v.
Charles A. Scott
The petition praying that the bonds of matri [*744] mony be severed was filed August 7, 1913. The original notice was served personally on the defendant in Pottawattamie County; and, on September 3d of the same year, he specially appeared and challenged the jurisdiction of the court on the grounds that the plaintiff, at the beginning of the suit, had not resided in Iowa the year preceding, and that he was not a resident of Iowa. This was overruled September 20th, and on September 30, 1913, as he did not appear generally, default was entered against him, and on hearing, a decree of divorce, including an order awarding the custody of their child, Melvin A. Scott, then five years of age, to the plaintiff, was entered as prayed. On October 22d following,* the defendant moved that the portion of the decree giving plaintiff the custody of the child be stricken therefrom, and this motion was sustained on stipulation of the attorneys, November 29, 1913. The plaintiff moved, on February 5, 1914, for an order amending the decree and awarding plaintiff the custody of the child, on two grounds: (1) The order entered November 29th was without personal notice to her and without her knowledge or consent; and (2) for that defendant is without home or place for the proper care of the child, and the latter’s interest would be best served if he be in plaintiff’s custody. By way of resistance, defendant alleged plaintiff to be an improper person to have custody of the child because of being without means and morally unfit.
[*745]
[*746]
[*745] III. It is argued, however, and the district court so found, that the court was without jurisdiction in entering the original decree, in that the petition did not allege jurisdictional facts. It averred that the “plaintiff js a resident of Council Bluffs, state of Iowa, and such residence has been in good faith and not for the purpose of obtaining a decree of [*746] divorce only.” There was no other allegation with reference to the residence of either party. The theory of the defendant is that, independent of statute, the courts are without jurisdiction to grant divorce, and that, as such jurisdiction is conferred in connection with the procedure prescribed, this also is jurisdictional and must be pursued strictly. This is correct, in so far as the matter of residence is concerned; for Section 3171, Code, 1897, declares that “the district court in the county where either party resides has jurisdiction of the subject-matter of this chapter.” If “one of the parties to a marriage contract resides in the county, jurisdiction of the subject-matter is conferred on the district court, and the statutes relating to its exercise are to be interpreted and construed as are others relating to procedure.” Gelwicks v. Gelwicks, 160 Iowa 675; Richardson v. King, 157 Iowa 287; Mengel v. Mengel, 145 Iowa 737. Undoubtedly the petition was defective, and must have been so held on demurrer. It was not assailed, however, and as, under the statute quoted, the court was given jurisdiction over the subject-matter and acquired jurisdiction over the person by service of the original notice on defendant within the county, nothing was wanting in its authority to pass on the issues involved. Our statute differs from those in many states in not exacting, as a prerequisite to jurisdiction, residence within the state a specified time. Rumping v. Rumping, (Mont.) 12 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1197, and note.
Sec. 3541, Code Supp., 1913, provides that:
“Any defendant may appear specially for the sole purpose of attacking the jurisdiction of the court. Such special appearance shall be announced at the time it is made and shall limit the party to jurisdictional matters only and shall give him no right to plead to the merits of the case. ’ ’
This conferred the right on the defendant to appear and specifically object to the jurisdiction of the court, either over his person or the subject-matter of the suit. His application was strictly within the scope of the statute, and invoked the jurisdiction of the court to pass only on the question as to whether the court had jurisdiction over the subject-matter, i. e., whether the residence of the parties was such that the court might entertain the suit for divorce on the merits. The ruling was necessarily defended on a finding of facts by the court and adverse to the defendant. Whether he then might have pleaded to the merits without waiving exception to the ruling is a point on which the authorities are in conflict. As he did not plead to the merits, the error in the ruling, if such it were, was available to him on appeal; and, as he did not so challenge it, the order of the district court in holding the residence of one or both of the parties such as to confer jurisdiction is binding on him. That he accepted it as such appears from his subsequently recognizing the validity of the decree by moving to correct it by striking a portion therefrom and in not assailing it in any manner in resisting plaintiff’s motion to amend by restoring the clause stricken on his motion. We are not to be understood as approving or disapproving this ruling. All now held is that the defendant, having procured an adjudication on the issue as to whether the court [*748] had jurisdiction to entertain the suit, is not in a situation to ignore the same and treat or have treated the decree as a nullity. Possibly on appeal it might have been reversed. But .defendant did not avail himself of that remedy. Having •invoked the power of the court to pass on the issue of whether it had jurisdiction to hear, depending on the facts as the court might find them, and decide, its decision thereon was quite as conclusive and no more subject to collateral attack than had the ruling been on the merits of the case. The court erred in treating the decree of divorce as void, in not holding the order striking the clause awarding the child to plaintiff therefrom as void, because having been entered without jurisdiction; and, as there had been no change in the circumstances and conditions of the parties since, should have continued the child in the custody of plaintiff. — Reversed.