This case is an appeal from an order of February 13,1980, setting aside a divorce. In June, 1978, wife filed a complaint for separate maintenance. Husband answered and counterclaimed for divorce on the ground that the marriage was irretrievably broken. In July, 1978, husband took an uncontested divorce, and all issues of alimony, support, custody, and division of property were reserved. The decree specifically stated that husband would have the right to remarry. On December 4, 1979, wife filed a motion to set aside the judgment as void. The motion was granted February 13, 1980.
Relief from judgments in alimony and divorce proceedings is controlled by the provisions of the Civil Practice Act, Code Ann. § 81A-181;
Johnson v. Johnson,
*463 Absent a defect of jurisdiction, the judgment here, which is not void on its face, may not be set aside. 1 Consequently, the threshold question is whether the wife’s action is such as would preclude her from attacking the judgment as void for lack of jurisdiction. We have held that where a party signed an acknowledgment of service or a settlement agreement, she had committed an affirmative act which would preclude her attacking the decree as void. See, e.g., Williams v. Pique, supra; Johnson v. Johnson, supra. Here, neither of these readily recognizable indicia of submission to the jurisdiction of the court was present. However, we find that wife’s actions prior to and subsequent to the granting of the divorce constitute such affirmative actions as will estop her from now attacking the decree as void.
Following the answer and counterclaim for divorce by husband, wife did not answer the counterclaim. An answer to a
counterclaim
is not required in any civil case and the allegations automatically stand denied. Code Ann. § 81A-112 (a). Further, an answer to a
complaint
for
divorce
is not required, default being impermissible in a divorce action. Code Ann. § 30-11.3;
Wallace v. Wallace,
Shortly after the divorce, husband remarried. Wife admitted in
*464
her deposition that she knew of the remarriage by “late August” of 1978. Yet, it was not until December of 1979 that she brought her motion to set aside the divorce. The stability of the family, and indeed of society, demands that one who intends to attack a decree of divorce apparently valid on its face should proceed with the utmost promptness.
Sikes v. Sikes,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Code Ann. § 81A-160 (c) deals with a motion for a new trial. Under Code Ann. § 70-301, a motion for a new trial must be filed within thirty days following entry of judgment and was consequently unavailable to wife. Under Code Ann. § 81A-160 (d), a motion to set aside must, in the absence of a jurisdictional defect, be predicated upon a nonamendable defect apparent from the face of the record or pleadings.
(But, see Adams v. Adams,
