delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff commenced this suit in October, 1867, on account of several items, the last of which was dated June-, 1861. To the defendant’s ansiver setting up the statute of limitations as a bar, the plaintiff replies, alleging that the defendant, after the debt accrued and before the suit was brought, “departed from and resided out of this State” for a period of time exceeding two years. Whether he did so or not was the fact in issue.
At the trial the defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that if they believed from the evidence that the “ plaintiff could have had service with process in a writ at any time after the date of the last item in the account, and Avithin five years from the said date, and did not so bring his suit, plaintiff is barred.”
This is clearly not the laAV, and the court Avas right in refusing the instruction. . The statute (Gen. Stat, 1865, p. 747, § 16) provides that if the debtor “ doparts from” and has his “residence out of this State” after the cause of an action accrues, the “time of his absence shall not be deemed or taken *501as any part of the time limited” for the commencement of suit. This exception is in the interest of creditors, and practically extends the period of limitation by the period of the debtor’s absence. It modifies the doctrine, which constitutes the groundwork of the instruction, that the statute of limitations, when once in motion, runs on without interruption. As a mere temporary absence does not stop the running of the statute (20 Mo. 528), so a mere temporary return or “flying visits, ” after the residence is changed, will not stop the running of the exception. (29 Mo. 61.)
The court was also asked to instruct the jury, in behalf of the defendant, that the words “ depart from and reside out of the State,” as employed in the statute under consideration, mean a “ departure with intent to change permanently the residence of the party.” This was also refused. This point has been discussed as though the words “ domicile” and “'residence” meant the same thing, which is a mistake. A man may have his. “ domicile” in St. Louis, and have a right to vote at elections, etc., and at the same time reside in Europe ; and this European residence may be prolonged for years without affecting his St. Louis domicile. So a debtor may depart from and reside out of the State, within the meaning of the statute, without abandoning his domicile in Missouri. But the debtor’s intentions, which enter so largely into the question as to domicile, are of no benefit to the creditor so long as the debtor keeps out of the reach of process and i thus avoids a personal judgment against himself. Nor is it conceived that the question of intention is very material. It is the fact of absence beyond the reach of process for a substantial period of time, and for a purpose not transient in its character, that is important. But if the statute contemplated a change of domicile, the instruction would nevertheless be wrong. Eor a man’s domicile is where he has fixed his ordinary dwelling, without a present intention of removal, and that domicile may be changed to another, notwithstanding the party, on his departure, may cherish a secret purpose of returning at some indefinite time in the future. Nor does the intent at the time of removal necessarily decide anything, since the party’s intentions may *502change at a subsequent period. He may come to a different mind, and fix Ms dwelling in another locality with no present purpose of leaving it, and thus become domiciliated there, notwithstanding his original purpose.
The judgment is affirmed ;
the other judges concurring.