Roberts v. Walker
This text of 18 Ga. 5 (Roberts v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
In this caée the infant was twenty years old, and engaged to be married. He was therefore “ of an age to exercise a choice” as to “where” he would go.
According to these authorities, then, even if Cabiness had been still guardian, and had caused the infant and the per- • son with whom the infant stayed, to be brought before a Court on habeas corpus, the only result would have been an option presented by the Court to the infant, to go with his guardian or not, just as he, the infant, might please. The Court would not have compelled the infant to reside with the guardian.
Nor is there any other mode, as far as I know, by which a guardian, in such a case, might better get the custody of his ward, than he could by this of habeas corpus. To obtain such custody in a case of the kind of this, who would the guardian have to sue? The infant? What would be the form of the .suit? what the form of the judgment? what the form of the -execution ? Suppose this infant’s contemplated marriage had been consummated, could the guardian, by any process known to law, have separated the infant from his wife and compelled him to reside with him, his guardian ?
The guardian, then, not having the power to compel his ward to reside with him, if the ward has arrived at years of discretion, it follows that the residence of the guardian of : such a ward is not the residence of the ward, if the ward choose not to make it his residence.
In this case, the ward having boon a person twenty years old, chose not to make the residence of his guardian his residence. ' He elected to reside with others, and others of a different county from that of his guardian, viz: the County of Jasper.
His residence, therefore, was in Jasper and not in Monroe, where his guardian; or late guardian, resided.
This seems to be the conclusion to be drawn from the Common Law; and our Statute but confirms it:
[8]*8“ The place where the family of any person shall permanently reside, in this State, and the place where any person having no family shall generally lodge, shall be held and considered as the most notorious place of abode of such person or persons, respectively.” (Cobb’s Dig. 530.)
The charge of the Court below was therefore, as we think, erroneous.
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18 Ga. 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-walker-ga-1855.