178 A. 893 | Vt. | 1935
The action is brought under P.L. 3923 to recover an amount expended in the relief of Albert Russell, a pauper, whose residence, it is claimed, is in the defendant town. The case was tried in the Franklin municipal court without a jury, and upon facts found and filed, judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendant excepted. The only question before us is that of residence.
The findings show that the pauper, then a single man, went to Waterville in July, 1915, and lived with and worked for his *350 brother on the so-called Bragg farm in that town. From that time on, for a period of several years, he frequently left Waterville and lived and worked elsewhere, but returned to his brother's several times a year until he set up his own establishment as hereinafter stated. He was married on April 27, 1918, and with his wife went on a trip to Berlin, N.H., where he worked for about a month. He then returned to Vermont, stopping for a time with a relative of his wife in Johnson, and then went to Waterville, where he set up housekeeping in February, 1919. He moved to Huntington in 1920, but gained no residence there or elsewhere outside of Waterville. On or about January 1, 1917, he went to Johnson to work for another brother, and while there broke his arm. He remained there until sugaring, when he returned to Waterville to work for his brother. He moved to Georgia about the first of December, 1931, where he came to want and was relieved by that town to the amount herein sued for. During the time from 1915 to 1920, the pauper left a little clothing and a few chairs at his brother's, but whether or not he intended to return there to live is a fact not covered by the findings. It is expressly found that there was no specific agreement between the pauper and his brother about the former's returning to the Bragg farm, as he did from time to time. But it seems that from the facts found, the court below inferred that there was an implied agreement to that effect.
There is no express finding that the pauper gained a residence in Waterville, nor are sufficient facts found to compel the inference that he did. To constitute a residence under the pauper law, the fact that the pauper actually lived in the town in question and his intent to make that town his home must concur.Fullam v. Howe,
Residence is a fact. Town of Jamaica v. Town of Townshend,
The plaintiff argues that this presumption continues until it is overcome by the defendant's evidence, and that the burden of proof is on the defendant to show that the Waterville residence was changed. It was said in Town of Newfane v. Town ofDummerston,
The distinction between these burdens is fully recognized in our cases. Harrison's Admr. v. Northwestern, etc., Ins. Co.,supra; White River Chair Co. v. Connecticut River Power Co.,
So we hold that the burden of showing a continuous domicile in Waterville was on the plaintiff notwithstanding the presumption referred to. Has the plaintiff established that fact by such a measure of evidence as to warrant the finding of the court below? As we have seen, the findings show that the pauper was, from time to time, absent from Waterville and for varying periods of time lived and worked elsewhere. These facts do not of themselves show a termination of his residence in the defendant town. Standing alone, they prove nothing of that kind. A change of domicile is effected only by the concurrence of an act and an intention. The absence of either of these thwarts the change. The necessary act is the actual transfer of bodily presence from the town of the residence. The necessary intention is a fixed and definite determination to remain in the new town or, at least, such a determination not to return to the old one. If this pauper actually went to another town with an intention of the character specified of remaining there for an indefinite time as a fixed place of abode, a change of residence was effective though he entertained a nebulous or floating intention of returning at some future time. Anderson v. Estate of Anderson,
Since the pauper retained no home in Waterville unless he had a place there to which he had a right to return, Town of Berlin
v. Town of Worcester,
The defendant argues that the pauper was a minor when he went to Waterville, and for that reason could not choose or gain a residence there. This may be so, but the trouble is, the point was not made below. So it will not be considered here. Roberge v.Town of Troy,
Many other exceptions were saved, but as the case is to be retried, we do not deem it necessary to consider them now.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded. *354