Maner v. Maner

189 So. 2d 336, 279 Ala. 652, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1091
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 23, 1966
Docket3 Div. 205
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 189 So. 2d 336 (Maner v. Maner) 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
Maner v. Maner, 189 So. 2d 336, 279 Ala. 652, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1091 (Ala. 1966).

Opinion

MERRILL, Justice.

This appeal is from a decree which, in effect, denied appellant’s motion to set aside a purported decree of divorce on the ground that the decree was void on its face. An appeal lies from, such a denial. Doby v. Carroll, 274 Ala. 273, 147 So.2d 803, and cases there cited.

Appellant, the wife, filed the motion to set aside the decree and the husband filed a motion to strike; the court granted the motion to strike and this appeal followed.

In 1963, the wife filed a suit for divorce in Montgomery County. On June 17, 1963, the husband swore to a plea in abatement that both he and his wife were bona fide residents of the State of Florida, residing at 1122 Brandt Drive, Tallahassee, and that they jointly owned the property and it was their permanent home. No further proceedings were had in that case.

The wife then filed a complaint in their home county in Florida, secured personal service on her husband and, on April 6, 1964, the Florida court ordered the husband to pay $200 per month to support their *655 young son, $150 per month alimony to the wife, ordered the husband to make the monthly mortgage payments on their home at 1122 Brandt Drive, Tallahassee, and awarded the ciistody of their child to the wife.

But between the time of the filing of the complaint in Florida, and the rendition of the decree, the husband, on February 26, 1964, filed a bill for divorce in Montgomery County, Alabama, and alleged that his wife “is over the age of twenty-one and is presently residing at 1122 Brandt Drive, Tallahassee, Florida.” The bill alleged that he was presently residing in Montgomery, and had “so resided for more than one year preceeding the filing of this bill.”

The wife was served as a nonresident defendant by registered mail on February 28; and on March 24, 1964 she, pro se, appeared specially and solely for the purpose of filing a plea in abatement, presenting the fact that her husband had sworn that they were both residents of Florida on June 17, 1963, in his plea in abatement filed on that date, and that he could not have been a resident of Alabama for more than one year preceding the filing of his bill on February 26, 1964. Attached to the plea in abatement was a photostatic copy of the husband’s plea in abatement in the wife’s suit in Montgomery County, Alabama.

The events following the filing of the wife’s plea in abatement are the basis of the charge that the decree of divorce in this case is void.

On March 26, 1964, the deputy register of the Montgomery County Circuit Court wrote the wife’s Florida attorney, who was handling her Florida proceedings, that the hearing on the wife’s plea in abatement was set for Tuesday, March 31, 1964, at 10 :00 A.M. At that time, and at no time thereafter, had the Florida attorney filed any paper for the wife in the Alabama court, and the wife herself was not notified by any court official of the date of the hearing. At the hearing, the plea in abatement was ■“overruled, denied and dismissed.”

But between the time the plea in abatement was filed, March 24, and the date of the hearing, March 31, the husband, on March 27, 1964, filed an amendment to-Paragraph I of his original bill, amending it to read as follows:

“Your Complainant is over the age of twenty-one years and is presently residing in the City and County of Montgomery, State of Alabama, and has so resided for the time required by law. Your Respondent is over the age of twenty-one years and her domicile is Montgomery County, State of -Alabama, although she presently resides at 1122 Brandt Drive, Tallahassee, Florida.”

The effect of this amendment was, of course, an attempt to allege that the wife was not a resident of the State of Florida, as alleged in the original bill, but a resident of Alabama. No service of this amendment was had on the wife. Counsel for the husband did mail a copy of it to the Florida attorney, who had represented the- wife in the Florida proceedings.

A decree pro confesso was rendered on April 21, 1964, and on April 28, the decree of divorce was rendered. In addition to granting the divorce on the ground of cruelty, the husband was ordered to pay $150 per month for the support of his son, and the wife was awarded “a lump sum property settlement of $3,600.00” payable in twenty four monthly installments of $150 each.

On May 6, 1965, the wife, appearing specially by her attorneys, filed the motion to set aside the decree of April 28, 1964, on the ground that it was void on its face. On June 25, the husband filed a motion to strike the wife’s motion and this motion was granted.

The wife contends that the decree is void on its face, not because of lack of service, but because the original bill and the plea in abatement affirmatively show that the court did not have jurisdiction of *656 the subject matter under Tit. 34, § 29, Code 1940, as amended, which reads:

“When the defendant is a nonresident, the other party to the marriage must have been a bona fide resident of this state for one year next before the filing of the bill, which must be alleged in the bill and proved; provided however, the provisions of this section shall not be of force and effect when the court has jurisdiction of both parties to the cause of action.”

We have held that the 1945 amendment to § 29 (beginning at the semicolon), applies only where the nonresident was personally served in this State or voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the Alabama court by filing a general appearance; and does not apply where some form of substituted service, such as by publication or by registered mail, was employed. Sachs v. Sachs, 278 Ala. 464, 179 So.2d 46(3); Richardson v. Richardson, 258 Ala. 423, 63 So.2d 364.

It follows that the husband, having alleged that his wife was a nonresident, was required to allege and prove that he had been a bona fide resident of Alabama for one year next before the filing of the bill. Iiis allegation in the original bill met the requirement.

But when the wife appeared specially and filed her plea in abatement, she attached to her plea a copy of the husband’s plea in abatement in her suit filed in Montgomery County, Alabama, in which he swore that both he and his wife were residents of Tallahassee, Florida. And his plea in abatement was filed less than one year prior to his filing his bill in Alabama, in which he alleged that he had been a bona fide resident of this State for one year next preceding the filing of his bill.

Where a party refers in his pleading to another proceeding or judgment between the same parties, and involving the same subject matter, the court, on demúrrer, or as here, on a plea in abatement, may and should take judicial notice of the entire proceeding in so- far as it is relevant to the question of law presented. Cogburn v. Callier, 213 Ala. 38, 104 So. 328 [6]; Davis v. Davis, 261 Ala. 95, 72 So.2d 852 [1].

So the trial court, in the instant case, was confronted with sworn allegations by the husband that he had been a resident of Florida less than a year before he filed his bill for divorce in Alabama. This amounted to a defect in substance and not form and showed that the court was without jurisdiction. Wright v. Wright, 200 Ala. 489, 76 So. 431; Volin v. Volin, 272 Ala.

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Bluebook (online)
189 So. 2d 336, 279 Ala. 652, 1966 Ala. LEXIS 1091, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maner-v-maner-ala-1966.