(After stating the foregoing facts.) The law provides for the holding of two terms of the Superior Court in Tattnall 'County each year, beginning respectively on the third Monday in April and the third Monday in October. Ga. L. 1922, p. 59. The time for the opening of the April term, 1947, thus fell on April 21 of that year. The petition for divorce in this case was not filed until September 12, which was nearly five months after the beginning of the April term. According to the plaintiff’s allegations, he and the defendant married only five days before the term began, and they separatеd on August 20, about four months later. The alleged cause of action was therefore not even in existence at the convening of that term.
Rule 24 of the new rules of prоcedure applicable in trial courts expressly excepted divorce and alimony cases, while Rule 17 undertook affirmatively to preserve the then-existing lа'w (Ga. L. 1935, p. 481) as to trial of divorce cases at the first or appearance term by consent of the parties entered upon the docket of the court.’ Gа. L. 1946, pp. 776, 779. The phrase, “this section,” in paragraph 24 refers not merely to that paragraph, but to the entire “Report No. Two” as made to this court by the Bar Committee. Nor did the divorce act of 1946 purport to repeal or modify the act of 1935 as to trial at the first term instead of the second term, provided certain conditions are complied with. See Ga. L. 1946, p. 90;
Evans
v.
Evans,
190
Ga.
364 (
The Code provides that an action for divorce shall be by peti
*408
tion and process, as in ordinary suits, filed and served as in other cаses, unless the defendant shall be a nonresident of this State, when service shall be perfected as prescribed in causes in equity. Code, § 30-105. Neither was this section repealed by the new divorce act. As to repeal by implication, see
McGregor
v.
Clark,
155
Ga.
377 (
It follows that, unless there can be a valid waiver, the petition in a divorce case must still be dеposited in the clerk’s office at least twenty days before the term to which it is returnable, in accordance with the law as it existed before adoption of the nеw rules of procedure and before the enactment of the new divorce law. Code, § 81-111. Compare
Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co.
v.
Troup,
177
Ga.
456 (6) (
It may be said also that, notwithstanding the new rules of procedurе and passage of the new divorce act, there is still no law whatever that would authorize the grant of a divorce
before
the first or return term as these expressions have been heretofore understood and applied. Compare
Kantzipper
v.
Kantzipper,
179
Ga.
850 (supra);
Langston
v.
Nash,
192
Ga.
427, 429 (1) (
Nevertheless, it has been held several times by this court that a defendant when sued may acknowledge .sеrvice and waive copy, process, and filing in office before the term of the court to which the case is returnable, .and he will not afterwards, as against the plaintiff, be heard to object that the suit was not filed within 20 days before the term.
Steadman
v.
Simmons,
39
Ga.
591 (3);
Weslow
v.
Peavy,
51
Ga.
210;
American Grocery Co.
v.
Kennedy,
100
Ga.
462 (
From what has been said, in order for the husband in this case to have obtained a divorce at the April term, 1947, his suit should in ordinary course hаve been instituted twenty days before that term, that is, not later than April 1, to say nothing of the other
*409
conditions prescribed by the act of 1935, supra, for the trial of such action аt the first term. As indicated above, he and the defendant were not even married at that time. But could the defendant waive the time of filing, as she undertook to do by the paper signed by her on August 20, so as to vary the ordinary procedure? We think not. , “Laws made for the preservation of public order or good morals can not be done awаy with or abrogated by any agreement; but a person may waive or renounce what the law has established in his favor, when he does not thereby injure others or affect thе public interest.” Code, § 102-106. Marriage and divorce are matters in which the public is deeply concerned, and the public policy of this State relating to marriage hаs been to foster and protect it, and to discourage separation. The State is thus vitally interested in every divorce action, although it is not an actual party to the case. In
Watts
v.
Watts,
130
Ga.
683, 684 (
It is still true that no court can grant a divorce of any character to any person who has not been a bona fide resident of the State for twelve months before the filing of the application for
*410
divorce. Code, § 30-107. Nоr can this provision be waived by the party sued.
Moody
v. Moody, 195
Ga.
13 (2a) (
It has been held by the Court of Appeаls that, where a promissory note contains an obligation to pay attorney’s fees, the statutory notice which the plaintiff is required to give to the defendant as a сondition precedent to recovery of attorney’s fees can not be waived in the note, and the attempt to waive it therein is unenforceable and of nо effect.
Miller
v.
Roberts,
9
Ga. App.
511 (3) (
If the waivers dealt with in the two classes of cases just mentioned were void as being against the public interest, there would seem to be even stronger reason for holding that the time fоr the filing of a divorce suit as prescribed by law can not be effectually waived by the defendant. Accordingly, we are of the opinion that such a waiver would be void аs an undertaking to authorize a divorce before the time allowed by law, and the facts of the present case forcibly illustrate how far-reaching such a waiver might bе in circumventing the law. As further illustration, the required residence for twelve months might not be accomplished before the return day for a given term, and yet if the time of filing suit could be waived, the plaintiff might still complete such *411 a period of residence after the return day and obtain a divorce at such term. Also, the one-year period of desеrtion, as a ground for divorce, might by such means be virtually cut in half in counties having only two terms of superior court a year, as Tattnall. The time has not yet come under the law оf Georgia when a married person may, with such a waiver, file suit in court on any day when it happens to be open, testify in support of his action, and then walk out of the сourthouse on the very same day with a certificate of divorce in his pocket.
We are not here dealing with a waiver of process or service; nor arе the views herein expressed in any way contrary to the decision in
Don
v.
Don,
162
Ga.
240, 243 (
The court erred in refusing the petition of the wife to set aside the decree of divorce, on thе asserted ground that she, as defendant in the case, could not waive the term of court or the filing date as fixed by law for the April term, 1947, during which the divorce was granted.
Judgment reversed.
