By the Court.
Nisbet, J.
delivering tbe opinion.
[1.] In our judgment, the declaration was amendable, at the time it was amended, by averring the residence of the defendant to be in the County of Appling. If it was, it was error to order it to be afterwards stricken out. An exception to the declaration for want of that averment at the first term, would have been regular, and in the face of the exception the plaintiff could not have proceeded. He would have been then put upon amending, and could have amended.
[2.] Upon the appeal, the plaintiff,' on his voluntary motion, was allowed to amend. We do not think that it was competent for the defendant afterwards to have that judgment amend-ing, reversed upon motion. Had the writ not been at that time amended, I doubt whether the defendant’s exception would have been in time. The defect could not arrest the judgment. The defendant was served ; he appeared and pleaded, and upon a motion to arrest, for that cause would have been held to have waived the defect. Eor these reasons, the Court, in our judgment, erred in dismissing the action. That a defect of this sort is amendable, see 2 Peters’ S. C. R. 565. 10 Ibid, 480.
[3.] Again, it is not indispensable to aver the residence of the defendant in the County. As before admitted, it is an irregularity in pleading, of which the defendant might have availed himself at the proper time, but if he is served and appears and answers, as he did in this case, he admits the regularity of the service, and without the averment, the Court may proceed to judgment. Gracie et al. vs. Palmer et al. 8 Wheat. 699.
The questien of jurisdiction on the ground of non-residence, is not made in this case, at all. It is only a question of pleading and amendment. There is no plea to the jurisdic*320tion, nor any consent or waiver as to the want of it. The suit was brought in Appling County — -the process was issued by the Clerk of that County, and served upon the defendant by the Sheriff of that County, who appeared and pleaded. We are constrained to infer from the record, that he resided in that County. He has admitted the jurisdiction, and he has also admitted the fact (residence) upon which the jurisdiction depends. If the fact had been otherwise, he could have foiled the plaintiff by pleading to the jurisdiction; this he could have done with, or without, the original averment, and with, or without, the amendment. The case is very different from the cases decided by this Court, and relied upon by the defendant in error. This is the first time that this point has been before us.
Let the judgment be reversed.