126 Va. 640 | Va. | 1920
(after making the foregoing statement) delivered the opinion of the court.
Pleas in chancery were then and since that time seldom used. When such a plea was used it was generally to present some single fact, vital to the cause, and the determination of which would end the litigation at once. For example, a married woman was sued in equity to subject lands to the payment of a debt prior to the enactment of the married women’s statute. She simply pleading coverture and the plea being found in her favor ended the case. That class of cases seems proper for a jury trial. At the revisal of 1849 the section appears as section 33 of chapter 171, in the following words: “A plaintiff in equity may take issue upon a plea and have such issue tried by a jury. If .the plea be found false, he shall have the same advantage as if it had been so found by a verdict at law.” • At the revisal of 1887 the section appears as section 3274 in the following words: “A plaintiff in equity may take issue upon a plea, and either party may have such issue tried by a jury.” This section omits the statement as to the effect of the verdict contained in the previous statutes probably because unnecessary, for Judge E. C. Burks, one of the revisors, speaks of the change made in the section as follows: “Under the former law, it would seem that if a plaintiff in equity took issue upon a plea, he only could have such issue tried by a jury. This is changed, so as to allow either party to have such trial.” Burks’ Address p. 39. It
There were two issues submitted to the j ury: First, was the complainant domiciled in Virginia for one year next before the institution of his suit, and, second, was he at the time of instituting his suit, to-wit: on October 9, 1916, a bona fide resident of the city of Alexandria.
Great stress is laid by counsel for the appellee, Mrs. Tow-son, on the fact that about the time this suit was brought, the complainant registered as a voter in Stafford county and voted at the presidential election held November 7, 1916, and it is insisted that he could not be a resident of the city of Alexandria at the time of the institution of his suit, and at the same time a resident of Stafford county. He seems to ignore the fact that, while a man can have but one domicile at a time, he may have had more than one residence at the same time. In the Cooper Case, supra, we held that Cooper had a domicile and also a domiciliary residence in West Virginia, though his actual residence and place of permanent abode for the time being was at Salem, Virginia. The opinion in that case is very full and instructive on this subject. Amongst other things, it is said in the opinion: “The residence of the president is in the White House at Washington, while the domicile of the incumbent is in New Jersey; the residence of ambassadors during their terms must be at the capitals of the foreign countries to which they are accredited, while their domi
The opinion in the Cooper Case, supra, also quotes at length from the opinion of Kelly, J., now a member of this court, but.then judge of the Corporation Court of the city of Bristol, in Bruner v. Bunting, 15 Va. Law Reg. 516, in which Judge Kelly held that, within the meaning of the Virginia election laws, domicile carried with it what may be called legal residence, or all the residence necessary to entitle a party to vote, and this we understand to be the general rule prevailing elsewhere. Lankford v. Gebhart, 130 Mo. 621, 32 S. W. 1127, 51 Am. St. Rep. 585; 9 R. C. L. sections 47, 49, and cases cited. Indeed, we do not understand counsel for the appellee to deny that, if the facts justified it, the complainant could have shown that he had retained his domicile in Stafford county with the right'to vote there, and at the same time have had a residence for other purposes in the city of Washington, D. C. He did not object to the admissibility of the evidence to prove these facts, but on the contrary took evidence in rebuttal and argued strenuously to show that the complainant had not established them. If the complainant could have a domiciliary residence in Stafford county with the right to vote there, and at the same time a residence for other purposes in the city of Washington, D. C., why could not the latter resi
In Alkire v. Alkire, 33 W. Va. 517, 11 S. E. 11, It is said: “According to the weight of authority, and what seems to be the only safe and practicable rule, the justifiable cause which will excuse .one of the parties for leaving the other, must be such conduct as could be made the foundation of a judicial proceeding for divorce a mensa et thoro. Nothing short of such conduct will justify a wilful separation or a continuance of it. The interests of society, the happiness of the parties, and the welfare of families demand such a rule. Separation is not to be tolerated for light causes, and all causes are light which, the law does not recognize as grounds for divorce.” '
In Crounse v. Crounse, 108 Va. 108, 60 S. E. 627, it was held that desertion by one consort of the other can only be justified by showing such conduct on the part of the deserted party as would entitle the other to a divorce a mensa, and that nothing short of this will justify a wilful desertion, or a continuance of it.
The decree of the trial court makes no order as to the custody of the infant, a boy now about eighteen years of age, and we are not asked to make any.
Under the circumstances of the case, a decree will be entered here, affirming the decree of the circuit court, but awarding costs to the appellant.
Affirmed.