Ex Parte Davis

30 So. 2d 648, 249 Ala. 221, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 22, 1947
Docket5 Div. 426.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 30 So. 2d 648 (Ex Parte Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Davis, 30 So. 2d 648, 249 Ala. 221, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 323 (Ala. 1947).

Opinion

LIVINGSTON, Justice.

This is a petition filed by Wallace E. Davis and Willie Mae Davis, each sepa *223 rately, p'raying that a writ of mandamus or other appropriate writ be issued to Hon. Arthur Glover, Judge of the Nineteenth Judicial Circuit, in Equity, and as Circuit Judge of Chilton County, in Equity. The petition sets forth and avers the following: That on September 14, 1946, one Florence Davis filed in the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Chilton County, her bill of complaint, seeking a divorce from her husband, Wallace E. Davis, a copy of the bill being attached to the petition as exhibit “A.” This bill of complaint is based on the charge of cruelty, and in addition to seeking a divorce, sets up that said parties have two children born to them of said marriage, viz., Glenda Vivian Davis, a girl of five years, and Barbara Florence Davis, a girl three years of age. Complainant, Florence Davis, seeks the custody of these children. The bill also seeks temporary and permanent alimony for their support, and solicitor’s fees. It avers that complainant, Florence Davis, is a 'resident citizen of Chilton County, and that respondent, Wallace E. Davis, is a resident citizen of Montgomery County. The averment upon which jurisdiction is based in Chilton County is “That at the time of said separation they were residing in Chilton County, Alabama.”

Thereafter, on October 12, 1946, the respondent, Wallace E. Davis, filed a plea in abatement setting out that from the time prior to the separation of said parties and continuing at all times subsequent, and to the filing of said plea, that he did not have his legal residence or domicile in Chilton County, and did not have such residence or domicile at the time of the separation of the parties, and that at the time of the separation, he was not a resident citizen of Chilton County, but that at all the times involved he was a resident of DeKalb County, having there his legal residence and domicile, and that he was only temporarily located in Montgomery undergoing medical treatment by the United States Veterans Administration. A copy of said plea is attached to the petition as exhibit “B.”

After the filing of the bill of complaint, and on September 25, 1946, the said Florence Davis filed in said circuit court, in equity, a petition against said Wallace E. Davis, and his mother, Willie Mae Davis, who is the other petitioner in this cause (a copy of which is attached to the petition as exhibit “C”), which sought the immediate determination by the court of the temporary custody of said children. There appears in the fourth paragraph of the petition a copy of the order or decree rendered by Hon. Arthu'r Glover, as, such judge, setting such petition for hearing before him on October 19, 1946, and directing the said Wallace E. Davis and Willie Mae Davis to have said children before said court on that date, there to be dealt with according to law. On October 19, 1946, the petitioners, Wallace E. Davis and Willie Mae Davis, filed their plea in abatement, verified by their oath (a copy of which plea is attached to the petition as exhibit “D”), and said plea set up the same facts as to the 'residence of Wallace E. Davis as were contained in his plea to the original bill, and also set up that at all times the said Willie Mae Davis was not a resident citizen of Chilton County, but was a resident citizen of and having her legal residence and domicile in DeKalb County. On the same day, and, on subsequent. dates, the Circuit Court of Chilton County proceeded to hear and determine both of the above mentioned pleas in abatement, and there appears in the beginning of the testimony taken on said hearing, all of which is .attached to the petition as exhibit “E,” the statement that the hearing of said pleas was consolidated and the court tried said pleas together. The entire testimony offered for and against said pleas is attached and made exhibit “E” of the petition. The question presented by the petition is whether or not such pleas in abatement were sustained. On October 28, 1946, the Circuit Court, in Equity, of Chilton County overruled each of said pleas, separately, and to this action of the court each of the petitioners excepted.

It was held in Ex parte Weissinger, 247 Ala. 113, 22 So.2d 510, that mandamus may be employed to vacate a decree denying a plea in abatement in a divorce case because of the public interest in such cases.

Here, as in the Weissinger case, the primary inquiry relates to venue and whether the divorce action against Wallace E. Davis should have been brought in Chilton Coun *224 ty, or in DeKalb County, the original domicile of said Davis. No argument being made to the contrary, we take it that the determination of venue in the divorce proceedings determines the venue as to custody of the minor children of the parties, and the right to the writ of mandamus on the part of Willie Mae Davis, á resident of DeKalb County, and the mother of Wallace E. Davis, and who is alleged to have the custody of said minors.

In pertinent pa'rt, section 28, title 34, Code of 1940, provides:

“Bills for divorce may be filed in the circuit court of the county in which the defendant resides, or in the circuit court of the county in which the parties resided when the separation occurred” etc. r

The law' controlling the case is not in dispute, and we can see no good 'reason to here restate the applicable principles so recently pronounced by this Court in the Weissinger case, supra.

The decree of the lower court overruling the pleas in abatement is premised upon the theory that both the parties to the divo'rce proceeding resided in Chilton County when the separation occurred. The question presented in the court belovy and here’ is one of fact.

The testimony was taken ore tenus before the trial judge, and the usual presumption prevails^ in favo'r of the correctness of his finding of facts.

That Mrs. Willie Mae Davis is, and has been practically -all of her life, a resident of DeKalb County, is undisputed; and the followings facts are likewise not questioned. Wallace E. Davis was born and reared in DeKalb County, He and Florence Davis were married in Anniston, Calhoun County, on July 23, 1940,’at which time they were students at Jacksonville State Teache'rs College, at Jacksonville, Alabama. They continued in school for a short time, then resigned and moved to ” Wetumpka, Elmore County, where Mr. Davis entered the employ of his brother-in-law, one Klinner, who was engaged in the furniture business, operating several stores. Mr. Davis worked in the Wetumpka furniture store until about April 1941, when he was transferred to a store in Talladega, .Talladega County, by Klinner, where he and his wife resided until about January 1944, when he was' inducted into the a'rmed service. Their first child was born in Wetumpka, and their second in Talladega. When his induction became imminent, he arranged for a home for his wife and children in Fort Payne. The mother of Mr. Davis, and who is one of the petitioners, resided with Mrs. Florence Davis and the children, the latter paying the rent out of the allotment provided by her husband. Mr. Davis registered for military service at Wetumpka, but gave his address as Route 1, Chavi'es, DeKalb County. Mr. Davis returned from overseas duty in November 1945, and was discharged from military service in March 1946. M'rs. Davis instituted suit for divorce in Chilton County on September 14, 1946.

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Bluebook (online)
30 So. 2d 648, 249 Ala. 221, 1947 Ala. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-davis-ala-1947.