shown that the wife was decoyed there, by the procurement of her husband, and for the purpose of making a case against her. Id.,
3. A husband who seduces his wife before marriage, and, after mar- riage, sees her in a situation of temptation, and does nothing to rescue her, and she yields, will be understood as having con- sented to her adultery. Id.,
1. A person sui juris may change his domicile as often as he pleases. To effect such a change, naturalization in the country he adopts as his domicile is not necessary. Harral v. Harral,
2. To effect a change of domicile there must be a voluntary change of residence; the residence at the place chosen for the domicile must be actual; to the factum of residence there must be added animus manendi; and that place is the domicile of a person in which he has voluntarily fixed his habitation, not for a mere temporary or special purpose, but with a present intention of making it his home, unless or until something uncertain or un- expected shall happen to induce him to adopt some other place as his permanent home. Id.,
3. By the laws of France, the marriage of a foreigner in France with- out any contract as to property, followed by the establishment of a conjugal domicile in that country, will subject the property of the married persons to the community law, and a government authorization under article XIII of the Code is not necessary to the establishment of such a domicile. Id.,
4. H., whose birthplace was in Connecticut, went to Europe in 1869, for the purpose of acquiring the German language, and com- pleting his professional studies. In 1872 he went to Paris, where he remained; and, in February, 1877, married a French woman in Paris, without any contract as to property. Immedi- ately after the marriage he rented a house at Suresnes, a village near Paris, for two years, and took up his residence there with his wife. In May, 1878, he was brought to this country, and sent to a hospital for the insane, at Philadelphia, where he died in 1881.-Held, that by his marriage in France, and the estab lishment of his conjugal domicile there, his personal property became subject to the community law, and that his widow, on his death, was entitled to the one-half part thereof, notwith- standing that by his will, made before the marriage, he had be- queathed the whole of it to others. Id.,
that she was not his wife, and therefore it should be decreed that she was entitled to no dower, and must give up possession of the property in which he and she lived together at his death, and of which she continued to hold and claim possession as his widow. Besson v. Gribble,
2. After directing that his debts be paid, and making a specific de- vise, a testator gave the "balance and residue" of his estate to his wife, declaring that that gift to her was in lieu of her dower. In the settlement of the estate, and the payment of testator's debts, all his personal estate was exhausted, and all his lands, other than those specifically devised, sold, by order of the or- phans court.-Held, that his widow was not deprived of her right of dower in those other lands by her failure to file her dissent to the devise to her within the time limited by the statute. Osmun v. Porter,
3. A widow who has dower by the judgment of a court which cannot award her damages or compensation for mesne profits, may main- tain a suit in equity for their recovery. Shields v. Hunt,
4 A widow whose dower has not been assigned, and who remains on the homestead farm of her husband, is entitled to the crops grown thereon after her husband's death. Merchant's Case,
An alley lying between two houses had been used for over forty years by the adjoining owners, for access to the rear of their houses, and to the lots behind and belonging thereto. Both houses were destroyed by fire.-Held, that the easement in the alley was not thereby lost, and that whether complainant had forfeited her right thereto by placing the foundation of her house in the alley, in rebuilding (the evidence thereof being conflicting), should be determined by an issue at law before she could enjoin the de- fendant from appropriating the part of the alley next to his lot in rebuilding. Chew v. Cook,
A master was directed to ascertain and report the value of certain lands taken by a railroad company for its right of way, and the consequent damage to the owner's adjacent lands, as of the time when the company took the land.-Held, that the land covered by a public road, which was laid out through the land taken by the company, after the company had taken it, should not be ex- cepted. New York and Greenwood Lake R. R. Co. v. Stanley,
itor's bill to set aside, as fraudulent, two conveyances of lands by the brother to the defendant. The evidence showed satisfac- torily that the lands in question, in fact, belonged to the defend- ant, although the legal title thereto had been in the name of his brother.-Held, that, as the cause of the action at law had been a tort, there was, against the defendant, no ground of estoppel such as sometimes exists where the cause of action is founded on a contract, and the credit has been given under the belief that the debtor was the true owner of the property, of which he had the legal title only, but not the equitable title. Lillis v. Gal- lagher,
2. The assignment of a mortgage was made in December, 1879. The mortgage was afterwards foreclosed, the premises bought by com- plainant's agent, and conveyed to the defendant in July, 1881. The complainant, who was then in Paris, was notified thereof in October, 1881, and returned to this state in April, 1882. He lived continuously thereafter, until April, 1883, with his agent, who informed him fully as to this transaction. He filed his bill in June, 1883.--Held, that his delay constituted a ratification and an estoppel as against defendant. Chetwood v. Berrian,
3. A mortgage for about $1,500 was given to the defendant to secure a bond containing a warrant of attorney to confess judgment thereon. After it became due, and was, with the interest, unpaid, the defendant entered a judgment by confession on the bond, in the supreme court, and issued an execution thereon. The complainant, the mortgagor's brother, in order to aid him, conveyed with him to the defendant, pursuant to an agreement between the complainant and defendant, certain cedar swamps owned by him and his brother, and the consideration thereof was credited on the bond. He also, under the agreement, obtained from his brother a deed for the undivided one-half of another tract of land, likewise owned by them in common, and known as the Tin Shop Lot, on the brother's interest in which the judg- ment was a lien, and then gave the defendant a mortgage thereon for $150, which complainant afterwards paid on account of the $1,500 mortgage. Subsequently, the defendant foreclosed his $1,500 mortgage, and after the sale there remained a deficiency. --Held, that under the circumstances the defendant should be enjoined (on the ground of equitable estoppel and waiver) from collecting this deficiency out of the Tin Shop Lot, which defend- ant now claims the right to do by virtue of his lien, under his execution on the confessed judgment, on complainant's brother's interest in the Tin Shop Lot before its conveyance to complain- ant. Lewis v. Champion,
estate, and another received payment from the estate for services to the testator, estops the former from excepting to the executor's account because of such payment. Kinman v. Wight,
5. The holder of a decree against an insolvent railway corporation who, as director of a new corporation, with full knowledge, con- sents to the subsequent acceptance of a deed from a receiver to it, free from all encumbrances, under the statute, and votes to execute a mortgage for the security of bond-holders, which shall be a first lien-Held, not entitled, on petition, to execution and sale of land of the company, with priority. Freehold and New York Railway Co. v. Hodgson,
See AGENCY; ARBITRATION; FRAUD, 3.
1. On a bill by the alleged vendee against an administrator cum testa- mento annexo, for the specific performance of a contract for the sale of lands alleged to have been made by the executor, who had a testamentary power of sale, the vendee is incompetent to prove the contract. Palmateer v. Tilton,
2. The complainant was, by a decree of this court, declared to be of unsound mind, and he appears in this suit (to foreclose a mortgage held by him) by guardians of his person and estate duly appointed. The defendant set up usury as a defence, and at the examination offered himself as a witness to prove it.-Held, that complainant (and not his guardians "suing in a representative capacity") was the real party to the suit, and being under a "legal disability," within the meaning of the statute, the defend- ant was incompetent as a witness, and the examiner should, under the 218th Rule, have rejected him. Demarest v. Vanden- berg,
3. An executrix (the wife) was held incompetent to prove the gift of a chattel by her husband to her, which she claimed as her own. It did not appear that any objection was made to her testimony. There was a minor interested who was not represented in the case.-Held, that her testimony should be disregarded, although the record did not show that objection to her competency was made at the time she offered herself as a witness. Sherman v. Lanier,
thereon authorized by the act, and that on such payment the title to the land should vest in the company in fee, and that a deed therefor might be made by the riparian commissioners, governor and attorney-general, in the name and under the great seal of the state.-Held, that on the trial of an action of ejectment, a deed under the great seal of the state, purporting to convey land of the state in pursuance of the statute, was, of itself, competent evi- dence, without proof that the previous steps leading to the vest- ing of the title had been taken when the deed was made. American Dock Co. v. Trustees for the Support of Public Schools,
5. Also, that evidence offered by the defendants in the action to show that the lands conveyed by the deed did not come within the loca- tion of the road or of the depots, stations or other works of the company, was properly excluded. Id.,
6. The administrator of a married woman paid a bill presented by a physician against the estate, and her husband excepted to its allowance in the settlement of the administrator's account.-Held, that the physician was incompetent to testify to a promise by the decedent to pay the bill. Baker v. Galpin,
7. On a bill filed by a wife for moneys received for her by her hus- band, she cannot be a witness to prove the admissions of her husband. Gray v. Gray,
See AGENCY; ATTORNEY; FRAUD, 1; MORTGAGE, 5; PRACTICE, 3. Executors and Administrators.
1. A testatrix obtained a decree in a foreclosure suit, and the exеси- tion thereon was, by direction of her solicitor, returned unexe- cuted. After her death an alias execution was issued in her name, and, at the sheriff's sale, one of her executors bought the premises, taking the title in his own name for convenience, and in trust for the estate.-Held, that a deed executed by himself and his wife, and his co-executor, would transfer a good title to the premises. Banta v. Board of Trustees of School District No. 3,
2. After the account of two administrators, allowing commissions in a gross sum to both, had been passed, one of them, alleging that his co-administrator had possessed himself of all of the commis- sions, filed a petition in the orphans court to compel his co- administrator to pay him one-half thereof.-Held, that the or- phans court had no jurisdiction to grant the order. Mount v. Slack,
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