| Academie De Droit International De La Haye - 2000 - 472 sider
...lives or has his home . . . where he has his true, fixed, permanent home, and principal establishment, and to which, whenever he is absent, he has the intention of returning (animus revertendi)."53 From Roman law and French doctrinal writings he draws terms such as "principal... | |
| Paul Goldstein - 2001 - 650 sider
...1979) ("The place where a man has his true, fixed, and permanent home and principal establishment, and to which whenever he is absent he has the intention of returning.") See also G. Ricordi ft Co. v. Columbia Gramophone Co.. 258 F. 72-74 (SDNY 1919). tional or domiciliary.... | |
| Kenneth J. Winkle - 2002 - 268 sider
...Joseph Story, one of the doctrine's leading architects, defined it, "that place is properly the domicil of a person in which his habitation is fixed, without any present intention of removing." Domicile, in short, considered an individual's physical presence and his intention when assigning legal... | |
| Ulrike Graf - 2003 - 468 sider
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| Joseph Story - 2006 - 234 sider
...This is not quite accurate. It would be more correct to say, that that place is the home or domicil of a person, in which his habitation is fixed, without any present intention of removing therefrom (10 Mass. R. 488). The question of domicil is often one of great difficulty and nicety, and so dependent... | |
| Stephen Elias - 2007 - 370 sider
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