199 Mo. App. 60 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1918
Appellant sued respondents, who are husband and wife, upon their joint note, and in aid of that action secured a writ of attachment and garnisheed money belonging to the husband in the hands of another. The appeal is from the attachment branch of the case.
One of the grounds alleged in the affidavit for attachment was: “That the defendants are about to remove their property and effects out of the State of Missouri with the intent to change their domicile.”
. The issue which appellant tried and upon which he submitted his right to an attachment was whether or not the husband, Martin Flory, was about to remove out of the State with the intent to change his domicile at the time of the attachment. All of the evidence showed that the defendants were living together as husband and wife. There was a very strong showing by appellant’s evidence in support of the charge relied upon as ground for the attachment. Indeed, it is practically unquestioned that the defendant, Martin Flory, had moved his family from the farm into town and had left them there temporarily while he went to Kansas to secure a home for himself and family. Defendants,
In defendants'’ instruction 1, the jury were told that the burden was upon plaintiff to prove that both defendants intended to leave the State; and the latter part of defendants’ instruction No. 4 required proof that both' intended to leave the State. This was in conflict with the instructions asked by appellant. The modification of plaintiff’s instruction No. 3 by inserting the words “against both defendants” accentuated this conflict and would still further lead the jury to think that the attachment could not be sustained unless it was established that the wife also had formed a personal and individual intention on her part to remove to Kansas.
The husband, as the head of the family, has right to fix the domicile or matrimonial residence without the wife’s personal agreement or consent thereto, and the wife is bound to follow her husband when he changes his Residence, provided the change is made by him in the bona fide exercise of his power. [15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2 Ed.), 812; 21 Cyc. 1150.] The law presumes that the domicile of the husband is the domicile of the wife and that the residence of the wife follows that of the husband. [State ex rel. v. Wurdeman, 129 Mo. App. 263, 276-7.] Since the husband has the
Instructions Nos. 1 and 4 for the defendant, therefore, stated an erroneous rule and were in conflict with those asked by plaintiff which were correct as applied to the facts in the ease. The latter cannot be regarded as curative of the former. [Ross v. Metropolitan St. Ry. Co., 132 Mo. App. 472, 481.] Certainly plaintiff’s instruction No. 3, as modified, could not cure anything. The fact that a part of defendants’ instructions may be correct does not cure the error caused by their other instructions that were incorrect. [Standard Oil Co. v. Myer Bros. Drug Co., 74 Mo. App. 446.]
The modification of plaintiff’s instruction No.’ 1 by.inserting therein as a definition of the word “domicile” the words “that is, his permanent home” was hardly specific and full enough as applied to the evi
The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded.