168 Mass. 28 | Mass. | 1897
The defendant Atkinson obtained a discharge in insolvency, and relied upon it in defence to the plaintiff’s claim. The discharge was dated June 28, 1895, and the first publication of notice was on November 21, 1894. The plaintiff’s action was brought on June 24,1893, for breach of a contract dated January 30, 1893. The trial was before a judge sitting without a jury,
By Pub. Sts. c. 157, § 81, the defendant Atkinson was discharged from debts “ due to any person resident therein [that is, in this State] at the time of the first publication of the notice of the issuing of the warrant.” The request for a ruling treats the word “ domiciled ” as equivalent to the statutory word “ resident.” Such is the usual but not universal meaning of the word as used in our statutes; Stoughton v. Cambridge, 165 Mass. 251; and in McDaniel v. King, 5 Cush. 469, such was held to be its meaning as used in the original statute of insolvency in this State, St. 1888, c. 163, § 19.
The question what constitutes domicil is mainly a question of fact, and the element of intention enters into it. Personal absence for a while does not necessarily change one’s domicil, and personal presence in a place for a somewhat prolonged period does not necessarily establish domicil there. Viles v. Waltham, 157 Mass. 542. Borland v. Boston, 132 Mass. 89. Chicopee v. Whately, 6 Allen, 508. Harvard College v. Gore, 5 Pick. 370, 374. The question of domicil is often, as in the present case, rather a complex question, depending on a consideration of many different facts.
An examination of the evidence leads to the conclusion that the findings were well warranted. There were certain general facts not in dispute. The plaintiff was a native of Ancona, Italy, and devoted himself to music. He went from Ancona to Naples for purposes of study, thence to Greece as conductor of an orchestra, thence to Milan, thence to Havana, and finally, in 1881, to Paris, where he stayed till 1892. In the autumn of 1892 he came to New York, and remained there till he entered into the contract with the defendants. He was in Boston performing his duties under the contract from February 10, 1893, till June 20, when the defendants broke the contract, having become unable to carry it out further. He brought the present action on June 24, 1893, and soon afterwards left Boston for the summer, returning on September 5 or 6, and staying till June 4, 1894, when he left for Paris. He was in Boston again about
In the contract of January 30, 1893, the plaintiff is described as of New York. In the writ, dated June 24, 1893, he is described as of Ancona, Italy. In February, 1894, the defendants moved for an indorser of the writ, on the ground that the plaintiff was not a resident of the State, and an indorser was ordered. There was testimony which seems satisfactory to show that, when he returned to Boston in September, 1893, he came by advice of his counsel, on account of the litigation with the defendants, and to watch the suit. During this and his subsequent stay in Boston, he gave singing lessons. At the trial in March, 1894, the defendants for some reason sought by cross-examination of the plaintiff and otherwise to show that his residence or domicil was not in Boston; and the defendant Atkinson testified that on many different occasions, beginning in February, 1893, and continuing until June, 1893, the plaintiff said that he did not like Boston; that he was ill, and sick of the whole business; and that he wanted to go back to New York, where he could make more money. At the hearing in February, 1895, the plaintiff being asked what on February 10, 1893, (the date of his coming to Boston under his contract,) he meant to do after finishing his contract with the defendants, said: “ If I could make very fine business here in America I would remain here; but if business was not right, I went back to Paris, and the most American people would come to me to take lessons. It was to establish my reputation here in America, to be known.” The judge found the fact to be in accordance with this testimony of the plaintiff, and that on November 21,1894, he was living in Boston, engaged in his vocation as a music teacher; that it was his intention, if he could find sufficient business in America, to remain here, but if not, to go back to Paris; and that he had not made up his mind to make Boston his permanent place of abode, or to change his domicil. There was no evidence that the plaintiff had any other strong reason for remaining permanently in Boston, or that after June, 1893, when the defendants broke the contract, he was very successful in earning money by giving singing lessons here.
There is no doubt that an alien may have his domicil or resi
Hxeeptions overruled.