
    The Overseers of the Poor of the Town of Sherburne against The Overseers of the Poor of the Town of Norwich.
    Where a ivoman has a husband resident state, and able her, a resettle” ' he'may "ha vi» I o'* her" loarpended'3 and she cannot be removed to the place of her ment, but only h°erXXband°s residen™.' °'
    case‘hCoferthe husband’s inahtlity to maintain the wife, moved to her •Qitare.emen"
    tuate es¡nte s'á reskience'h0ilt there, does not gain the owner that'town"'in
    IN ERROR, on certiorari to the Court of General Ses- . sions of the Peace of the county of Chenango.
    Two justices of the peace of the town of Norwich, in the county of Chenango, made an order for the removal of Rackel Ingraham, as a pauper, from Norwich to Sherburne. The overseers of the poor of the town of Sherburne, apPeafo^ to the Court of Sessions of the county of Chenango, which affirmed the order of removal.
    . The pauper was formerly the wife of one Spencer, who died seized of a lot of land in the town of Sherburne, worth 1,200 or 1,400 dollars, in which she was entitled to dower, but dower had never been assigned to her, nor had she ever been in possession of the land. She afterwards married 0De Little, who had no settlement in this state, in his own ’ - rni right, and it did not appear where he resided. The pauper afterwards married Samuel Ingraham, her present husband, who resided, at the time of the order and appeal, and for five years previous, in the town of Smithville, in Chenango county. It was proved that Ingraham, at the date 0f ov5er was a housekeeper in Smithville ; that he was a 7 x ' weaver by trade, in good health, and earned a dollar a day, -and sometimes more; that he was out of debt, and had property to the amount of 300 dollars.
   Platt, J. delivered the opinion of the Court.

I think the Sessions erred in affirming the order of removal. Admitting that in virtue of her dower, the pauper had a settlement in Sherburne, at the time of her marriage with Ingraham; yet the settlement in her own right, or in the right of her former husband Spencer, was suspended by the last marriage. Blackstone (1 Black. Comm. 354.) says, “ a woman marrying a man that is settled in another parish, changes her own settlement; the law not permitting the separation of husband and wife. But if the man has no settlement, her’s is suspended during his life, if he remains in England, and is able to maintain her ; but in his absense, or after his death, or during (perhaps) his inability, she may. be removed to her old settlement.”

Ingraham, the husband, cannot be deemed to have a settlement in Sherburne, merely in right of his wife’s dower there ; for it is settled that, “ having land in a parish will not make,a settlement; but living in a parish where one has land, will gain a 'settlement.” (Per Lord Holt, Inter Parishes of Ryslip and Harrow, 2 Salk. 524.) “ The residence need not be on the estate, provided it be within the parish.” (Burr. Sett. Cas. 125. 370.) The evidence in this case does not establish the fact, that the husband, Samuel Ingraham, was unable to maintain his wife; but if that fact had been proved, it would be with great difficulty, and extreme reluctance, that I should ever subscribe to the doctrine, that a wife is to be removed from her husband, merely because lie is unable to maintain her. The pauper ought to have been removed to Smithville, where her husband resided, and not to Sherburne, where the land was situated, in which she was entitled to dower. The order of the Sessions ought, therefore, to be quashed.

Order quashed  