McLeod v. McLeod
This text of 87 S.E. 286 (McLeod v. McLeod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
(After stating the foregoing facts.)
Had the first wife, who obtained the divorce, been the person who set up such contention, the question of estoppel because of her obtaining the divorce on the basis of such entry, and taking no action until her husband, or ex-husband, had married and died, might have been involved. See, in this connection, McConnell v. McConnell, 135 Ga. 828 (70 S. E. 647); Arthur v. Israel, 15 Colo. 147 (25 Pac. 81, 10 L. R. A. 693, 22 Am. St. R. 381); Mohler v. Shank, 93 Iowa, 273 (61 N. W. 981, 34 L. R. A. 161, 57 Am. St. R. 274); Greene v. Greene, 68 Mass. 361 (61 Am. Dec. 454, 465); Brown v. Grove, 116 Ind. 84 (18 N. E. 387, 9 Am. St. [361]*361R. 823, 826). She, however, is not the contestant, but her son by the intestate. By the Civil Code (1910), § 5563, after providing for the service of process, it is declared that “leaving a copy at defendant’s residence shall be a sufficient service.” This has long been the law of this State. In Barton v. Barton, 74 Ga. 761, where a husband was sent to the penitentiary, and confined in a different county from that in which he had been living before his conviction, and his wife brought a suit against him for divorce, it was held that his involuntary leaving of the county which he had chosen as his domicile, and remaining in custody in a different county, did not change his domicile for suit, and that the proper venue of the action for divorce was in the county where he had lived before his conviction. See also Grant v. Dalliber, 11 Conn. 234. If that was the venue of the action because there had not been a change of his residence, then there must have been some way to serve him. If the present action had been brought against him by a person other than his wife, there could be little doubt that service by leaving a copy at his residence in the county where he lived before his conviction, and where his wife (from whom he was not separated) still lived, would be good. It has been held, that although a man may be absent for a considerable time from a county, if he has not permanently separated from his wife, or removed from the county, service by leaving a copy at their residence where she still remained was sufficient. Rogers v. Craig, 68 Ga. 286. It has also been held, that where a man wounded another and fled into another State, leaving his wife, who continued to reside where they had been residing, service by leaving a copy of the writ with his wife at such residence was sufficient service on him. Barrett v. Black, 25 Ga. 151; Collins v. Camp, 94 Ga. 460 (20 S. E. 356). Where a married man lives in this State and is not separated from his wife, his domicile is generally where his wife and family reside. Daniel v. Sullivan, 46 Ga. 277.
The peculiarity of the situation in the present case grows out of the fact that the wife was the plaintiff. Still she sued in the proper county. The sheriff undertook to serve the defendant in the manner- above stated. The defendant returned from the penitentiary. Yerdicts were rendered, by the second of which his disabilities were removed. He remarried, presumably relying on this verdict. He made no objection to the service, and never at[362]*362tacked the verdicts during his lifetime. Under these facts, the divorce will not be declared void at the instance of his son by his first wife, on a collateral attack in a contest over the grant of letters on his estate, on the ground that the service was void and all the subsequent proceedings were void. Under such circumstances it will not be held that the divorce was a nullity, and that the second wife, who claimed the right to administer, was no widow, but only a bereaved concubine.
From what has been said it follows that there was no error in directing a verdict in favor of the second wife, on the trial of the contest for administration, which had been carried to the superior court by appeal. Civil Code (1910), § 3943, par. 1.
Judgment affirmed.
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87 S.E. 286, 144 Ga. 359, 1915 Ga. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-mcleod-ga-1915.