WEEMS v. WEEMS., 225 Ga. 19, 165 S.E.2.d 733

Supreme Court of Georgia

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D. D. Veal, for appellee.Adams, O'Neal, Steele, Thornton & Hemingway, Kice H. Stone, for appellant.

1. Where an action for divorce by the husband was dismissal, the appeal by the wife from the dismissal of the counterclaim for alimony is not rendered moot by the filing of a similar counterclaim by her to the subsequent action by the husband for divorce on the same date her notice of appeal was filed.

2. The counterclaim of the wife, which set out a claim for temporary and permanent alimony, was not subject to dismissal because of the dismissal of the husband's action for divorce because of insufficient service on her.

William G. Weems brought an action for divorce against Emily Jones Weems, a nonresident. She filed an answer, counterclaim for temporary and permanent alimony, and a motion to dismiss the divorce action because of failure to perfect service on her. the trial judge sustained the motion to dismiss for failure to perfect service an the wife, and also sustained an oral motion by the husband to dismiss the wife's counterclaim. The wife appealed from the dismissal of her counterclaim.

1. The appellee (the husband) asserts that the appeal is moot because on the same date the order appealed from was entered he filed a new divorce action, and the appellant has filed a counterclaim to that action similar to the one she filed to the previous action. This counterclaim was filed on the same date the wife filed her notice of appeal from the ruling dismissing her former counterclaim. the filing of the counterclaim in the second suit simultaneously with the filing of the notice of appeal would not be ground for dismissal of the appeal as being moot. Randolph v. Brunswick &c. R. Co., 219 Ga. 265 (2) (133 SE2d 35); Wallace v. Eiselman, 219 Ga. 307, 309 (133 SE2d 355). These cases were based on Code 3-510, which was repealed by the Civil Practice Act. Section 41 of the Civil Practice Act (Ga. L. 1966, pp. 609, 653; Code Ann. 81A-141), dealing with dismissal of actions, claims, and counterclaims, contains provisions similar to those in former Code 3-510. We therefore conclude that a counterclaim is not necessarily subject to dismissal because of the dismissal of the main complaint.

The objections made by the wife to the husband's divorce action were not based on lack of jurisdiction in the court to determine the matter. Her counterclaim alleged a separation caused by the husband's abandonment of her against her wishes and without justification or excuse, showed the property owned by him, and prayed for temporary and permanent alimony. It was therefore a complete claim which could be adjudicated without regard to the husband's action for divorce, and it was error to dismiss this counterclaim.

Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.

1968

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