Keith v. Stetter

25 Kan. 100
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 25 Kan. 100 (Keith v. Stetter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keith v. Stetter, 25 Kan. 100 (kan 1881).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Brewer, J.:

This is a proceeding to review an order of the district court dissolving an attachment. We might fairly dispose of this case in a few words, and on a single question. The affidavit for attachment among other grounds alleged that the debt was fraudulently contracted. On the motion to dissolve, not a syllable of testimony is offered tending to disprove this. The circumstances under which the debt was contracted do not. appear — are not even referred to. Hence the sworn charge in the original affidavit remains uncoritra-dicted, and that sustains the attachment and compels a reversal of the order of the district court. And this point is made by counsel, and demands our attention. (Reyburn v. Brackett, 2 Kas. 227.) But justice to counsel and the interests involved compel a notice of other matters in the case. We are informed that several suits were commenced against this defendant in error, defendant below, and that they are waiting the disposition of this case. Hence some of the litigated and disputed matters should receive our notice.

Two principal questions exist, which are in dispute, and around which the testimony circles. This testimony being all of it by affidavit or deposition, comes before this court very much as before the district court — neither sees the witnesses; and while weight should be given to the conclusions of the district court, yet it is not as though that court saw the witnesses and measured the men. (Robinson v. Melvin, 14 Kas. 484; Shedd v. McConnell, 18 Kas. 594.) The two grounds of attachment which are challenged are non-residence, and a disposition of property with intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors. These are undisputed facts. Defendant in 1869 commenced business in Atchison. This business continued until December 20,1879.' Upon that day mortgages for sev[102]*102eral thousands of dollars were placed upon the goods in the store at Atchison, one to Moses Wallack, one to the First National Bank of Atchison, and one to Everest & Waggener, attorneys at law. Some months before this, branch stores had been opened — one at Emporia and one at Newton. These branch stores were supplied from the central establishment. The same day of these mortgages a telegram was sent to the party in charge of the store at Newton to come immediately to Emporia. On the night train Max. N. Stetter, son of defendant and his general manager, went to Emporia, and there made a sale of the two stocks at Emporia and Newton to the clerk in charge of the store at Emporia for $9,000, $1,500 of which was paid. by. receipting an account for salary as clerk, and the balance in notes, secured by a chattel mortgage on the goods sold. The terms of this sale were agreed upon before the arrival of the clerk in charge of the Newton store. The stocks in the three stores were worth about $30,000. Defendant’s family consisted of himself, wife, and an unmarried daughter. For many years they had resided and kept house in New York city. Until 1878 he had never been in Atchison, the business being in charge of Max. N. Stetter. In April, 1878, he came to Atchison, and remained till October, 1879. He then returned to New York, and was there at the time of the mortgages, sale, and attachments. He was a man of seventy-four years of age, and his wife some years older. During his stay in Atchison he lived with his son, having brought no furniture with him, nothing but a trunk and a satchel. Some four or five years ago a married daughter and her husband came to live with him in the house he rented and occupied in New York city. The lease of this house was in his name, and so continued until after the attachments; the furniture, or most of it, was his. Part of the time of his absence it is probable that his son-in-law kept house, and his wife and daughter boarded with them. The testimony as to the exact family arrangements of the household in New York was, to say the least, indefinite and unsatisfactory. He says that when he came to Atchison in April, [103]*1031878, he came intending to live there and to bring his family out as soon as the health of his wife and daughter permitted, and that when he returned to New York in October, 1879, it was for the purpose of moving them to Atchison. But they have never yet been moved. His son Max N. testified that it was his father’s intention to move the family to Atchison and to make that their home, and that he went to New York for that purpose. Other witnesses testified that they understood that that was his intention'. But the bill of sale of the goods at Emporia and Newton, executed by Max N. two days after the attachment, recites the sale as made by N. Stetter, of New York city.

Now it is familiar law that a residence once established is presumed to continue until it is clearly shown to have been changed. “ We find it laid down in all the authorities that an original domicile, whether of birth or otherwise, if once fixed clings closely, and we conceive that it can never be changed by the mere intent of the party. The act must accompany and verify the intent. As the homely proverb asserts that ‘Actions speak louder than words,’ actions must corroborate and confirm the words. ‘The fact and the intent must concur.’ ” (Hart v. Horn, 4 Kas. 239.) Doubtless residence and domicile are not absolutely synonymous terms, but evidently from the facts of that case domicile was used in the sense and as the equivalent of residence. And in so far as there may be any distinction between the two terms, it is not a distinction affecting the rule as stated.

Defendant’s residence confessedly was fixed and established for many years in New York. This while his business was carried on in Atchison. Again, the residence of a man who has a family which he maintains, and which has an established home, is 'prima facie with that family. Wherever he locates that family in anything like a fixed and permanent residence, it is presumptively his chosen place of residence. Wherever he may go for business or pleasure, he resides at home, and home is where the family dwell. Now defendant’s family dwelt in New York; they were established there. [104]*104They had never been in this state. Titeir household goods had never been moved.

Suppose the situation had been reversed — the family living in Kansas, and the defendant absent in New York for a year and a half on business and then returning and being with them for nearly three months: would there be much doubt as to his residence in Kansas? Would service of process upon him at the family dwelling during his absence have been worthless ? Could he not have claimed the benefit of the exemption law as to personal property? Or would the claim have been defeated by proof of his intent to make New York his home, and move his family as soon as their health would permit?

Again, while a man’s intentions are securely lodged in the recesses of his own heart, and he may safely assert that he intends one thing.or another, providing neither is absolutely inconsistent with his acts, yet by reason of this secresy of intention arises the familiar rule that men must be judged by their cpnduct rather than by their declarations. The conduct of the defendant and his son points to a continued residence in New York. While his business was in Atchison, yet that business remained for nearly eight years without his personal supervision, and in the charge of his son. When finally he came out to look after it, he was an old man, still ignorant of the English language, bringing nothing, boarding with his son, and making no arrangements for removing his family.

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Bluebook (online)
25 Kan. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keith-v-stetter-kan-1881.