115 So. 27 | Ala. | 1927
The statutes conferring jurisdiction on courts of equity to divorce persons from the bonds of matrimony limit the jurisdiction by prescribing the causes or grounds upon which divorces may be granted, prescribing the procedure and requiring that "the cause for which the decree is sought mustbe alleged in the bill," and prohibiting the granting of a decree on the confession of the parties, or either of them, or on certain statutory grounds produced by connivance, or where both parties are guilty, or the offense has been condoned. Code 1923, §§ 7407-7413. This jurisdiction does not exist independent of the statute, and hence courts of equity, in exercising jurisdiction to grant divorce a vinculo, are courts of statutory and limited jurisdiction, and it is essential to the validity of the proceedings that the jurisdictional facts affirmatively appear from the record. Martin v. Martin,
One of the jurisdictional facts essential to the validity of the proceedings is that a statutory cause or ground for divorce must be alleged in the bill, and failing in this the proceedings are coram non judice and therefore wholly void. Martin v. Martin, supra; Trammell v. Pennington,
The bill in this case is by the wife against *143 the husband, and the only ground alleged in the bill is stated thus:
"The complainant avers that hitherto in, to wit, the month of March, 1926, said respondent on two or more occasions soconducted and bemeaned himself toward complainant as togenerate in the existence and mind of complainant a reasonableapprehension of actual violence on his part toward her." (Italics supplied.)
Aiding these averments with every reasonable intendment, as a matter of construction, they fall far short of showing, or tending to show, that "the husband has committed actual violence on her person, attended with danger to life orhealth," or that from his conduct there was "reasonable apprehension of such violence." Code 1923, § 7409; Farmer v. Farmer,
It follows, therefore that the decree of April 27, 1926, is void in so far as it undertook to dissolve the marriage relation existing between the parties, and that relation still exists.
It clearly appears that the other relief granted by the decree was incidental to the abortive divorce proceedings, and the entire decree must be pronounced void.
The decree being void for want of jurisdiction, the subsequent proceedings, seeking to modify the original void decree, were likewise without jurisdiction, and the subsequent decree is also void, and will not support the appeal. Gunter v. Mason,
Appeal dismissed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.