Wakefield v. Wakefield
Decision Date | 29 March 1928 |
Docket Number | 5 Div. 982 |
Citation | 116 So. 685,217 Ala. 517 |
Parties | WAKEFIELD v. WAKEFIELD. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Rehearing Denied May 17, 1928
Appeal from Circuit Court, Randolph County; S.L. Brewer, Judge.
Bill for divorce by Rosa Wakefield against William Wakefield. From a decree dismissing the bill, complainant appeals. Affirmed.
Hooton & Moon, of Roanoke, for appellant.
The bill as amended was for divorce. It was not tested by demurrer. The jurisdictional facts are alleged. The nonresidence of defendant and service by publication on him as a nonresident are shown by the certificate of the register that copy of bill and summons were registered to defendant as required by law, and the return receipt of the delivering postmaster.
If it be true that the bill as amended was subject to demurrer, as to amendable defects, as to averring adultery, the same was not challenged by demurrer. And in this jurisdiction, an allegation of a want of knowledge is a sufficient excuse for omitting the name of the paramour, and such averment of adultery with a person unknown is warranted as being sufficiently definite. Holston v. Holston, 23 Ala 777; Farley v. Farley, 94 Ala. 501, 10 So. 646, 33 Am.St.Rep. 141; Bouney v. Bouney, 210 Ala. 101, 97 So. 141.
After the cause was at issue on the bill as amended, commission issued, and the testimony of complainant and one Pool was taken by depositions. And that evidence was to the effect that complainant was of age, a bona fide resident citizen of the county where the bill was filed and had been for more than one year next before the filing of her bill for divorce the post office and street address of respondent given as being Detroit, Michigan, their marriage was shown to have been consummated in March, 1925, that immediate separation ensued because respondent committed adultery since their marriage, and that such action on his part was not condoned and that complainant has not lived with said respondent since their separation.
Any amendable defects of the bill as amended were waived by failure to file demurrer, the jurisdictional facts being averred. The evidence was specific as to the required one-year residence of complainant of the marriage, and separation because of adultery by defendant thereafter, and not condoned by the complainant. The statutory ground of adultery was charged ; the residence required when defendant is a nonresident (section 7416, Code) is alleged in the bill and proved. Wright v. Wright, 200 Ala. 489, 76 So. 431; Martin v. Martin, 173 Ala. 106, 55 So. 632.
It is true that in Davis v. Davis, 132 Ala. 219, 31 So. 473, it is declared that when the bill for divorce is grounded on voluntary abandonment, the three years' bona fide residence in the state next before the filing of the bill must be averred and shown, regardless of whether the respondent is a resident or nonresident of the state. Section 7414, Code. This is not the statutory requirement of a bill rested on the ground of adultery and where the respondent is a nonresident. Sections 7414, 7416, of the Code; Ex parte State ex rel. Tissier, 214 Ala. 219, 106 So. 866. The two statutes are specific and different as to such requirements.
The venue statute is section 7415 of the Code, as follows:
"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; if the defendant is a nonresident, then in the circuit court of...
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