The motion, on the hearing of which the order appealed from was entered, was made upon the ground that the plaintiff’s proceedings, taken for the purpose of commencing this action, were so defective as to render the judgment pronounced void for want of jurisdiction. By the complaint in the action, a case was presented which was within the jurisdiction of the court, as that was at the time regulated by statute. For it was alleged that the plaintiff was at the time of its presentment an inhabitant of this State, and had been so from the 10th of September, 1872, and then charged the defendant with acts of adultery committed between the 1st of January, 1870 and 1873. By the act of 1862, jurisdiction was conferred upon this court to decree a divorce on the ground of adultery, when the injured party at the time of the commission of the offense, and at the time of exhibiting the complaint, shall be an actual inhabitant of the State. Laws of 1863, chap. 246, § 1. The averment made was sufficient to constitute a proper cause of action for the consideration and action of this court, under this statute. And that conferred jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the action.
The affidavit on which the order was made for the publication of the summons stated that this complainant ’%as here, and that the defendant could not be found within the State, although due search had been made for him ; and that the defendant was a resident of Berlin, in the Empire of Germany, where he then actually resided, to the knowledge of the plaintiff, who swore to it. This was sworn to on the 10th of March, 1873, and the order directing the publication of the summons was made on the following day. This affidavit was materially defective in its failure to conform to the requirements of the Code, providing that an order for the publication of the summons shall only be made when it shall be made to appear by affidavit, that the person on whom the service is to be made cannot, after due diligence, be found within the State. Code, § 135. It did not show what efforts had been made to find the defendant. That fact is required to be shown, because it does not follow that a non-resident may not, by diligent search, be still found within the State, and personal service made of the summons upon him. And where, 'by diligent effort, that may be done, the law does not allow service to be made by publication.
But the defect was not of so serious and important a nature as to deprive the justice who made the order of the power of making it*495Eor, from the statement that the defendant was, at the time when the affidavit was made, actually residing in ' Berlin, he could infer that no diligence could result in the personal service upon him. At least the inference deduced from the statement of that fact would not be so entirely unsupported as to be without colorable évidenee to sustain it. And where, that is the fact, a case of simple error is shown and not an absence of jurisdiction. Where a court or officer has such a degree of evidence before him as fairly to require the exercise of judgment upon its weight and effect, an erroneous conclusion simply renders his act voidable but not void. That was the nature of the proof which was supplied by the plaintiff’s affidavit, and it was sufficient to sustain the validity of the proceedings as long as no order has been made setting them aside. The rule upon this subject has been declared in the following terms: "When the proof has a legal tendency to make out a proper case, in all its parts, for issuing the process, then, although the proof may be slight and inconclusive, the process will be valid until it is set aside by a direct proceeding for that purpose. Miller v. Brinkerhoff, 4 Denio, 118, 120. Staples v. Fairchild, 3 N. Y. 41, 46.
But it is claimed that the order, in its direction, wholly failed to conform to the provisions prescribed upon that subject by the Code, inasmuch as the copy of the srimmons annexed to it required the defendant to appear and answer in six, instead of twenty days. That, however, was not the summons which the order required to be published. For the direction was, that the summons in the action should be published, and the fact that the order recited that a copy of it was annexed, when in fact it was not, in no manner qualified or rendered that direction invalid. The recital was manifestly erroneous, and as it was in • no sense controlling upon the direction given for the publication, and was followed by publication of the summons in the action, no injury resulted from this informality.
The affidavit showing the mailing of a copy of the summons and complaint to the defendant, under the order, states that it was a copy of the summons and complaint in this action. And from that it may be inferred, that an accurate copy of the summons in the suit accompanied the copy complaint mailed.
This affidavit does not show a strict compliance with the order of publication in the address of the papers mailed. That required the copy to be directed to him at his said place of residence, referring, *496of course, to the statement contained in the affidavit, showing that to he Berlin, in the Empire of Germany, while the direction actually given the package addressed it to the defendant at the Union Club, Berlin. But as that is followed by the general statement in the affidavit, that it was his place of residence, it did show a substantial compliance with the order. This statement is in no way inconsistent with the plaintiff’s statement of the defendant’s residence, in her affidavit, for. if his residence was as the attorney’s affidavit states it, then both affidavits are literally true. And it does not follow that he did not reside, at the time when the copy summons and complaint was mailed to him, at the Union Olub, because, at a later period, his residence was in a different part of the city of Berlin. This defect, if it can be properly said to be one, in no way prejudiced -the defendant, and for that reason it may be disregarded. Code, § 176.
The proceeding already mentioned resulted in such a commencement of the action as to confer jurisdiction upon the court, for the purposes of the action, over the person of the defendant. For the additional fact was shown that the summons in the action was properly published during the period specified in the order, and jurisdiction having been acquired, it was not lost by the premature entry of the defendant’s default and the reference of the action for the purpose of taking the proofs. That was an inexcusable irregularity, indicating gross inattention to the condition of the proceedings, on the part of the plaintiff’s attorney. But it did not divest the jurisdiction over the person of the defendant already acquired by the preceding proceedings. The rule upon ‘this subject was stated' by Justice Ingraham as follows: “In such a case any departures from the statutory provisions regulating proceedings before judgment are only irregularities, which may be waived by the parties, and which do not affect the validity of the judgment, if such judgment should finally be rendered according to law. Or; in other words, a want of jurisdiction can never be alleged as to the interlocutory proceedings in an action, where the court has obtained jurisdiction originally and renders the proper judgment in the cause.” D'Ivernois v. Leavitt, 8 Abb. 59, 62; and the same principle in substance was affirmed in Schaeltler v. Gardiner, 7 N. Y. 404.
Although the default was entered, and the reference ordered, before the plaintiff was entitled to a direction for either, the reference itself did not proceed until the time arrived when the order could be law*497fully executed. The object of the reference was to take the plaintiff’s proof, on which an application . could afterward be made for judgment in the action. It was takenl for. the purpose of enabling the court, not the referee, to pronounce‘judgment, and might have been taken by the court itself. Regularly^" it could not be directed to be taken until it was seen whether a defense was to be made or not. But the omission to delay the direction until that time could not divest the jurisdiction which had already been acquired of the person of the defendant. The order directing the reference to proceed was irregular ; but, when it did proceed, the defendant had made default, and the proof could be properly taken. But, assuming that it was irregularly taken, it did not invalidate the judgment afterward ordered upon it by the court, for the evidence was regularly submitted to the court, at a term held for such purposes, and it was of such a nature as to require judicial action upon it.
It is true that the evidence, as it was taken, was in itself defective, because it was not confined to the misconduct of the defendant alleged in the complaint, and it also failed to state the fact that the plaintiff was an actual inhabitant of the State when the complaint was established, and the offense proved was committed. To admit the proof of the misconduct established strictly required a supplemental complaint. Code, § 177. But the pleading and the proof together, presented the point for the consideration and decision of the court, and that, in effect, was held not to be necessary in the disposition which was made of the case. This was no doubt an error, but a mere error could not render the judgment affected by it invalid. It would still, as long as allowed to stand, have the force and effect of a judicial determination between the parties, and it could only be set aside by some direct proceeding involving the review of the error.
As to the fact of inhabitancy the case was not entirely unsustained, because the complaint and the affidavit on which the order of publication was made were both verified within this State by the plaintiff, on the 10th of March, 1873, and she appears to have also been in this State when the order of reference was executed. From these circumstances, the court could properly'infer that she was an inhabitant of this State when the complaint was filed, and also through the month of March, 1873, when the defendant’s misconduct was shown to have occurred.
The proceedings in the action abound in defects and irregulari*498ties, but they were none of them of so serious a character as to deprive the court of power to pronounce judgment. Ordinarily, they would require the court, in the exercise of its discretion, to set aside a judgment, for the purpose of leaving the defendant at full liberty, unaffected by its entry, to defend the action. But it is not essential to the security and protection of the defendant’s rights in the action, that the relief afforded should be so far extended. He can fully defend himself if the plaintiff has no just cause of complaint against him, or if he has any lawful defense against her charges, by simply giving him unqualified leave to answer, and in the meanwhile allowing the judgment to remain undisturbed. That relief he clearly ought to have, under the circumstances, but as the plaintiff, on the faith of the judgment, has married an innocent third person, the judgment should be allowed to stand for their protection until it shall appear that the plaintiff has no right to the relief it has provided for her. The order appealed from should be accordingly so far modified as to allow the defendant the same liberty to answer as he had before the period for answer expired. And in order to give him the full benefit of this modification, as he resides in a foreign country, he should have forty days time, at least, to avail himself of this liberty. As so modified, the order should be affirmed, without costs to either party,'and with liberty to either party to file and serve a supplemental complaint, or an answer, as the case may be, at any time within twenty days after notice of the order.
Davis, P. J., concurred. Dohohite dissents.
Ordered accordingly.