v.
SCOTT, Collector of Internal Revenue
(after stating the facts as above). The plaintiff in error contends that there is no evidence to support the finding of the District Court that Alexander Dunsmuir was domiciled in San Francisco at the time of his death, and to sustain that contention presents to this court by a bill of exceptions the testimony received in the court below.
[*202]
“But as the law stands, if a jury is waived and the court chooses to find generally for one side or the other, the losing party has no redress on error, except for the wrongful admission or rejection of evidence.”
Passing the question whether such a finding was appropriately within the scope of such a decree of final settlement and distribution, we turn to the question whether the finding of the probate court as to the domicile of the decedent is res judicata as to the defendant in error herein. In Thormann v. Frame, 176 U. S. 350, 20 Sup. Ct. 446, 44 L. Ed. 500, it was held that the appointment of an executor or administrator of a [*203] deceased person by the courts of one state cannot be held to foreclose inquiry as to the domicile of the deceased in the courts of another state, the court ruling that the judgment in rem of a probate court binds only property within the control of the court which rendered it, and citing with approval the case of De Mora v. Concha, 29 Ch. Div. 268, affirmed in the House of Lords, 11 App. Cas. 541, holding that the decree of a probate court is not conclusive in rem as to domicile, and intimating that the findings on which judgments in rem are based are not in all cases conclusive against .the world. In Overby v. Gordon, 177 U. S. 214, 20 Sup. Ct. 603, 44 L. Ed. 741, it was held that the mere finding by a probate court of the fact of domicile in a proceeding in rem did not conclusively bind all the world as to that fact. In Tilt v. Kelsey, 207 U. S. 43, 28 Sup. Ct. 1, 52 L. Ed. 95, it was reaffirmed that an adjudication by a probate court that a testator was a resident of the state in which the court was held was not necessarily conclusive on the question of domicile, nor even evidence of it in a collateral proceeding. And although the court in that case held that the Surrogate Court of the county of New York had not the jurisdiction to decree the payment of a transfer tax alleged to be due the state of New York under a statute requiring the payment of such a tax where the decedent was a resident of that state, and so held on the ground that the decedent’s will had been admitted to probate in New Jersey with an adjudication that he was a resident of that state, and proceedings thereupon had been had whereby his whole estate had there been distributed in accordance with the terms of the will, the decision was based expressly upon the ground that to permit the proceeding in the court of New York would be to deny full faith and credit to the judicial proceeding in the state of New Jersey,-in violation of article 4, § 1, of the Constitution, since the effect of the judgment in the New York court would be pro tanto to set aside the judgment of the court of New Jersey. But the Supreme Court in the course of the opinion reaffirmed the doctrine of the cases above cited, and quoted with approval Brigham v. Fayerweather, 140 Mass. 411, 5 N. E. 265, in which the difference in the effect of a judgment on the res before the court and of the adjudication of the facts on which the judgment is based had been pointed out, and it had been held that the decree of a probate court admitting a will to probate was not, on an issue between parties, one of whom was not a party to the probate proceeding, competent evidence of the testator’s mental capacity.
In the case now before us, the judgment of the court below had no-effect upon the res which was before the probate court of California, and it has not the effect to disturb in any way the decree of that court as to the distribution of the property which was before it. It affects only the question of the liability of one of the legatees to pay a war tax on the legacy which he received under the will, and we hold that the right of tire government to collect that tax is not precluded by the finding of the probate court that the domicile of Alexander Dunsmuir was in British Columbia. There was no error, therefore, in the admission of evidence which tended to show that his domicile was in California.
The judgment is affirmed.