36 A.2d 451 | Pa. | 1944
This is an appeal from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County striking the name of the appellant from the registry list of voters in the 8th District of the Third Ward of the City of Pittsburgh. The appellant owns a dwelling house at 1306 Bedford Avenue in that district and ward. It contains eight rooms, four of them being bedrooms. It is occupied permanently by James Suriano, his wife, two young sons and two young daughters. The children range in age from one year to nine years. Suriano gets "rent free" but he maintains the home and the contracts for gas and for electricity are in his name. It is conceded that at this address the appellant resided all his life up to 1930. He claims that this has been his legal residence since 1930 also, except for a brief period when he resided in a hotel. He never voted from any other residence. In 1930 he purchased a home in Mount Lebanon Township, where, so he testified, his children had lived "practically all their time." He has domestic help there but has none at the Bedford Avenue house. Mrs. Suriano manages *589 the latter home and Stabile and his wife are privileged to sleep, dine and entertain in that home whenever they choose to do so.
Stabile was asked these questions and made these replies:
Q. How many nights a week do you stay at 1306 Bedford Avenue?
A. Two or three. Sometimes a whole week. Sometimes longer than that. Sometimes I stay away from the place. I don't have any set time.
Q. Your children never stay there?
A. Once in a great while.
Q. Where are their clothes?
A. 515 Meadowcroft. [Mt. Lebanon]
Q. Mr. Stabile, your children live in Mt. Lebanon, don't they?
A. I said yes.
Q. Where do your children go to school?
A. Mt. Lebanon.
Q. Where do you sleep?
A. 1306 Bedford Avenue.
Q. You only sleep there a couple nights a week, don't you?
A. I said, sometimes weeks. Sometimes a couple nights. Sometimes I don't sleep there.
Q. Sometimes you sleep in Mt. Lebanon all week?
A. Oh yes.
Mrs. Stabile testified that she buys all her groceries in Mt. Lebanon and has "no dishes or pots or pans" at the Bedford Avenue house. She was asked: "When you have a family dinner, you usually eat in Mt. Lebanon?" and she replied: "On Sundays we do" and that she eats meals with her husband at the Bedford Avenue address "once-in-awhile".
It is clear from the reading of this record that Stabile's home, i.e. his legal residence, is in Mt. Lebanon and that since 1930 he has attempted to maintain a "voting residence" at 1306 Bedford Avenue, Pittsburgh. *590 The Act of June 3, 1937, P. L. 1333, sec. 704, declares that "the place where the family of a married man or woman resides shall be considered and held to be his or her place of residence, except where the husband and wife have actually separated and live apart" . . . Stabile and his wife havenot separated and do not live apart. They and their family are a unit and their only family home is in Mt. Lebanon. Stabile calls his Mt. Lebanon home his "summer home," but his three children reside there all the year around and go to school from that home. There is the only place where this family "keeps house", as Mrs. Stabile's testimony indicates. The Restatement of Conflict of Laws, Sec. 13, declares as follows: "A home is a dwelling place of a person, distinguished from other dwelling places of that person by the intimacy of the relation between the person and the place." Sec. 13, comment g, "When a person has his family living with him in a dwelling-place, it is strong evidence that the dwelling-place is his home." By every test laid down by the law this appellant's home in Mt. Lebanon township is his legal residence.
The courts have never accepted the contention sometimes made that a man's legal residence is wherever he says it is or where he says he intends it to be. An individual's legal residence is a question of fact which the state has a paramount interest in determining. A voter can vote only where his legal residence is; he can hold public office only if he resides in the political division his office serves. For example, the U.S. Constitution declares that a member of Congress must be an inhabitant of the state in which he shall be chosen and our State Constitution declares that a judge of the court of Common Pleas must reside in the district for which he shall be elected. The Pennsylvania Election Code of 1937, P. L. 1333, at page 1362, declares as one of the prerequisites of the right to vote in any election district, the following (Art. 7, sec. 701 (3)): "He or she shall have resided in the election district where he or she shall offer *591 to vote at least two months immediately preceding the election." For purposes of certain kinds of taxation, particularly inheritance taxes, each state has a vital interest in the question of the legal residence of the person on whom or on whose estate the tax is to be levied. The fact of any person's residence, for any legal purpose, whether for voting, or for holding office, or for taxation, has never been determined merely by that person's "say so". In determining that question the state brushes aside all colorable pretences and finds the reality behind the guise.
In Com. ex rel. Fortney v. Bobrofskie,
In Dorrance's Estate,
In the case now before us there can be no doubt that Stabile's family life centers in the home in Mt. Lebanon. There his young children, with whom he and his wife *593 stand in intimate relation, spend the entire year. From that home they go to school in the morning. To that home they return from school at night. For that home only, family groceries are purchased. In that home alone does Mrs. Stabile cook for her family. In that home only are family dinners served. The Bedford Avenue home in Pittsburgh is the home of another family, the Suriano family, where Suriano and his wife and child center their domestic life. When Stabile and his wife come to that home they come as they would come to a lodging house where they have the right to sleep and to eat and to entertain friends. It is not their permanent home, their place of domestic abode. It is a place where they are only transients, exactly as they would be at a hotel where they had similar privileges.
In the case of Texas v. Florida,
By parity of reasoning, we conclude in the instant case that "the physical facts of residence united with the major interests" of the appellant's life fix upon the home at Mt. Lebanon as the place of Stabile's domicile. That has been and is his "preeminent headquarters". If by merely obtaining the privilege of occasionally lodging and eating and entertaining in another man's habitation, a person can obtain "legal residence" there, our decision in the Dorrance case, supra, and the decision of the U.S. Supreme Court in the Green case, supra, must be erroneous. We do not so consider them.
Residence indicates permanency of abode as distinct from mere lodging or boarding. One of the rules for determining a person's residence, as prescribed in sec. 704a of the Election Code of 1937, supra, is the following: "That place shall be considered the residence of a person in which his habitation is fixed, and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning".
No one reading this record can doubt that the place to which Stabile "intends to return" when he is away from home is the place in Mt. Lebanon where his wife, with the aid of a servant, keeps house and where his three young children sleep and eat and have practically all their existence, except for the few hours five days a week when they are in school. There and not to the Suriano home in Pittsburgh is where he goes when he returns *595 from his labors, to the "bosom of his family". That is his home and his home is his legal residence.1
We hold that the decision of this court in theDorrance case, supra, and in the Fortney v. Bobrofskie case, supra, requires us to affirm the action of the court below in deciding that the appellant's legal residence is 515 Meadowcroft Avenue, in the township of Mt. Lebanon and not at 1306 Bedford Avenue, in the city of Pittsburgh.
The order is affirmed.