Wharton v. Coppock

234 P. 258 | Mont. | 1925

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

This cause was submitted to the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts, from which it appears that on October 12, 1921, Grace Lydia Coppock, a citizen of the United States residing in China, made and published her last will and testament and three days later died at Shanghai, leaving as her only heirs at law a sister, Ida J. Wharton, and two brothers, Charles E. Coppock and Ed. G. Coppock. Her estate consists principally of personal property in Fergus county, Montana, and the proceeds of a life insurance policy. By the terms of the will Miss Margaret Mackinlay, of Shanghai, was nominated executrix to have charge of the estate in China, and Ed. G. Coppock was nominated executor to manage the estate in this country. Aside from some inconsequential items, all of the property was bequeathed to the National Committee of the Young Women’s Christian Association of China in trust for charitable and benevolent purposes.

The will was first admitted to probate by the United States district court for China and letters testamentary were issued to Miss Mackinlay. Later a duly authenticated copy of the will and probate thereof was presented to the district court of Fergus county, and such proceedings were had under the provisions of sections 10040 and 10041, Revised Codes, that the will was admitted to probate and letters were issued to Ed. G. Coppock. Ida J. Wharton and Charles E. Coppock then instituted this proceeding to secure a revocation of the order admitting the will to probate in Fergus county, but a judgment was rendered dismissing the contest, and they appealed.

It is too well settled to be open to further controversy that if the court which admitted the will to probate in the *434first instance had jurisdiction of the subject matter, its judgment, is conclusive as to the validity of the will. (State ex rel. Ruef v. District Court, 34 Mont. 96, 115 Am. St. Rep. 510, 9 Ann. Cas. 418, 6 L. R. A. (n. s.) 617, 85 Pac. 866), but it is equally well settled that neither the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution (sec. 1, Art. IY, U. S. Const.), nor the legislation enacted in pursuance thereof, compels the courts of this state to give recognition to the judgment of the district court in China if that court did not have jurisdiction to render the judgment in question. (Burdick, The Law of the American Constitution, 477.) In other words, the question of jurisdiction may be raised by these contestants (In re Mauldin’s Estate, 69 Mont. 132, 220 Pac. 1102), and the purpose of this proceeding is to have that question determined.

Counsel for both parties assume that under the common law which is enforced by the United States court in China, the jurisdiction to administer primarily upon an estate depends upon the domicile of the deceased at the time of his death (23 C. J. 1010), and for the purpose of this appeal we adopt that theory even in the broad terms stated.

It is a general rule that the place of one’s residence is prima facie the place of his domicile (Ennis v. Smith, 14 How. (U. S.) 400, 14 L. Ed. 472 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]); but counsel for appellants contend that the rule cannot have application here, for, it is contended earnestly, a citizen of the United States cannot acquire a domicile in China or in any other oriental country which by capitulations or treaties extends to our nationals residing there, exemption from the operation of the ordinary local laws, and support for this theory is to be found in certain decisions of English courts. In the leading case, In re Tootal’s Trust, L. R. 23, Ch. Div. 532, decided in 1889, it was held that a British national could not acquire a domicile in China. The decision by Justice Chitty was grounded principally upon the doctrine of immiscibility announced by Sir William Scott (Lord Stowell) in The Indian Chief, 3 C. Rob. Adm. 22, the statement by *435Dr. Lushington in Maltrass v. Maltrass, 1 Rob. Ecc. 67, to tbc effect that “every presumption is against the intention of British Christian subjects voluntarily becoming domiciled in the dominions of the Porte,” and the assumption that an individual cannot become domiciled in a community “which is not the community possessing the supreme or sovereign territorial power.” The decision was cited approvingly in Abd-ul-Messih v. Farra, L. R. 13 App. Cas. 431, in The Derfflinger, 1 Br. & Col. P. C. 386, and in Casdagli v. Casdagli, 87 L. J. R. Probate, 73. In the last case, decided by the court of appeals in 1917, there was a vigorous dissenting opinion by Serutton, L. J. In the meantime a contrary conclusion had been announced by the United States district court for the district of' China (In re Allen’s Will, 1 Extrater. (Mather v. Cunningham, 105 Me. 326, 18 Ann. Cas. 692, 29 L. R A. (n. s.) 761, 74 Atl. 809). These conflicting decisions were reviewed at length by Charles H. Huberich, of Stanford University (24 Law Quarterly Review, 440), and -by Edwin D. Dickinson of the University of Michigan (17 Michigan Law Review, 437). Each of these writers criticised adversely the decisions of the English courts and, in principle at least, approved the conclusion reached by the courts of our own country. Hall, an eminent English authority on Private International Law, assumed that Tootal’s Trust and Abd-ul-Messih v. Farra had settled the law in England, but expressed regret that it had not been modified by an Order in Council (Hall’s Foreign Jurisdiction of the British Crown, 184); while Sir Francis Piggott, erstwhile Chief Justice in Hong Kong, and Professor Westlake, still regarded the question unsettled in England, ventured to predict that a different result might be reached later (Westlake’s Private International Law, 4th ed., 311; Piggott’s Exterritoriality, 216), and their prophecies were fulfilled. Casdagli v. Casdagli was appealed to the House of Lords, and in October, 1918, the decision of the court of appeals was reversed and the doctrine announced in Tootal’s Trust and *436Abd-ul-Messih v. Farra disapproved (1919 App. Cas. 145). It was held that a citizen of Great Britain may acquire a domicile in Egypt even though the British government exercises extraterritorial jurisdiction in that country. By this decision of the court of last resort, the question was settled in England in harmony with the views of our own country.

Vattel defines “domicile” as “a fixed residence in any place with an intention of always staying there.” (Vattel’s Law of Nations, Chitty’s ed., 103.) Story observes: “It would be more correct to say that that place is properly the domicile of a person in which his habitation is fixed without any present intention of removing' therefrom. ” (Story on Conflict of Laws, p. 43.) "Whether we accept one or the other of these definitions, or the more elaborate one given by Dicey (Dicey, Conflict of Laws, 789), it is apparent at once that neither the doctrine of immiscibility nor the doctrine of extraterritoriality —factors stressed by the English -courts in the earlier decisions — enters into the proper conception of the term “domicile.” The authorities are all agreed that the two essential elements are residence and the intention to make the place of residence the home.

We are satisfied that an American citizen may acquire a domicile in China, and it may be said fairly that there is not now any authority to the contrary. We agree with the result reached in In re Allen’s Will and Mather v. Cunningham, and conclude that Miss Coppock could establish a domicile in China and did so, so far as disclosed by the record before us. It follows that the United States court of the district of China had jurisdiction to render the judgment admitting the will to probate.

Although the property here involved is actually present in Fergus county, its legal “situs” is in the place of the owner’s domicile at the date of her death, under the familiar maxim, “Mobilia seqmmtur personam,” and section 70'69, Revised Codes of 1921, provides that the validity and interpretation of a will, so far as the disposition of personal property *437is concerned, are governed by the law of the testator’s domicile, and this is the general rule. Section 7015, Revised Codes of 1921, has not any application.

The ground of the contest fails, and the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Mr. Chief Justice Callaway, Associate Justices Stark and Matthews and Honorable C. W. Pomeroy, District Judge, sitting in place of Mr. Justice Galen, absent on account of illness, concur.
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