By the Court,
Dickinson, J.The declaration in this suit is signed by Bocage, as the attorney for the plaintiff; but, in the subsequent proceedings of the cause, it appears that James Yell is also an attorney for the same party. The paper, purporting to secure the costs which may accrue, is not sealed, and consequently cannot be considered such an obligation as is required by statute. The only question is as to the residence of the plaintiff, and whether the Court below is sustained in its judgment by the testimony adduced. James Yell, one of the plaintiff’s attorneys, disclaims all knowledge of his place of residence, while Henry Allen, who knew him, declared that, seventeen years ago, the plaintiff was then a citizen of Indiana, and he had never heard of his removal from that State. This is all the evidence having any bearing upon the case.
It is sometimes a matter of some difficulty to ascertain and decide in what place a person has his residence; and, in this instance, the question is not free from difficulty. One of the witnesses, however, has fixed and determined the residence of the party, at a period, it is true, long anterior to the institution of this suit, but sufficient to' raise a presumption, which, however slight, when once fixed, must remain until it is overthrown by other testimony. And, in this conclusion, we are sustained by Judge Story, in his Commentaries on the Conflict of Laws, p. 39, and by other authorities. The question'is one of fact, and, from the evidence set out in the bill of exceptions, we should not feel warranted in declaring the Court had erred.
Judgment affirmed.