Plaintiffs James and Florence Godino, Florida residents, appeal a Windham Superior Court order dissolving an ex parte writ of attachment and dismissing their action to collect on a promissory note for lack of personal jurisdiction over defendant, Marilyn Cleanthes. We reverse.
Defendant, along with her estranged husband, gave plaintiffs an unsecured promissory note in the amount of $20,000. They executed the note in New York state in 1988. After separating from her husband, defendant moved to a house she owns in Wardsboro, Vermont, where she lived for several years. Believing defendant lived in Wardsboro, plaintiffs instituted suit in Vermont. Plaintiffs obtained an ex parte writ of attachment of defendant’s property, alleging that she had fled and encumbered property in the past and was likely to dispose of it. Plaintiffs served notice of the proceedings on defendant by leaving the summons, complaint, motion for writ of attachment, and writ of attachment with defendant’s adult son, who continued to live in the Wardsboro home.
On October 15,1993, defendant filed a notice of limited appearance and a motion to dissolve the writ under V.R.C.E 4.1(e) and to dismiss plaintiffs’ complaint pursuant to V.R.C.E 12(b)(1), (2), and (5). Flaintiffs then served defendant in Florida.
At the time plaintiffs brought suit in August 1993, defendant claimed to have been absent from Vermont for several months. *239 According to her affidavit, defendant left Vermont for Florida in December 1992. She sought state services there and obtained a full-time job in May 1993. She then leased an apartment in June 1993. Defendant, nevertheless, retained her home in Wardsboro, remained a licensed driver in Vermont, and continued to register her car in Vermont.
In its order granting defendant’s motion to dismiss, the court limited its review to minimum contacts jurisdiction and concluded solely on the basis of affidavits that “defendant’s mere ownership of property in Vermont, without more, is not sufficient to allow this court to assert jurisdiction over the defendant.” Plaintiffs appeal this ruling, arguing that they have made out a prima facie case of quasi-in-rem jurisdiction and personal jurisdiction based on domicile and minimum contacts. Because plaintiffs have made a prima facie showing of personal jurisdiction based on defendant’s domicile in Vermont, we do not reach the other issues.
A court has discretion to decide a pretrial motion to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction on the basis of affidavits alone, to permit discovery, and to conduct an evidentiary hearing.
Roman Catholic Diocese of Burlington, Inc. v. Paton Insulators Inc.,
Defendant concedes that domicile continues to be a valid basis of jurisdiction, and we agree.
Milliken v. Meyer,
Defendant maintains she is not domiciled in Vermont. Domicile is (1) “‘a place where a person lives
or
has [her] home,’”
Piche v. Department of Taxes,
Although one can change domicile by moving to a new residence and dwelling there with the intent to remain indefinitely, “[a]n essential ingredient of the intention requirement is the intent to give up the old domicile.” Id. Defendant’s retention of the home, license, and registration evidence the opposite intent, the intent to keep the old domicile. Consequently, plaintiffs have met their prima facie burden of proving personal jurisdiction.
Reversed and remanded.
