22 S.E.2d 790 | Ga. | 1942
A solicitor-general is not authorized, merely in virtue of his office, to institute a proceeding to set aside a decree of divorce. The instant petition filed for that purpose was properly dismissed on general demurrer on the ground that the petitioner as solicitor-general had no authority to bring it.
Mrs. Reynolds, having become by marriage Mrs. Martocello, filed a general and special demurrer to the petition. The judge sustained the general demurrer and dismissed the proceeding, on the theory, as stated in his judgment, "that there is no right in the solicitor-general to bring the petition," and did not pass upon other questions. To this judgment the solicitor-general excepted.
The constitution (Code, § 2-3902) declares that "It shall be the duty of the solicitor-general to represent the State in all cases in the superior courts of his circuit and in all cases taken up from his circuit to the Supreme Court; and to perform such other services as shall be required of him by law." The plaintiff relies in part on the first clause of this provision, contending that it includes divorce cases. We can not sustain this contention. According to the usual and ordinary signification of the language employed, this clause applies only to cases in which the State is a formal party, and would not include a divorce case in which the State has not been named and has not appeared as a party; although, as this court has several times expressly recognized, the State has an interest in all divorce cases. Watts v. Watts,
Nor does the duty imposed upon such officer by the Code, § 24-2908 (5), "To prosecute or defend any civil action in the prosecution or defense of which the State is interested, unless otherwise specially provided for," include an action for divorce, since cases of this class are "otherwise specially provided for," in that by a different statute it is declared that "In divorce cases proceeding undefended by the opposite party the judge shall see *869
that the grounds are legal and sustained by proof, or shall appoint the solicitor-general or some other attorney of the court to discharge that duty for him." Code, § 30-129. The duty imposed by this section is clearly placed on the trial judge, and not the solicitor-general, although the judge may appoint the solicitor-general or some other attorney to discharge that dutyfor him. In Creamer v. Creamer,
The Code, § 30-124, referring to applications for removal of disabilities, declares that "The divorced person, or any citizen of the county wherein the divorce was granted, may resist the application; and should no person resist the same, the solicitor-general shall represent the State, with full power to resist the same, as in ordinary divorce cases." This section was taken from an act of the General Assembly passed in 1872 (Ga. L. 1872, p. 14); and while it would seem to imply that the legislature thought that the solicitor-general was already authorized to represent the State *870
in original divorce cases, it does not within itself confer such authority; and although it may be entitled to some consideration as a legislative interpretation, it can not be construed as changing the plain and settled meaning of the existing law as to the officer upon whom the State relies in such cases. Park v.Candler,
While various duties are imposed by law upon the solicitor-general, there is no other constitutional or statutory provision that would seem to be pertinent in this connection. InWalker v. Georgia Railway c. Co.,
At the time of our adopting statute, February 25, 1784, divorces were granted in England only in accordance with that branch of the common law known and distinguished as the ecclesiastical law, and there was no authority in the State's attorney to appear in such cases. Head v. Head,
The judge properly dismissed the petition on the ground that there was no authority in the solicitor-general to bring it. 5 Am. Jur. 239, § 9; State of Wisconsin v. Milwaukee Electric Railway Light Co.,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur. *871