Court Opinion

ID: 7938540
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:12:15.145479+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:37.904076
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
The relator filed her bill in chancery in the circuit court for the county of Wayne to obtain a divorce on the ground of desertion. ' Her husband was a nonresident of the State, and the usual order of publication was made, and published for the statutory time. An order pro confesso was entered, and proofs taken in open court. While testimony was being taken, it was disclosed that there had been no personal service upon the defendant, and therefore the court refused to proceed further, or to render any decree, holding that it had no jurisdiction, under Act No. 202, Pub. Acts 1895. This act provides that—
“No decree of divorce shall be granted in any case unless the defendant be domiciled within this State, or shall have been domiciled herein at the time the cause for divorce arose, or unless the defendant shall have been personally served with process in this State, or with copy of the order of publication in said cause, or has voluntarily appeared in such action or proceeding.”
Divorce proceedings are purely statutory, and the statute must be complied with in order to confer jurisdiction upon the court. Complainant had not brought herself within the statute. She had not shown that her husband was domiciled in this State at the time the cause for divorce arose. No cause arose until the desertion was completed by abandonment for two years. At that time he had become a nonresident. The defendant had not been personally served with the order of publication.
The writ will be denied.