White v. White
White v. White
Opinion of the Court
The bill of complaint was filed in the circuit court of St. Clair county on May 25, 1920, and seeks a divorce on the ground of abandonment. It is alleged that complainant has resided in St. Clair county for more than three years next before the filing of the bill, and that respondent is a resident of Jefferson county. There is no allegation as to the residence of thd parties at the time the separation occurred. Personal service was made on the respondent on June 24, 1920, and a decree pro confesso was entered in the usual form on July 26, 1920, reciting the failure of the respondent to plead, answer, or demur to the bill. The record shows that a plea in abatement was filed on the same day — July 26 — alleging that respondent was not a resident of St. Clair county at the time of the service of summons, but was a resident of Jefferson county, and that complainant and respondent were residents of Jefferson county at the time their separation occurred.
The trial court ignored ;this plea, and, testimony having been taken, and the cause submitted by complainant for final decree, a final decree was rendered granting to complainant the relief prayed for. It is respondent’s contention that the decree pro confesso *232 is either absolutely void, or at least erroneous on appeal, by reason (1) of the failure of the court to take any account of the plea in abatement on file; and (2) of the failure of the hill of complaint to affirmatively show-that it was properly filed in St. Clair county.
In the early case of Branch Bank v. Rutledge, 13 Ala. 196, where a bill to enjoin a judgment was filed in the wrong chancery district, and a decree pro confesso was rendered on personal service, without any previous objection by the respondent, and the objection was first raised on appeal, this court said:
“The bank must be considered as having waived the objection which it now for the first time makes. The chancery court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the complaint, but merely exercised it in the wrong county. This .was a matter which the court was not bound mero motu to notice, and which the defendant below could waive, and did waive by failing to raise the objection in that court.”
The rule is the same in law and in equity, and the subject is fully discussed, with citation of authorities, in Woolf v. McGaugh, 175 Ala. 299, 306, 307, 57 South. 754. See, also, Cleveland v. Little Cahaba Coal Co., 205 Ala. 369, 87 South. 567, for a very recent discussion and application of the rule.
No error appearing, the decree of the circuit court will be affirmed.-
Affirmed.
205 Ala. 369.
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