In accordance with leave granted by the Probate Court of Franklin County to the conservator of Henry Cohn, a libel praying for the annulment of a marriage between said Cohn and the libellee, a resident of the State of New York, was filed by the said conservator as next friend of his ward, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 208, § 7, which alleged that the ward was insane when he went through the form of marriage with the libellee at Hartford, in the State of Connecticut, on September 7, 1940. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 207, § 14. A plea in abatement filed by the libellee was “dismissed.” The Probate Court, after a hearing,found that the ward was a resident of, and domiciled in, Greenfield in this Commonwealth at the time of the marriage, that he was then insane and was incapable of contracting a valid marriage under the laws of the State of Connecticut where the purported marriage took place, and entered a decree adjudicating the said marriage to be void. The libel-lee appealed from the order dismissing the plea in abatement and from the final, decree.
The plea in abatement challenged the jurisdiction of the court on the grounds that the libellee was a resident of the State of New York and was duly married to the libellant at Hartford, Connecticut; that the libel was not brought by the libellant; and that the parties had not lived together as husband and wife in this Commonwealth. The plea contained prayers for a dismissal of the libel without a hearing on the merits, for an allowance for support, expenses and costs without “waiving this plea in abatement.” The libellant did not object to the form of the plea and we deal
In the next place, there was no error in dismissing the plea as insufficient upon every question of law that it raised. The libel was brought in the name of the libellant by a person purporting to be his conservator, who was admitted by the Probate Court to file and prosecute the libel as the next friend of the libellant. Proceedings at law and in equity in behalf of a person incapable of bringing an action or a suit may be brought in his name by his guardian, conservator, or next friend. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 201, §§ 20, 37; Lombard v. Morse,
The libel alleges and the plea sets forth that the parties have not lived together as husband and wife in this Commonwealth. The jurisdiction of the Probate Court to hear
At the argument before this court, the libellee urged that service by mail and publication was insufficient. That point was not raised by the plea in abatement and does not appear to have been urged in the Probate Court. Questions of jurisdiction of a court over the subject matter or the parties may be raised at any stage of the proceedings. Assessors of Boston v. Suffolk Law School,
The libellee finally contends that the decree declaring the marriage void was beyond the “scope” of the libel. Upon an appeal from a final decree without any report of the evidence or a report of the material facts, the only question is whether the decree is within the pleadings and could be supported upon any evidence that the judge might have heard. Brogna v. Commissioner of Banks,
The order relating to the plea in abatement, which we regard as an interlocutory decree, and the final decree must be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.
