Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Trustee v. Lawrence

223 S.W.2d 823, 215 Ark. 718, 12 A.L.R. 2d 748, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 816
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 3, 1949
Docket4-8930
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 823 (Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Trustee v. Lawrence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri Pac. R.R., Thompson, Trustee v. Lawrence, 223 S.W.2d 823, 215 Ark. 718, 12 A.L.R. 2d 748, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 816 (Ark. 1949).

Opinions

Frank G. Smith, J.

Appellee recovered judgment for $25,000 to compensate an injury which he sustained in a collision between one of the passenger trains of appellant railroad company and a taxicab he was driving in the City of Little Rock.

A motion was filed to dismiss the case upon the ground that the Clark County Circuit Court, where the suit was brought and tried, was without jurisdiction thereof, inasmuch as appellee was not a resident of that county and the injury occurred in another. The motion was overruled and the trial resulted in the judgment which this appeal seeks to reverse.

The venue of this and similar litigation is controlled by Act 314 of the Acts of 1939, which provides that all actions for damages for personal injury or death by wrongful act shall be brought in the county where the accident occurred -which caused the injury or death, or in the county where the person injured or killed resided at the time of the injury.

The answer to the question of venue posed depends upon the answer to these two questions. (1) Is residence synonymous with domicile? (2) If not, was appellee a resident of Pulaski county at the time of his injury? If the words “Residence” and “Domicile” are synonymous, then the Clark County circuit court had jurisdiction, as we think the testimony was sufficient to support a finding that appellee’s domicile was in Clark County at the time of his injury.

In our opinion the words are not synonymous and cannot properly be used interchangeably. Cases without number have pointed out the difference in meaning which the words import, and our own early case of Krone v. Cooper, 43 Ark. 547, is one of these. A headnote in that case reads as follows: “ ‘Domicile is of broader meaning than residence.’ It includes residence: but actual residence is not indispensable to retain a domicile after it is once acquired. It is retained by the mere intention not to change it.” In the body of that opinion Chief Justice Cockrill said: “The appellant’s testimony, taken alone, would establish, not only an actual residence, but a domicile in this state. His honor, the circuit Judge, who determined the facts upon the testimony, might well have concluded, as he doubtless did, that appellant’s acts and previous statements about his domicile, contradicted his testimony in that behalf. Admitting, however, that the testimony clearly shows that appellant’s domicile was in St. Louis, we find nothing sufficient to show that his actual residence was not in Arkansas. The burden of showing this was upon the appellees. It was not shown that appellant’s regular place of abode, bis dwelling place, was in St. Lonis. If it had-been, the bare fact that he spent a great part of his time in Arkansas attending to business interests there, would not have been a sufficient answer.”

We cannot assume that the General Assembly was unaware of this difference in the meaning of the two words, but on the contrary, we must assume that it was-aware of the fact that a person might have a residence in one place and his domicile in another. The venue act does not provide that the plaintiff may sue in the county of his domicile, but provides that if the suit is not brought in the county where he was injured it must be brought in the county where he “ resided at the time of injury.” The question is not in what county did appellee reside for the longest period of time, but at the time he was injured. In our opinion the undisputed testimony admits of no other reasonable construction than that appellee was a resident of Pulaski County at the time of his injury. The following testimony was offered by appellee, or his wife, or her mother, and was undisputed by them or any one of them.

Appellee was born in Clark County, and enlisted as a soldier in World War II as a resident of that county, and upon receiving an honorable medical discharge from the army, returned to that county and registered his discharge there. His wife was also a native of Clark County and for some time after their marriage they resided in Gurdon, Clark County, and kept house there. Their only child was born in that county and both testified that that county was their home and that it was their present intention, and had always been, to return to that county.

Appellee has had a very peripatetic career which he detailed as follows. He entered the army in 1941 and was discharged Nov. 3, 1943, and after his discharge he worked in Gurdon until April, 1944, when he came to Little Rock and secured employment from the Missouri Pacific Railroad Co. in which employment he continued for a period not disclosed by the record. He returned to Gurdon, for' two weeks or longer, after which he was employed by Swift & Co. in Little Rock for some two to five months. He quit that job and went to the State of Indiana, where he remained a month and then returned to Gurdon. He was again unable to secure employment there at a satisfactory wage, and he returned to Little Rock where he secured employment from the Terminal Van & Storage Company, in which he continued from July to January 1, 1946. He quit that employment and went to Arkadelphia where his wife’s father and mother lived, and after a short visit there went to Gurdon. But this too was a mere visit as he had no home in Gurdon at that time. He went to Texas and while there obtained a driver’s license to operate a truck and gave as his place of residence the city in which he was employed. He testified that it was his practice always to give as his place of residence the place of his employment.

He soon left Texas and returned to Little Rock where he was given employment by the Olmstead Mfg. Co., which he soon quit and went to St. Louis where he remained from July to October, 1946. He returned to Little Rock and went to work for Swift & Co. in Little Rock for three or four weeks, where he continued to work until November 21st or 22nd, when he was employed by the Yellow Cab Co. of Little Rock, in which service he was engaged when he received the injury to compensate which this suit was brought.

Appellee left Gurdon in 1944 and has not resided there since. He testified that when he left Gurdon he stored his household effects in a house which his mother had rented, which was not rented ás a residence, but for storage purposes only. He visited Gurdon frequently since leaving there, but his trips were mere visits as he had no home there. He stated that the purpose of these trips was to see after his things and to see about his dog which he had left there. His effects which he did not take to Little Rock remained in storage until February, 1947, when they were brought to Little Rock by his father.

In his attempt to show that he did have a residence in Gurdon he was interrogated as follows:

Q. “Where do you live now in Gurdon?”
A. “I can live with my aunt and uncle. ”
Q. “You can live with your aunt and uncle?”
A. “That’s right.”
Q. “You consider your home with your aunt at Gurdon ?’ ’
A. “At the present time if I would go there it would be.”

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 823, 215 Ark. 718, 12 A.L.R. 2d 748, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 816, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-pac-rr-thompson-trustee-v-lawrence-ark-1949.