52 Neb. 653 | Neb. | 1897
On November 29, 1893, Sarah E. Stevens, as administratrix of the estate of George P. Stevens, brought this suit in the district court of Frontier county to recover damages for the deliberate and malicious killing of plaintiff’s intestate by the defendant. The defendant made a special appearance in the court below, objecting to the jurisdiction of the court over his person, which was overruled, and from a judgment against him in the sum of $5,000 he prosecutes an error proceeding to this court.
A single question is argued upon the record, which is, whether the court below acquired jurisdiction over the person of the defendant. He made no general appearance in the cause. Two summonses were issued, — one on November 29, 1893, directed to the sheriff of Dawson
It is suggested that the summons directed to the sheriff of Frontier county is invalid, because the same was issued without an order of the court to that effect, and prior to the returning of the writ issued to Dawson county. Section 67 of the Code of Civil Procedure declares: “When a writ is returned ‘not summoned,’ other writs may be is
Lastly, it is urged that jurisdiction was not acquired by the service of the summons directed to the sheriff of Frontier county. The return of the officer discloses that it was served by leaving a copy at the defendant’s usual place of residence. This return is not conclusive as to the fact of residence, but is prima facie correct. The return must stand unless its truthfulness is impeached by the evidence introduced on the hearing of the objections to the jurisdiction in the court below. The uncontradicted testimony established that said John B. Walker is a single man, and on, and for at least nine years prior to, May 12,1893, was the owner of a farm in Frontier county on which a dwelling house was situated; that during all of said time he lived therein and occupied the same as Ms home and had no other place of residence, and that on the date aforesaid he was arrested at Ms said residence for the murder of one George P. Stevens, in Dawson county, and since which time continuously to the institution of this suit in November, 1893, he has been imprisoned in the jail of said county.
1. That the words “residence,” and “usual place of residence,” as employed in statutes, are generally synony-mous with the term “domicile.”
2. The residence essential to confer jurisdiction is a legal one equivalent to the domicile of the defendant.
3. Domicile is that place of residence of a defendant where he has his fixed and permanent home, and to which, when absent, he has the intention of returning.
4. To effect a change of domicile there must be not only a change of residence, but an intention to permanently abandon the former home.
In the light of the foregoing principles there is no room to doubt that the legal place of residence of Walker, at the time the service of summons was made, was in Frontier county. That county had been his residence and domicile for years. He did not leave his home for the purpose of abandoning the same. He acquired no residence elsewhere, and could not have been legally sued in Dawson county, since he was held in custody there to answer to the charge of felony. (Palmer v. Rowan, 21 Neb., 452.) If this summons was not properly and legally served, then the defendant could not be sued at all. We hold that the defendant’s usual place of residence was in Frontier county, and that jurisdiction over his person was acquired by the service of the summons therein. The judgment is
Affirmed.