Court Opinion

ID: 3646081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:02:14.256003+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:05:20.889387
License: Public Domain

It appears from the record that the only service of summons attempted in this case was service by publication. It further appears that the notice of summons, as published in The Alamance Gleaner, was in the following words: "The defendant Gertrude Guerin will take notice that an action entitled as above has been started in the Superior Court of Durham County, North Carolina, and a duly verified complaint has been filed there. The purpose of said action is to secure an absolute divorce from the defendant, and the said defendant will further take notice that she is required to be and appear at the office of the clerk of the Superior Court of Alamance County, North Carolina, on 25 March, 1934, and answer or demur to the complaint or the relief therein prayed for will be granted."
It is manifest that the defendant has never been given notice of any action by her husband against her in Alamance County. The notice is that such action "has been started in the Superior Court of Durham County, . . ." Unless the defendant had come in by answer in the Superior Court of Alamance County, where the case was actually pending, she would not be in court at all, and any judgment against her would be without warrant of law. As was said by Merrimon, J., in Stancill v. Gay, 92 N.C. 462, "Jurisdiction of the party, obtained by the court in some way allowed by law, is essential to enable the court to give a valid judgment against him." Since the defendant, the movant, has never been given notice of any action pending against her in Alamance County, she has never been served with process, and for that reason the judgment entered against her was void and her motion to set the same aside was properly allowed. "A void judgment is no judgment, and may always be treated as a nullity. A nullity is a nullity, *Page 459 
and out of nothing comes. Ex nihilo nihil fit is one maxim that admits of no exceptions." Harrell v. Welstead, 206 N.C. 817.
Since the judgment was void for want of valid service of process, a motion in the cause to set said judgment aside was the proper procedure, and the order allowing said motion was properly entered. Fowler v. Fowler,190 N.C. 536.
Affirmed.