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Horne v. Horne

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1848
31 N.C. 99 (N.C. 1848)

Summary

In Horne v. Horne, 31 N.C. 99, this Court said: "The term domicil in its ordinary and familiar use, means the place where a person lives or has his home; in a large sense, it is where he has his true, fixed and permanent home, to which, when absent from it, he intends to return, and from which he has no present purpose to remove.

Summary of this case from In re Estate of Cullinan

Opinion

(December Term, 1848.)

1. If a testator knows what he is doing and to whom he is giving his property, his mental capacity is sufficient to enable him to make a will.

2. The domicil of origin of a person continues until he acquires another, by actual removing to another country with the intention of remaining in the latter altogether or for an indefinite period.

3. Two things must concur to constitute a domicil: first, residence, and, secondly, the intention to make it a home.

4. And if these two concur, it makes no difference how short his residence may be in the new domicil.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Law of ANSON, at Spring Term, 1848, Bailey, J., presiding.

Iredell for plaintiffs.

Strange for defendants.


This was an issue of devisavit vel non upon a paper-writing offered for probate by the plaintiffs as the last will and testament of Joel Horne, deceased, in which paper-writing the said plaintiffs were named as executors and only legatees. Three objections were raised by the defendants, to wit:

1. That the supposed testator was not of sufficient capacity to make a will, for want of a sound disposing mind and memory.

2. That if not actually incapable of making a will, he (100) was unquestionably a man of very feeble intellect, and executed his paper-writing under influence and through fraud and circumvention.

3. That the supposed testator was domiciled in Chesterfield District, South Carolina, and not in Anson County, North Carolina, at the time of executing said paper-writing; and that the paper-writing was not executed according to the laws of the former State.

Upon the first point one of the subscribing witnesses testified fully to his belief of the sanity of the supposed testator at the time of signing the said paper-writing, and the proof of the factum and subscription by two witnesses, according to the laws of North Carolina, was full, although the second subscribing witness said that he had no distinct opinion whether the supposed testator was sane or not — he having but little means of judging, having never seen him until called upon to witness his will, though he discovered nothing to make him doubt his sanity. Other witnesses, on the part of the plaintiffs, testified to their belief of his capacity to make a will, though all concurred in the belief that he was a man of weak understanding. One witness testified that, three or four years before, the testator had expressed a purpose to give his property to the plaintiffs, who are, in fact, the only legatees in the will; and several of the witnesses spoke of his intention to give a part of his property to the plaintiff Joel E. Horne, together with others, and this at different times. On the part of the defendants four witnesses proved that he was, in their judgment, incapable of making a will; and of these were his attending physician and two persons who had for some time resided in the same house with him. It was in proof that he had sixteen or seventeen slaves; that one of them had great influence over him; that he had many relations equally near with the plaintiff, to several of whom he had expressed his intention of giving property, as well as to the plaintiff Joel E. Horne, and to one witness his intention to give his property to other relations, as near (101) as Joel E., without mentioning him at all, and at another time a determination to make no will at all. The supposed testator was a native of Chesterfield District, South Carolina, where he had resided all his life, until a few weeks before his death, upon the part of the same plantation on which he had been born, and where both his parents had lived and died and were buried; that he lived in a very uncomfortable way among his negroes, without any white family, having never married; that his farm was small and poor, and his slaves were so unproductive as to render it necessary for him to borrow money, which was furnished him to some extent by Joel E. Horne; that when 36 years of age he fell into a very bad state of bodily health, and was advised by his physician to seek a place where he would be more comfortable; that accordingly, upon the invitation of Mrs. Worley, who lived in North Carolina, near the line, as was the residence of the testator in South Carolina, he went to her house, where he remained a few weeks and became discontented, but while there proposed to young Mr. Worley, her son, to bring his slaves to Mrs. Worley's, work them upon the farm, and make some division between them of the profits; but young Worley declined the arrangement, saying that his negroes were unmanageable, and he did not wish to have anything to do with them. He was then removed to Nancy Horne's, in South Carolina, she being the widow of his brother, Thomas Horne, who had several children, and while there was kindly treated, for which he expressed himself grateful, as well as for that at Mrs. Worley's, and to one or two witnesses expressed his intention of rewarding them in his will, although at the time of making his will, three or four weeks afterwards, he expressed himself dissatisfied with them, and determined to give them nothing. Within a few days after his coming to Mrs. Nancy Horne's he was removed, together with his slaves, (102) by the plaintiff J. E. Horne to the plaintiff William Horne's, in Anson County, North Carolina, early in December. Before leaving South Carolina the last time he observed to a witness that his place was too poor for him to live on; that he had rented William Horne's old place in Anson County, N.C. where he was going to make a crop, and Joel E. Horne was going to superintend his hands; to another witness he said he was going to stay a while, but would return again; to the subscribing witnesses to the will he said he was about to rent, or had rented, William Horne's old place, and Joel E. Horne was to superintend his affairs. The witness was not clear whether he said he had rented or was about to rent. On 14 December the will was executed, and after that day no witness deposed to having seen him, though it is believed he died about Christmas following the making of the will, but whether at William Horne's residence or at the place spoken of as having been rented by him, did not appear, nor did it appear whether he or any of his slaves had ever been on the William Horne old place. His will was proven in common form at January Term, 1841, being the next term of that court after his death, which occurred on the second Monday of January. There were but two subscribing witnesses to the will, and it was proved that by the law of South Carolina three were necessary to a will, either of realty or personalty.

His Honor charged the jury that if they believed the evidence touching the paper-writing, it was duly proved according to the laws of North Carolina, and they should find it to be the last will and testament of the testator, Joel Horne, deceased, unless one of the three objections raised by the defendants existed in fact, the first of which was that the supposed testator, Joel Horne, was not of sound and disposing mind and memory.

Upon this point the court informed the jury that it was in evidence that Joel Horne was always a man of weak (103) intellect, and especially during his last illness; that weakness of mind was not itself a valid objection, as the law did not undertake to weigh the size of men's intellects; that it did not require that he should be a wise man; that if he was between the wise and foolish sort, although he inclined rather to the foolish, he was, in law, capable of making a last will and testament; that to enable a man to make a disposition of his property by last will and testament he must do it with understanding and reason, and that if the jury should be satisfied that, at the time of executing the paper-writing, Joel Horne had not understanding and reason, they should find a verdict against the will; that if the supposed testator knew what he was doing at the time of making the supposed will, and that he was giving his property to the plaintiffs, and that they would be entitled to it, provided the forms of the law were complied with, then they should find in favor of the will. As to the second objection, the court instructed the jury that if they should be satisfied that the plaintiffs or either of them, or his negro woman Hannah, had had such control and dominion over the supposed testator, and had exercised that control and dominion illegally and fraudulently, in the disposition which he had made of his property, then the paper-writing offered for probate would not be his will, but the will of those exercising such improper influence, and, if they should be satisfied that that was true in this case, they should find against the will. But, although the jury should be satisfied that there had been importunity and persuasion on the part of the plaintiffs, or either of them, or the negro woman Hannah, and the supposed testator had yielded to such an importunity and persuasion because he was convinced it was right, it would not render the will invalid. But if the importunity was so great that the testator was too weak to resist its influence, and his free agency was taken away, then (104) they should find against the will.

As to the third objection, the court instructed the jury that a man's residence prima facie was his domicil; that wherever his residence was there was his home, his domicil prima facie, but not being conclusive, it was susceptible of explanation; that residence and domicil were not convertible terms; that a man might have his residence at one place and his domicil at another, and that the domicil of origin continues until it is changed for another; that the testator's domicil of origin was in South Carolina, and it continued still to be in South Carolina, unless it was proved that he had changed it; that if he had left South Carolina for this State for a temporary special purpose, not with a view of making it his home, but of returning to South Carolina, then he had not lost his original domicil, and of course had not acquired a new one here, and if they should so find, then they should render a verdict against the plaintiffs, because the will had not been proved according to the laws of South Carolina; but if they should be satisfied from the evidence that the testator had abandoned his home in South Carolina, and come to Anson County, in this State, for the purpose of settling there either permanently or for an indefinite time, although he had not consummated that purpose, but was prevented from doing so by death overtaking him, his domicil would be in this State.

The defendant's counsel then requested the court to charge the jury that if the supposed testator was so deficient in memory as not to remember who his relations were, as appeared must be the case from his speaking but a few days before of giving them his property and now not mentioning them at all, he was incapable of making a will. The court refused so to charge, but told the jury that if he understood what he was doing when he made the will, so as to know he was giving his (105) property to the plaintiffs, he had such a sound and disposing mind as would enable him, in law, to make a will. A verdict having been returned in favor of the plaintiffs, and a rule for a new trial having been discharged, the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court.


This was an issue of devisavit vel non to try the validity of a paper-writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Joel Horne, deceased.

Three objections were made by the defendants, the caveators: (1) That the deceased had not mental capacity; (2) if he had, his mind was so weak that he was easily influenced, and executed the paper under influence and through fraud and circumvention; and (3) that the supposed testator was, at the time he executed the paper, a citizen of South Carolina, and had his domicil there, and that the paper-writing was witnessed by only two subscribing witnesses, whereas by the laws of that State three were necessary.

The defendants' counsel then requested the court to charge the jury that if the supposed testator was so deficient in memory as not to remember who his relations were, as appeared must be the case, from his speaking but a few days before of giving them his property, and now not mentioning them at all, he was incapable of making a will. The court refused so to charge, but told the jury that if he understood what he was doing when he made the will, so as to know that he was giving his property to the plaintiffs, he had such a sound and disposing mind as would enable him, in law, to make a will.

In his charge the presiding judge went fully into the evidence upon each question raised in the cause, and it was fairly left to the jury. Upon the questions of law embraced in the (106) first and second objections, although his Honor might have been more explicit, we think he was sufficiently so, and that the charge, in those particulars, was substantially correct. As to the mental capacity of Joel Horne, his language is, "that if the supposed testator knew what he was doing at the time of making the said supposed will, and that he was giving his property to the plaintiffs, and that they would be entitled to it, provided the forms of the law were complied with, they should find in favor of the will." We do not see that the defendants have any right to complain of what is here laid down. If the deceased had the portion of mental capacity here required, he had such a mind and memory as the law required to enable him to dispose of his property by will. As to undue influence, or the papers being obtained from the deceased by fraud and imposition, there was no evidence whatever to sustain the objection, and his Honor ought so to have informed the jury.

The instruction asked for by the counsel of the defendants was not such as the court could give. It required the judge to pronounce an opinion upon a matter of fact, to wit, "that, a few days before making his will, the deceased spoke of giving his property to his relations, and now not mentioning them at all." Whether he had so spoken was a fact, to which the jury alone could respond. We think, therefore, the instruction was properly refused. Where instructions are prayed, if granted, they must be put as the counsel requires; otherwise they are not what he demanded.

We concur with his Honor in his instructions to the jury upon the third objection. It is unquestionably true that if Joel Horne was, at the time the paper-writing was executed, still domiciliated in South Carolina, it would not be a good will in North Carolina. For it had not the requisite number of witnesses, there being but two, and the laws of South Carolina requiring three. It was important, then, to (107) ascertain whether, under the circumstances detailed by the witnesses, the deceased had acquired a domicil in this State, and thereby lost that of origin. On the part of the plaintiffs it was contended such was the fact, and on that of the defendants that the origin of birth still continued. After stating to the jury the facts bearing on this point, the court left the intent with which Joel Horne had come to this State as a matter of fact for their inquiry. Upon the law he instructed them that South Carolina, being the domicil of origin to the deceased, it continued so until he had acquired another; it could not be lost until then. And to enable them to come to a proper conclusion he instructed them that if the deceased had left South Carolina and come to this State with a view to a temporary purpose, and with the intent, when that purpose was served, to return to his native State, he had acquired no domicil here; but if he had come to this State with the intent to live permanently in it, he had acquired a domicil here, and lost it in South Carolina, and the will was executed with the forms entitling it to probate here. To this charge we see no just exception. The domicil of a testator must govern the form in which a will is executed.

The term domicil, in its ordinary and familiar use, means the place where a person lives or has his home; in a large sense, it is where he has his true, fixed and permanent home, to which, when absent from it, he intends to return, and from which he has no present purpose to remove. Two things, then, must concur to constitute a domicil: first, residence, and second, the intention to make it a home — the fact and the intent. In this case Joel Horne had a domicil in South Carolina — a domicil of origin, which continued up to a short period before his death, and up to that time, unless he had lost it be acquiring a new one in this State. This was the point to be decided by the jury, and to it their attention was drawn by the court. There (108) was one circumstance which, we think, was nearly conclusive upon the question — it is, that the deceased himself considered North Carolina his domicil. In his will he styles himself "Joel Horne, of Anson County, North Carolina." The law governing the question was plainly and correctly stated to them. The plaintiffs relied much upon the fact that, at the time the deceased executed the paper-writing, his residence was in North Carolina. They were instructed that residence did not constitute a domicil, though it was prima facie evidence of it; thus guarding them from a mistake as to that fact. In concluding his charge upon the question of domicil, his Honor instructed the jury, "if the deceased had come to Anson County, in this State, for the purpose of settling there permanently or for an indefinite time, his domicil would be there, although prevented from doing so by death." There is some confusion in the latter clause. It is obvious, however, from the context of the whole sentence, his Honor did not mean, if he had been prevented by death from reaching this State; if he had died in transitu. In that case his domicil of origin would still have continued, for he would not have acquired a new one, and he had already told the jury that a domicil could not be lost until another was acquired. And in the same sentence he had stated to them, if the deceased had abandoned his home in South Carolina and had come to Anson, etc. We presume the intention of the charge in this part was to instruct the jury that the length of time during which the deceased enjoyed his new home was not material to the question of the new acquisition. In this view the charge was correct. Residence, for however long a time it may be continued, cannot constitute a domicil, without the intention of permanently making it a home, nor can the shortness of time in which the new home is enjoyed (109) defeat the acquisition when accompanied with the intention, for in the latter there would be the factum et animus. These views are sustained by the cases of De Bonneville v. De Bonneville, 7 Eng. Eq., 502; Craige v. Lewin, ib., 560; Plummer v. Brandon, 40 N.C. 190, and Story Conflict of Laws, ch. 3.

PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.

Cited: Lawrence v. Steel, 66 N.C. 587, 8; Wheeler v. Cobb, 75 N.C. 25; Horne v. Horne, ib., 101; Paine v. Roberts, 82 N.C. 453; Barnhardt v. Smith, 86 N.C. 484; Bost v. Bost, 87 N.C. 479; Fulton v. Roberts, 113 N.C. 426; Jones v. Alsbrook, 115 N.C. 52; Bond v. Mfg. Co., 140 N.C. 384; In re Thorpe, 150 N.C. 492.


Summaries of

Horne v. Horne

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Dec 1, 1848
31 N.C. 99 (N.C. 1848)

In Horne v. Horne, 31 N.C. 99, this Court said: "The term domicil in its ordinary and familiar use, means the place where a person lives or has his home; in a large sense, it is where he has his true, fixed and permanent home, to which, when absent from it, he intends to return, and from which he has no present purpose to remove.

Summary of this case from In re Estate of Cullinan

In Horne v. Horne, 31 N.C. 99 (107), speaking to the subject, it is said: "The term domicile, in its ordinary and familiar use, means the place where a person lives, or has his home; in a large sense, it is where he has his true, fixed, and permanent home, to which, when absent from it, he intends to return, and from which he has no present purpose to remove.

Summary of this case from Howard v. Coach Co.

In Horne v. Horne, 31 N.C. 99, and Abrams v. Pender, 44 N.C. 260, a distinction was taken between domicil and residence.

Summary of this case from Wheeler v. Cobb
Case details for

Horne v. Horne

Case Details

Full title:JOEL E. HORNE ET AL. v. JAMES HORNE ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Dec 1, 1848

Citations

31 N.C. 99 (N.C. 1848)

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