The first objection of the defendant to the validity and regularity of the decree of divorce is based on section 1559 of Revisal, which provides that “In all proceedings for divorce the summons shall be returnable to the court of the county in which the applicant resides,” the defendant contending that this is jurisdictional.
It is evident that the General Assembly did not so intend because it placed the section under the title of venue and not of jurisdiction, and nothing appears to show the purpose to take an action for divorce out of the general principle, which prevails, that any action brought in the wrong county may be removed instead of dismissing it, and that a failure to make the motion for removal is a waiver of the objection to the county in which it is brought.
In section 419 of the Revisal it is declared that actions for the following causes must be tried in the county in which the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated, and then follows the enumeration of certain causes of action, and the same language is used in section 420 in regard to certain actions.
In the following sections, 421, 422, and 423, provision is made for the trial of actions upon official bonds, domestic corporations, and foreign corporations, and then follows section 424 providing for the place of trial “in all other eases,” thus showing a clear purpose to establish the venue of all actions, including divorce, and then the rule is laid down in section 425 applicable to all actions that, “If the county designated for that purpose in the summons and complaint be not the proper county, the action may, notwithstanding, be tried therein, unless the defendant, *188before tbe time of answering expires, demand in writing that the tria] be had in the proper county, and the place of trial be thereupon changed by consent of parties, or by order of the court.”
It has been held repeatedly that these statutes relate to venue and not jurisdiction, and that if an action is brought in the wrong county it should be removed to the right county, and not dismissed, if the motion is made in apt time, and if not so made, that the objection is waived, and we do not think that section 1559 was intended to change this principle or that it has any such* effect.
The second objection would be well taken if the plaintiff relied alone on the affidavit set out in the findings of fact, because section 442 of the Revisal requires it to be shown by affidavit that a cause of action 'exists before an order for the service of a summons by publication can be made and the facts constituting a cause of action are not stated in the affidavit, but it appears that at the time of filing the affidavit for publication, and before the order was made, the plaintiff filed his complaint, duly verified, stating a cause of action, and that both papers were before the clerk at the same time, which is, in our opinion, a compliance with the statute, as the complaint properly verified was also an affidavit.
The third objection must be sustained.
Wheeler v. Cobb, 75 N. C., 21, which is approved in Faulk v. Smith, 84 N. C., 503, is directly in point. .
In that ease it was held that an affidavit, filed to procure an order of publication, which stated that the defendant was a nonresident, was fatally defective because of failure to allege that the defendant could not, after due diligence, be found within the State, and the Court held that the defendant in that case was in fact a nonresident, which are identical with the facts in this record.
Bynum, J., speaking for the Court, says: “The service of summons by publication is fatally defective, in that it does not conform to the requirements of the statute. The foundation and first step of service by publication is an affidavit that The person on whom the summons is to be served cannot, after due diligence, be found within the State.' Bat. Rev., ch. 17, see. 83. This requirement was omitted in the affidavit, why, it is hard to conceive, as it was made by the attorney himself, who, as a prudent practitioner, should have had the statute before him in drafting the affidavit. For this Court had repeatedly held that the provisions of this statute must be strictly followed. Spiers v. Halstead, 71 N. C., 210. Everything necessary to dispense with personal service of the summons must appear by affidavit. The mere issuing of a summons to the sheriff of the county of Pasquotank, and his endorsement upon it the same day after it came to hand, that The defendant is not found in my county,’ is no compliance whatever with the law; for it might well be *189that tbe defendant was at tbat time in some other county in tbe State, and tbat tbe plaintiff knew it, or by due diligence could bave known it, and make upon tbe defendant a personal service of tbe summons. Every principle of law requires tbat tbis personal service should be made, if compatible with reasonable diligence.”
The same principle was declared in Sheldon v. Kivett, 110 N. C., 408, in which Clarck, J., says of an affidavit, which alleged nonresidence but omitted to state that the defendant could not after due diligence be found within the State, “the original affidavit was defective in the particulars in which it was amended.”
It was also held by the Circuit Court of Appeals, in Flynt v. Coffin, 176 Fed., 872, in an opinion by Goff, J., concurred in by Waddill and Connor, JJ., that “Under Revisal, N. C., 1905, sec 442, which in certain eases authorizes the making of an order for service of process on a defendant by publication, where it is made to appear by affidavit to the satisfaction of the court that such defendant ‘cannot, after due diligence, be found within the State,’ as construed by the Supreme Court of the State, an affidavit alleging or showing due diligence and that defendant cannot be found within the State is an essential condition precedent to a valid service by publication, and an affidavit in an attachment suit which merely alleges that defendants are residents of another State, and cannot be found within the State, but fails to show any diligence or search whatever, is fatally defective, and a publication based thereon does not give the court jurisdiction.”
The reason for thus bolding is that the statute requires an affidavit to be filed stating that the defendant cannot, after due diligence, be found in the State before an order for publication can be made, and an allegation of nonresident is not the equivalent of an allegation of diligence, as many nonresidents spend many months in the State, and can, with proper diligence, be served personally.
We would therefore affirm the judgment upon the record made in the Superior Court, but the plaintiff moves here to be allowed to amend bis affidavit.
It is held in Kivett v. Sheldon, supra, that the power to amend an affidavit for publication in the particular in which the one before us is defective, exists in the Superior Court, and in Robeson v. Hodges, 105 N. C., 50, that, “This Court has the power to make amendments or to remand the case that they may be made in the court below (The Code, par. 965), but only to the same extent and in such cases as the Superior Court could allow amendment.”
If, however, there was no authoritative decision on the question, the Revisal, sec. 1545, is clear that the Supreme Court has the power to amend any process, pleading, or proceeding in form or substance, or to *190remand in order that the amendment may be made in the Superior Court, if, upon a full development of the facts it appears to be proper and just for it to be done, and this is a proper case for the exercise of the power in one way or the other, as it appears from the findings of fact that the plaintiff is a man of good character; that he was acting in good faith; that the application for publication was drawn by his attorney; that the defendant had never been in the State, and could not have been found therein; and that the plaintiff, relying upon the decree, has since married and has a child by his second wife.
This makes out a strong case for the plaintiff, and one which would justify the exercise of the power of amendment at once in his behalf, but it must be kept in mind that the defendant has had no opportunity to be heard on the allegations of the complaint, and that the verdict and decree convict her of adultery, and that we have no means of investigating the truth.of this charge, while in the Superior Court additional evidence may be heard, and the court can, for the purpose of being advised as to the facts, submit the question to a jury.
We therefore conclude that the motion to amend should be considered, and in order that both parties may have full opportunity to introduce evidence and to present their several contentions, that the motion should be referred to the Superior Court to be heard and passed on as if originally made therein, and to that end the cause is remanded to the Superior Court.
Remanded.