136 P. 15 | Or. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The principal question- to be determined is whether or not the plaintiff has shown enough to confer jurisdiction upon the court over the subject matter of the suit within the meaning of Section 509, L. O. L.,
In Reed’s Will, 48 Or. 500 (87 Pac. 763), Mr. Chief Justice Bean says: “ ‘Domicile,’ strictly speaking, is the relation the. law creates between an individual and a particular place or country, and each case is dependent upon its own particular facts. It is not in a legal sense synonymous with ‘residence.’ A person may have more than one residence and more than one home, in the ordinary acceptance of those terms, but he can have only one domicile, and the law requires that for the purpose of the succession of his property he be domiciled somewhere.”
The plaintiff herself, after going into Idaho with the defendant, remained there continuously until April 29, 1913, when she returned and filed the complaint in this suit on the following day. During the time the defendant was in Idaho the last time, he voted at an election there, although he had previously registered in Oregon. On August 19, 1912, the plaintiff consulted an attorney in Idaho, and he drew up for her a complaint against the defendant for a divorce upon substantially the same grounds as the complaint in this action, in which she alleged that she “is and has been a resident of the state of Idaho for more than six months immediately preceding the commencement of this action.” This complaint was verified by her before a notary public of that state, but was never filed in any court. As a reason for not filing it she states that on the promises of the defendant to amend his conduct she returned and lived with him in Idaho about
As said by Mr. Justice Beard in Duxstad v. Duxstad, 17 Wyo. 411 (129 Am. St. Rep. 1138, 100 Pac. 112): “We think the rule is that the wife’s residence is that of her husband, save in exceptional cases, when she can, on account of necessity, establish and claim a separate residence. One of such exceptions is when he has given her cause for divorce. In that case it has been generally held that she may acquire a separate residence in another jurisdiction which will entitle her to maintain an action for divorce in that jurisdiction. This she may do; but her husband cannot by his wrongful acts and by mistreating her compel her to do so; * * she may still claim his residence as hers, at least until she has established a residence elsewhere.”
Considering, however, the domicile of the wife as governed by the general rule that it is determined by that of the husband, we recall that the original domicile of the parties was confessedly in the State of Oregon; that for the purpose of educating the children they migrated into Idaho; that by a great prepon
The decree of the Circuit Court is reversed in the manner indicated. Reversed.