Bilbo v. Bilbo

177 So. 772, 180 Miss. 536, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 4
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 3, 1938
DocketNo. 32951.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 177 So. 772 (Bilbo v. Bilbo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bilbo v. Bilbo, 177 So. 772, 180 Miss. 536, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 4 (Mich. 1938).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

An appeal is prosecuted here by the appellant, Mrs. Linda Ruth Bilbo, from a decree in the Chancery Court of Pearl River county overruling a plea to the jurisdiction of.the lower court in a suit for divorce brought against-her by the appellee, Senator Theo. G. Bilbo, husband of the appellant, , .

*544 On March 13, 1937, appellee filed his hill for divorce against appellant in the chancery court of Pearl River county. On May 4, 1937, the appellant filed an answer and cross-bill for support and maintenance, and incorporated in her amended answer a plea to the jurisdiction of the court. On motion, this plea was separately heard; and after hearing the evidence thereon the court overruled the plea and an appeal was granted here. Following this hearing, the appellant applied to the court for a hearing on a motion for alimony pendente lite and attorney’s fees. The court declined to hear the latter motion, but did allow the appellant temporary attorney’s fees in the sum of $100.

The appellant assigns as error here: (1) The action of the court in overruling her plea to the jurisdiction; (2) the action of the court in declining to hear her application for and to allow her at that time alimony pendente lite; and (3) in fixing the attorney’s fees allowed for prosecuting her plea to the jurisdiction at only $100 as being inadequate.

The plea, in substance, is that the appellant was not absent from the state so that process could not be served on her, and that the separation of the parties did not occur while they resided in Pearl River county, but,that the parties resided in Hinds county at the time of their separation.

The allegation in the bill as to the jurisdiction of the court is that appellee, Senator Bilbo, complainant in the court below, is a citizen and resident of Pearl River county, Miss., and that he was a resident of said county and state at the time of the separation, and that the appellant, Mrs. Bilbo, defendant in the lower court, is a citizen and resident of Hinds county, Miss., but is now absent from this state' so that process cannot be served on her in this suit, ánd that the defendant is not to be found in this state'on diligent'inquiry made by the appellee; nor has she at this time any place of abode therein, but that her post office and street address is.Lafayette *545 Hotel, Sixteen and Eye Street Northwest, Washington, D. C. Appellant and appellee were residents of Pearl River county for a long time prior to and at the time of their separation as husband and wife, and appellee continued thereafter to be, and he still is, a resident of said county at the time this suit was instituted.

The bill further averred that the parties interested lived and resided together as man and wife in Pearl River county about the - day of October, 1931, at which time they separated, and since have ceased to live together as husband and wife.

On the appellant’s plea to the jurisdiction, she testified that appellee and she moved from Poplarville to Jackson, Hinds county, Miss., in the spring of 1923, and there resided in the Colonial Apartments for about a year, then moved into a home on Robinson street in Jackson, where she and the appellee lived until they moved' into the Executive Mansion in 1928, the appellee having been elected Governor of Mississippi in 1927; that the separation occurred while they were living there in 1931; that at the end of the appellee’s term as Governor of this state, she requested the appellee to permit her to go- to Poplarville, but he refused her request and moved her into their home on Robinson street, in Jackson, Miss. She testified that she was personally served with process in this suit in Hinds county; that she was temporarily in Washington, D. C., at the time the shit was filed on matters of business, and had no intention of remaining away for a long time, having bought a round trip ticket from Jackson to Washington.

The appellee, Senator Bilbo, testified' that he had been a resident of Poplarville, in Pearl River county, since 1908, and had maintained his home and residence there since that time; that he moved to Jackson as Governor in 1916 and returned to Poplarville in 1920 at 'the close of his first term as Governor of this state; that in 1923 he moved to Jackson, where he edited and operated a newspaper as a part of his campaign in the primary *546 election to be held in 1927; that during that time he and his wife voted in Pearl River county; that in 1923 they first lived in the Colonial Apartments, but later moved into a home which he built in Jackson on Robinson street as an investment, and where they lived until 1928; that from there they moved to the Executive Mansion, and in 1932, when leaving the Executive Mansion, he moved the appellant, at her request, back to the Robinson street home, and would have moved her to Poplarville had she requested, telling’ her that he was going to move to- the Walthall Hotel in Jackson and remain and practice law. He further testified that he had never changed his domicile and residence from Pearl River county to Jackson, Miss. He stated that he had voted in Poplarville since 1908 in every county, city, and state election; that he paid his poll tax, and also- his wife’s after she became liable therefor, until their separation; that before he moved to Jackson to conduct his campaign for Governor for the state, he had acquired his old parental home and farm, and began the construction of a home known as the “Dream House.” The record shows that he protested against Mrs. Bilbo’s entering this “Dream House” or interfering with the parties whom he had placed there as- caretakers. Appellee was born in Pearl River county and says he never removed his domicile or citizenship therefrom.

The appellee, at the time the bill was filed, knew that his wife was in Washington attending to- legal business. They were engaged in litigation in Washington with each other.

It - is contended by the appellee that the chancery court of Pearl River county had jurisdiction, because his wife was then absent from this state so that process could not be served on her, and that she did not have in the state a place of abode. The facts are that the appellant, Mrs. Bilbo, had a fixed place of abode and residence at the home on Robinson street in Jackson, Hinds county, Miss.; that she went to Washington to prosecute *547 her lawsuit, bought a return ticket, and left people residing in this home which she had occupied since the separation; that she was detained in Washington for about six weeks, much longer than she had anticipated.

It is agreed between counsel that section 1417, Code 1930, is decisive of this case on the question of jurisdiction, which is as follows: ‘ ‘ The bill must be filed in the county in which the complainant resides, if the defendant be a non-resident of this state, or be absent, so that process cannot be served; and the manner of making such parties defendants so as to authorize a decree against them in other chancery cases, shall be observed.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 772, 180 Miss. 536, 1938 Miss. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bilbo-v-bilbo-miss-1938.