Plaintiff assigns as errors Judge Morris’ conclusions and order.
G.S. 1-247 authorizes the entry of a judgment by confession for alimony, and provides that a wilful failure of the defendant to make payments of alimony, as required by such judgment, shall subject him, upon proper cause shown to the court, to such penalties as may be adjudged by the court as in any other case of contempt of its orders.
G.S. 1-248 provides: “A statement in writing must be made, signed, and verified by the defendant, to the following effect: 1. It must state the amount for which judgment may be entered, and authorize the entry of judgment therefor. 2. If it is for money due, or to become due, it must state concisely the facts out of which it arose, and must show the sum confessed is justly due, or to become due.”
Defendant challenges the validity of his own judgment- by confession for the payment of alimony on the grounds set forth above in the statement of facts.
Defendant relies upon
Gibbs v. Weston & Co.,
Defendant also relies on
Smith v. Smith,
These two cases, and others relied on by defendant, where the challenges are made by creditors, are not controlling in the instant case, because, inter alia, the challenge to the validity of the confessed judgment here comes not from or in behalf of creditors of the confessing debtor, but from the defendant himself. ;"
This Court said in
Hart v. Motors,
This Court said in
Jones v. Brinson,
21 C.J.S., Courts, § 108, says: “Jurisdiction of the subject matter cannot be conferred upon a court by, or be based on, the estoppel of a party to deny that it exists. As to other objections to jurisdiction, there may be an estoppel, as in the case of objections to the manner in which, or the steps by which, the court obtained jurisdiction, or to the venue.”
19 Am. Jur., Estoppel, § 77, says: “One who invokes or voluntarily submits to the exercise by a court of its jurisdiction upon a matter of which it has power to take cognizance is estopped from subsequently objecting thereto.”
An absolute want of jurisdiction over the subject matter may be' taken advantage of at any stage of the proceedings, even after judgment. However, “An objection to jurisdiction based on any'.'ground other than lack of jurisdiction of the subject matter, such as lack of jurisdiction of the person or irregularity in the method by which jurisdiction of the particular case was obtained, is usually waived by failure to raise the objection at the first opportunity, or in due or seasonable time, or within the time prescribed by statute.” 21 C.J.S., Courts, § 110.
In
Martin v. Briscoe,
In
Johnson v. Alvis,
In Mullin v. Bellis, supra, the defendant made a motion to set aside a judgment entered upon his confession of judgment, and one of his grounds for vacatur was the confession of judgment was signed but not verified, Civil Practice Act, § 541. Cahill-Parsons, N. Y. Civil Practice, contains The New York Civil Practice Act, § 541, which reads in part: “The statement must be verified by the oath of the defendant to the effect that the matters of fact therein set forth are true.” The Court said: “In any event, a defendant cannot impeach a judgment which is based upon his signed statement even though it be unverified or unacknowledged.” See Los Angeles Adjustment Bureau, Inc. v. Noonan, 5 West’s Cal. Rptr. 445, (1960), which quotes from the Mullin case what we have quoted.
The deed of separation states both parties were of Onslow County. Therefore, the superior court of Onslow County had jurisdiction over the subject matter of the proceeding here, the payment of alimony. G.S. 50-1.
Defendant’s confession of judgment is for the payment of specified
alimony, which is authorized by G.S. 1-247, it states he fully realizes his moral and legal obligation to provide adequate support for plaintiff, and that he confesses judgment therefor, stating it “is for an obligation for maintenance and support justly due by” him to her, and authorizes the entry of judgment by the court therefor. He invoked the exercise by the superior court of Onslow County of its undoubted jurisdiction upon a subject matter of which it had power to take cognizance. He made the payments of alimony required by his confessed judgment, and the entry of judgment therefor, from 18 July 1958 through 3 December 1960. On 30 November 1960 he obtained an absolute divorce from plaintiff. If this confessed judgment for alimony, and the entry of judgment therefor, should now be held invalid, at his instance, it would prevent, as he states in his brief, the enforcement by contempt of the payment of alimony to plaintiff by him, which defendant states in his confessed judgment is an obligation justly due by him to her.
Davis v. Davis,
The entry of judgment for the payment of alimony by the court, based on defendant’s confessed judgment therefor, states plaintiff shall have and recover of defendant the specified payments of alimony, instead of ordering defendant to pay these amounts. This is an infelicitous choice of words and an irregularity, because the court’s judgment before this states the defendant has confessed judgment for alimony, and “to that end has authorized the entry of judgment that the defendant pay to the plaintiff” the specified alimony, “an obligation for maintenance and support justly due by the defendant to the plaintiff for her support,” and because further this language appears in the deed of separation: “AND WHEREAS, the said husband has agreed to make provision for the support and maintenance of the said wife and to that end has this date confessed judgment before the clerk of the superior court of Onslow County, North Carolina, wherein he acknowledges an obligation to support the said wife and has consented that a judgment be entered against him that he pay to the said wife the sum of Sixty-two Dollars and Fifty Cents ($62.50) on the 3rd and 18th days of each and every succeeding month hereafter.”
It is to be understood that we are not'passing upon the question of the validity of the confessed judgment, and the entry of judgment thereon, if they were assailed by a creditor, or challenged by defendant on the ground of fraud, mistake, or oppression. We place our decision squarely upon the ground that defendant, under all the facts here, is estopped to question the validity of his own confessed judgment for alimony, and of the entry of judgment therefor by the superior court of Onslow County as authorized by him, and to question that the entry of judgment by the court on the confessed judgment is a court order to pay alimony.
The court below erred in not holding that defendant is estopped to question the validity of his own confessed judgment for alimony, and of the entry of judgment therefor by the court, and to question that the judgment entered by the court on his confessed judgment is an order of court for defendant to pay alimony, and in concluding that they are a mere contract between plaintiff and defendant constituting consent judgments unenforceable by contempt proceedings, and in ordering plaintiff’s motion to show cause dismissed. The lower court will issue a show cause order as prayed in plaintiff’s motion, and then have a hearing on such order according to law.
The order below is
Reversed.
