opinion, was not approved. The case of Emery v. Miller, does not authorize proof of “ general words importing a charge of perjury in support of a declaration which alleges that the charge was specific and particular.” And see Aldrich v. Brown, (11 Wend. 596.)
The defendant had no right to call upon the court to strike out the counts in the plaintiff’s declaration containing a general charge of perjury, or to prohibit the plaintiff from proceeding upon those counts in .which the charge of perjury was explained by reference to the school district meeting.
The judge charged the jury that the payment by the plaintiff, to Douglass the teacher of the school in school district No. 5, of 25 cents for his own schooling, although it was included in the rate bill against his father, was in legal effect, the payment of a rate bill against himself. Section 8, of the act of 1841, relative to common schools, (1 R. S. 540, § 80, 3d ed.,) provides that every resident of a school district authorized to vote at town meetings of the town, Sec. and “ who has paid any rate bill for teacher’s wages in such district, within one year preceding,” shall be entitled to vote, &c. The payment by the plaintiff of a part of the rate bill for teacher’s wages, although included in the sum assessed against his father, comes within the terms of the act. The act only requires the payment of a rate bill, to qualify the person making the payment, to vote. It does not require that his name should be contained in the rate bill. It is the payment of the rate bill which creates the qualification. I think that the circuit judge committed no error in this part of his charge.
I see no error in that part of the charge in which the judge told the jury that, in determining whether the plaintiff was a voter in district No. 5, on the ground of a property qualification, they might take into consideration the amount equitably due the plaintiff from his father, and the amount which would ultimately be due to him from the trustees of the school district in Malta in which he taught school, for that portion of his services rendered previous to the 23d of January, 1845. Section 7 of the act of 1841, (1 R. S. 540,3d ed.,) authorizes every res
An exception is taken to the opinion expressed by the circuit judge, that he did not think that, the facts proved operated as an interruption of the plaintiff’s residence at Saratoga Springs, at the time he voted at the district meeting. It is objected that this was equivalent to a peremptory direction as to the law upon that question ; and that it should have been left to the jury to find the fact. A similar objection is made to the opinion intimated by the judge, that from the evidence the plaintiff’s domicil, at the time of the district meeting, was at his father’s. If the evidence left the questions of the plaintiff’s domicil and residence open for the consideration of the jury, as questions of fact, I think it would have been proper to submit them rather more distinctly to the jury than was done by the learned judge. Still, I cannot say that the learned judge did, and I do not believe that he intended to withdraw these questions as questions of fact from the jury. And I think that his remarks, to which exception has been taken, cannot fairly be regarded as positive directions to the jury, but may more properly be deemed comments Upon the evidence, and the mere expression of his opinion by way of advice to the jury as to such evidence, upon which they were to exercise their judgment. If I am right in giving this character to these remarks of the learned judge, no exception
But I am inclined to believe that the facts proved, as to which there is no conflict, justified the opinion expressed by the learned judge, that the plaintiff’s domicil and residence was in school district No. 5 in the town of Saratoga Springs, at the time of the school district meeting; and that the mere fact of his entering into a contract to teach a school for the period of four months only in Malta, and going there for the purpose of fulfilling such contract, did not change either his domicil or his residence. If the facts were undisputed, I think the judge would have been justified in instructing the jury that they did not change either the domicil or the residence of the plaintiff. Where evidence is competent, and uncontradicted, and is sufficient to warrant a verdict, the judge may, on such evidence, direct a verdict, instead of submitting the question of the sufficiency of the evidence, to the jury. (Nichols v. Goldsmith, 7 Wend. 160.) But to warrant an unqualified direction to the jury in favor of one party or the other, the evidence must either be undisputed or the preponderance so decided that a verdict against it would be set aside and a new trial granted. (Rich v. Rich, 16 Wend. 663, 676. 1 John. C. 250. 6 Wend. 436, 438. 5 Bing. 354. Davis v. Russell, per Gaselee, J. 2 Hall, S. C. Rep. 102.) If the evidence is of a circumstantial character, although undisputed, there is often a conclusion to be drawn by the jury ; and in such case, to warrant the direction of the judge, the conclusion should be so plain that a verdict against it would be set aside. But where there is a conclusion of law arising on plain facts, the judge may, and it is indeed his duty to direct a verdict according to such conclusion. (Per Cowen, J., Rich v. Rich, 16 Wend. 676. Demyre v. Souzer, 6 Id. 436.)
Every person must have a domicil somewhere; and he can only have one domicil at one and the same time. Every person has a domicil of origin, which he retains until he acquires another j and the one thus acquired is in like manner retained
In the Matter of Thompson, (1 Wend. 45,) and in Frost v. Brisbin, (19 Id. 13,) a distinction is recognized between"domicil and residence. Domicil, it is said, means something more than residence ; that it includes residence with an intention to remain in a particular place. (1 Wend. 45.) Thus a foreign minister has not his domicil where he resides. Domicil is the habitation fixed in any place, with an intention of always staying there, (Vattel, 163, 164,) or at least without any present intention of removing therefrom. (10 Mass. Rep. 488.) The residence of a foreign minister at the court to which he is accredited, is only a temporary residence. He is not there animo manendi. The same may be said of the officers, soldiers and seamen, in the army and navy. They may be said to have their domicil in one place, and their actual residence in another. But generally residence and domicil mean the same thing. The place where a man carries on his established business, and has his permanent residence, is his domicil. Residence is defined in Bouvier, to be the place of one’s domicil. Webster defines it to be the place of abode; or the act of dwelling or abiding in a place for a continuance of time. Inhabitance and residence are generally used as synonymous terms. Inhabitant is defined to be one who has his domicil in a place; or one who has an actual fixed residence in a place. (1 Bouv. Law Dic. 678.) Webster defines it to be “ one who dwells or resides permanently in a place, or who has a fixed residence, as distinguished from an occasional lodger or visitor.” Chancellor Walworth, in the Matter of Wrigley, (8 Wend. 140,) says, “ Inhabitancy and residence do not mean precisely the same thing as domicil, when the latter term is applied to successions to personal estate, but they mean a fixed and permanent abode, or dwelling place for the time being, as contra-distinguished from a mere temporary locality of existence.” In Roosevelt v. Kellogg, (20 John. 210,) the supreme court decided that the term inhabitant, in the insolvent act of 1813, signified the same thing as resident. Woodworth, J. says “ a person res
In the Matter of Fitzgerald, (2 Caines, 317,) it was decided that a person who came into this state on a commercial adventure, without any intent of settling here, was not a resident within the meaning of the act for relief against absconding debt-, ors. In the Matter of Thompson, (1 Wend. 43,) the court held, in respect to an absent debtor, that residing abroad, engaged in business for a time, whether permanently or temporarily, was a “ residing out of the state,” within the meaning of the statute. In the Matter of Wrigley, (4 Wend. 602; 8 Id. 134,) it was held that a person remaining temporarily for a month in the cities of New-York and Brooklyn, intending to commence business in Canada, was not an inhabitant or resident within the meaning of the insolvent act of 1813. Savage, C. J. in this case, says that in the matter of Fitzgerald, (2 Caines, 318,) it was held that a resident within the state was one who had a residence of a permanent and fixed character, not one who had a mere residence of a temporary nature. In Frost v. Brisbin, (19 Wend. 11,) the facts were these: a resident of this state, left the state in May, 1836, and went to Wisconsin, and commenced business there as a merchant, with intent to make it his permanent residence, but left behind his wife and child at board at his former residence in this state. In March 1837, he returned to his former residence on a visit, and remained until May, when he was arrested and held to bail. And it was held that lie was not a resident of this state, within the meaning of the act to abolish imprisonment for debt. In that case, Nelson, Ch- J. says, “ There must be a settled fixed abode, an intention to remaip permanently, at least for a time, for business or other purposes, to constitute a residence within the legal meaning of that term.” In Thorndike v. City of Boston, (1 Met. 245,) Shaw, C. J. says, “ The questions of residence, inhabitancy, or doniicil, although not in all respects precisely the same, they are nearly so, and depend much on the same evidence.” In Cadwallader- v. Howell, (3 Harrison’s Rep. 144,) Dayton J, says, “ The word residence, (fixed resi
From the various definitions of the terms residence, inhabitancy, and domicil, and the decisions in regard to them, I think we can deduce the proposition that the terms legal residence or inhabitancy, and domicil mean the same thing. By legal residence, I mean the place of a man’s fixed habitation; where his political rights, such as the right of the elective franchise, are to be exercised, and where he is liable to taxation. A person leaving such place of fixed habitation, or abode temporarily, as for a particular purpose, either for business, pleasure, or health, with the intent of returning to the same, as soon as such purpose is accomplished, does not lose his residence or habitancy in such place of abode. < The actual residence is not always the legal residence, or inhabitancy of a man. A foreign minister actually resides, and is personally present, at the court to which he is accredited, but his legal residence or inhabitancy, and domicil, are in his own country. His residence at the foreign court is only a temporary residence. He is there for a particular purpose. So soldiers and seamen may be legal residents and inhabitants of a place, although they may have been absent therefrom for years. They do not lose their residence or domicil by following their profession. • Within these principles and decisions, did the plaintiff, by entering into a contract to teach school in Malta for the period of four months, lose his domicil or legal residence in Saratoga Springs ?• It will be remembered that he only remained in Malta during the four months. • At the expiration of that time he left Malta, and took a school in Stillwater. He could not lose his residence and domicil in Saratoga Springs, unless he acquired a residence and domicil in Malta. He could not acquire a residence and domicil in Malta unless he fixed his habitation there for an unlimited time, and without any present intention of removing therefrom; and he must have left Saratoga Springs with an intention to abandon that place as his domicil. The conduct of the plaintiff does not warrant any such conclusion.
I therefore have come to the conclusion that upon the plain undisputed facts of the case, the plaintiff’s domicil and legal residence, was in school district No. 5 in the town of Saratoga Springs, at the time of the school district meeting, on the 23d of January, 1845, and that therefore the charge of the judge on the subject of such domicil and residence was entirely correct. The plaintiff’s domicil of nativity, and his legal residence, having been shown to be or to have been in Saratoga Springs, it was incumbent upon the defendant to prove a change of such domicil and residence to Malta. I do not think that the evidence on the subject of such change of domicil and residence, was sufficient to entitle the defendant to have that question submitted to the jury as a question of fact.
It was suggested by the defendant’s counsel on the argument of this case, that the plaintiff died on the 24th of Dec. 1846, and he contended that by the plaintiff’s death the suit abated ; and as more than two terms had elapsed since the verdict, and as the cause of action did not survive to the personal representatives of the plaintiff, no judgment could be entered upon the verdict, under the provisions of the revised statutes.
The motion for a new trial must be denied; and the judgment must be entered nunc pro tunc as of a time during the life of the plaintiff.