Bryant v. Bryant

Decision Date10 December 1947
Docket Number669
PartiesBRYANT v. BRYANT.
CourtNorth Carolina Supreme Court

This was a motion in the cause by the defendant to set aside judgment in a divorce action on the ground that the plaintiff was not a resident of North Carolina as required by the statute G.S. s 50-6. The motion was not made until after the plaintiff had died, and his personal representatives and heirs were made parties, and answered.

After hearing the evidence offered by the movent and that on behalf of the respondents the court made certain findings of fact and upon them denied defendant's motion. It was not controverted that plaintiff and defendant were married in 1929, and separated permanently in 1932; that October 19 1943, plaintiff instituted action for divorce on the ground of two years separation in the Superior Court of Robeson County alleging residence in this state for more than six months. The defendant was personally served with summons, and filed no answer. At February-March Term 1944 the case came on regularly for trial before judge and jury, proper issues were submitted and answered in favor of plaintiff, and judgment was rendered accordingly.

It appeared that plaintiff formerly lived near Conway, South Carolina, where he owned a farm of 147 acres, and that in February 1943 he rented out his farm and came to live with his son in Robeson County, bringing with him his automobile and his clothes and personal effects. There he remained working at times with his son on the farm, until the summer of 1944, when he returned to South Carolina to live with his daughter and there died in April 1946. It also appeared that plaintiff registered his automobile in South Carolina in 1941, and that in October 1943 he renewed his license in that state, stating his residence as Conway, South Carolina, and that he made application there for gasoline and ration books for 1943-1944.

The court further found:

'8. In the early spring of 1943, he rented out his farm, stored his furniture and went to live with his son Mack in Robeson County, North Carolina, leaving South Carolina and moving with his son in February, 1943. He took with him his automobile, his truck, suitcase, china, bed clothes, gun and Bible. He had a separate room in his son's home. He did odd jobs about the farm and during tobacco time he worked for wages paid him by W. A. Stone. He bought his own groceries received his mail there and attended church in the neighborhood regularly and visited among the neighbors and was a resident in North Carolina, more than 55 miles from his former home in South Carolina. At the time he went to live with his son Mack he asked his son's landlord, W. A Stone, if it was agreeable with him for him to move there and live with his son. He told neighbors in his new home that he had moved to live with his son Mack; that he was better satisfied with him than any of his other children and had moved there with Mack to stay.

'9. In November of 1943, his son Mack took him from Robeson County to Horry County, South Carolina, where he spent a day and a night while there he sold out his furniture, stored in the old home, and his farming equipment, pursuant to a newspaper advertisement theretofore made by him. In the late fall of 1943, Mack Bryant moved his home to the nearby farm of Dewey Stone, in Robeson County, and plaintiff moved there with him. At the time, Mack Bryant informed his new landlord that his father would work with him during the year 1944. W. H. Bryant continued to live with his son Mack in Robeson County until the early summer or late spring of 1944, and while living there, from time to time, he told neighbors that he intended to remain in Robeson County.

'10. That plaintiff, W. H. Bryant, spent a portion of his time throughout the year 1943 in and around Conway, South Carolina, and in other parts of Horry County and while there purchased gasoline and other articles from stores near his farm, at times spending nights in the home of neighbors and with some of his own children in said State, and there was a mail box near his farm; that at frequent intervals during 1943 he called on a lady in Homewood, South Carolina, and was frequently seen...

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