delivered the opinion of the Court.
The jury having, upon a consideration of all the evidence, return-ad a verdict, against the defendants, judgment is to be entered thereon, if the instructions given to ;them were correct, and if those which were requested were improperly withheld. With respect to the instructions given, we perceive no incorrectness. Tt certainly does not require argument or authorities to shew that the character of the residence and home in a particular town, under the statute of March 21, 1821, depends in no degree on the question whether such residence or home was on land, and in a house by permission of th« owner; the lawfulness of the possession in such cases is not contemplated by the statute. Nor do we perceive that in the present case the circumstance can have any effect directly or indirectly on the question of domicil; for Burgis himself, if conusant of the nature of his wife’s entry into and occupation of the house in Vassalborough, which she found empty, does not appear to have authorised or consented to it. Neither does the criminality of the wife in the instance
In regard to the inquiry, whether the requested instructions were properly withheld, we would observe that the answer must depend on several facts which we shall notice, and on the principles applicable to them. In the first place,we are perfectly satisfied, that from the time Burgis moved into Vassalborough in the fall of 1819, to the time he went to Gardiner, early in the autumn of the next year, he resided and had his home in Vos--salborough. The case discloses all those facts necessary to establish this position beyond all doubt. We are equally clear that the temporary residencé of the wife in China, and change of the place of her residence in Vassalborough, both having been her acts merely, without any authority or consent of Burgis, had no effect upon his rights and liabilities as an inhabitant of Vassalborough. Such a power as this does not belong to a wife; and public policy and the nature of the marriage contract, do not admit of it. The residence •and home of Burgis, in the town of Vassalborough, not having been changed or lost by any act of his wife, our next inquiry is, whether the same consequences were occasioned by the acts of Burgis himself, and that by means of those acts, he acquired a settlement in Gardiner, by residing and having his home in that town on the day the statute was passed. The case of Knox v. Waldoborough, 3. Greenl. 455. shews that a residence of a man, even out of the United States, does not change his domicil, where he leaves a home and family in a town in this State, for the purpose of business, or seeking employment. In the case before us, Burgis left his wife and children at his home in Vassalborough, when he went to Gardiner in the fall of 1819. His object in going was two-fold : viz. partly to seek more profitable employment, and partly on account of his being dissatisfied with the conduct of his wife. He did not abandon his family; he furnished them small supplies on two or three occasions, while residing ip Gardiner ; and the case finds that he had
