The domicile of every person who is of full age and is laboring under no disability is the place where the family of the person permanently resides, if in this state. If a person has no family or if his family does not reside in this state, the place where the person generally lodges shall […]
If a person resides indifferently at two or more places in this state, the person shall have the privilege of electing which of such places shall be his domicile. If the election is made known generally among those with whom the person transacts business in this state, the place chosen shall be the person’s domicile. […]
The domicile of a married person shall not be presumed to be the domicile of that person’s spouse. History. Orig. Code 1863, § 1646; Code 1868, § 1691; Code 1873, § 1692; Code 1882, § 1692; Civil Code 1895, § 1826; Civil Code 1910, § 2183; Code 1933, § 79-403; Ga. L. 1982, p. 805, […]
If a minor child’s parents are domiciled in the same county, the domicile of that child shall be that of the parents. If a minor child’s parents are divorced, separated, or widowed, or if one parent is not domiciled in the same county as the other parent, the child’s domicile shall be that of the […]
Persons of full age who for any cause are placed under the power of a guardian have the same domicile as the guardian. History. Orig. Code 1863, § 1648; Code 1868, § 1693; Code 1873, § 1694; Code 1882, § 1694; Civil Code 1895, § 1828; Civil Code 1910, § 2185; Code 1933, § 79-405. […]
A person whose domicile for any reason is dependent upon that of another cannot effect a change of his own domicile. A guardian cannot change the domicile of his ward by a change of his own domicile or in any other fashion so as to interfere with the rules of inheritance or succession or otherwise […]