The plaintiff town has become obligated to pay for, or has paid for, the support and maintenance of one Roberts from July 16th, 1921, to January 16th, 1923, and brings this action against defendant town to recover such amounts. Roberts had resided in plaintiff town since November, 1920, and on July 16th, 1921, was poor and unable to support himself, and in immediate need of support, and was suffering from a mild form of dementia. The selectmen of plaintiff town gave written notice to defendant town that Roberts was in an indigent condition, chargeable to defendant, and that the plaintiff would look to the defendant for the expenses incurred by it in his care, support and maintenance.
Roberts was born in Middlebury in 1849, and had voted there until about 1903. His legal settlement was therefore in Middlebury unless he had acquired another in some other town. Danbury v. New Haven, 5 Conn. 584,586. He could not acquire this unless "he shall have resided . . . four years continuously in such town, and shall have maintained himself and family during the whole of said period without becoming chargeable to such town." General Statutes, § 1616. We say of this statute in Chaplin v. Bloomfield, 92 Conn. 395, *Page 253 397, 103 A. 118: "The statute intends an actual, stated residence, not one resting in presumption." InMadison v. Guilford, 85 Conn. 55, 59, 81 A. 1046, we approve of the definition of "resided" in this statute, as "a fixed, permanent and established residence, as distinguished from a residence which is merely transient or temporary." We say in Roxbury v. Bridgewater,85 Conn. 196, 201, 82 A. 193: "A change of domicil is a question of `act' and `intention.' Where there is an actual abiding in a place, the intention with which it is accompanied is the controlling factor in determining the question of domicil."
Roberts went to the town of Southbury and lived with his niece, Mrs. Sperry, from December, 1908, to the spring of 1909, and then went to work for one Wakelee in Southbury, and so worked at different times from the spring of 1909 to the fall of 1918, and was seen on numerous occasions at Wakelee's during this time. It is not found that it was his intention when at Mrs. Sperry's or at Wakelee's to make Southbury his fixed residence, or that he intended giving up Middlebury as his fixed residence. In 1912 and 1913 he voted at the annual town meetings in Southbury. This was evidence of his intention to abandon Middlebury as his fixed residence and make it in Southbury. But after this time all that the finding shows is that he worked at different times for Wakelee in Southbury and for Mitchell for seven weeks in 1915, and in 1918 rented a small house in Southbury, placed a few household articles in it and lived there a few months, but left these articles in the house for some fourteen months.
The trial court found from these facts as a conclusion that Roberts had not resided continuously for four years in Southbury. This conclusion is drawn from the subordinate facts and hence is reviewable by us. But we cannot hold, as matter of law, that this conclusion *Page 254 is erroneous and that these subordinate facts require the conclusion that Roberts had resided continuously for four years in Southbury. The facts found do not establish as matter of law the stated and permanent residence continuously for four years which our statute, as construed by our decisions, requires.Chaplin v. Bloomfield, and Madison v. Guilford, supra.
Error is predicated upon the drawing by the trial court of its inference that Roberts did not live with Wakelee from the spring of 1909 to the fall of 1915, from the fact that the plaintiff did not call Wakelee to testify to this fact. As we read the record, the court utilized this inference in connection with the facts in evidence in drawing its conclusion that Roberts had not resided continuously for four years in Southbury. The use of such an inference was entirely proper. Steinert v. Whitcomb, 84 Conn. 262, 267, 268, 79 A. 675.
In the memorandum of decision the trial court says: "The payment of his expense in Woodbury by the selectmen of Southbury [in February, 1920] could be considered only as an admission of liability, and might well have been founded on mistake"; and this is assigned as error. Such a payment is evidence of the residence of Roberts in Southbury as well as an admission of liability, and if the court failed to consider it in relation to the issue of residence it was in error, but in the absence of a more specific finding upon the point, or of the evidence before the court, we are unable to say that this constituted reversible error.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.