7 Vt. 407 | Vt. | 1835
The opinion of the court was delivered by
— This is a question as to the settlement of a pauper. The evidence should have been submitted to a jury, under a charge of the court, for them to find the fact of the pauper’s residence. Sufficient however is stated in the case, as it is presented, to enable this court to mqke'a decision. It is contended, and probably correctly, that the pauper gained a settlement in Newbu-ry, prior to 1812. If so, it was from the fact of her residing there after the year 1801, without being warned out. The statute of 1797 gave a settlement from residence only to persons coming and
In the case of Boardman vs. Beckford and his Trustees, (2 Aik. 345) this fact became of importance for the purpose of ascertaining the residence of Beckford, and whether he bad been an inhabitant of this state. — He was sued as an absconding debtor.— This was denied in the plea, and it Was held that where a single man, having a usual place of resort as a home in New-Hampshire, came into this state under a contract to teach a school for three months, leaving a chest of clothes there, and going once or twice to exchange them during said term, and then returning at the expiration of three months, he did not thereby become an inhabitant of this state. The case of the Mariner, (4 Mass. Rep. 312) was of this description. The residence, wherever it is, must be open, not concealed. As to single persons, whose business or employment calls them away from home a great part of the time, or who are from time to time living with their friends and connexions, it is always attended with more or less difficulty to ascertain the place of their actual residence. It was not so however in the case under
Judgment of county court is therefore affirmed, and the pauper was duly removed.