delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action of assumpsit, brought by appellant, in the Adams Circuit Court, against appellee. The declaration only contained the common counts. A summons was issued to the sheriff of Logan county, and served upon appellee in that county. At the return term appellee entered a motion to dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction. On the hearing of the motion the return of the sheriff was read to prove that the summons was served in Logan county, and appellant admitted that appellee resided in that county at the commencement of the suit, and on this evidence the court below quashed the summons, dismissed the suit, and rendered judgment against plaintiff for the costs. The company have brought the record to this court, and assign the decision of the court in quashing the summons and dismissing the suit, for error.
The circuit courts having general jurisdiction, the law presumes jurisdiction to hear and adjudicate all causes until the presumption is rebutted. The act of 1861, (Sess. Laws, p. 180,) declares that it shall not be lawful for a plaintiff to sue a defendant out of the county in which the latter resides or may he found, except in personal actions, where there are more than one defendant, when the plaintiff may sue in the county in which either of them resides, and may have writs to any county for the other defendants. Had this been all of the legislation on the subject, it is manifest that the decision of the court below would have been correct. But the third section of the same act declares that the provisions of the act shall not apply to any case where the plaintiff is a resident of, and the contract upon which suit is brought shall have been actually made in, the county in which it is brought.
Inasmuch as the presumption is in favor of the jurisdiction of the court, the defendant should have shown, by plea in abatement, either that the plaintiff did not reside in Adams county, or that the contract was not actually made in that county. Had either of these questions been presented by plea in abatement, and sustained by the evidence, then the defendant would have been entitled to the judgment which was rendered. Had either been shown under a plea in abatement, then the presumption of jurisdiction would have been rebutted. This is the uniform construction given to the original as well as the amendatory act of 1861. Even if the question could be raised on a mere motion, which would not be regular practice, the evidence in this case does not show that the plaintiff did not reside in Adams county, or that the contract was not actually made in that county, and hence there was no ground for rendering the judgment.
Inasmuch as the judgment of the court below is erroneous, it must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.