Court Opinion

ID: 5583551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-11 01:46:44.806561+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:36:09.569671
License: Public Domain

Beck, P. J.
(After stating the foregoing facts.) Some three years prior to the filing of the present suit the marriage relations between the plaintiff and the defendant had been dissolved-by a verdict and decree of divorce then rendered. The suit upon which the verdict and decree was rendered, dissolving the marital relations between the plaintiff and the defendant and awarding stated sums as permanent alimony for the wife and for the support and maintenance of the children, was between the same parties and involved the same subject-matters as are here involved. And that judgment and decree was final in its nature, and passed beyond the control of the court for purposes of change or modification. In the case of Wilkins v. Wilkins, 146 Ga. 382 (91 S. E. 415), it was said: “ After the termination of a suit for permanent alimony and the rendition of a final decree therein, not excepted to, the decree allowing alimony passes beyond the discretionary control of the trial judge; and he has then no authority either to abrogate it or to modify its terms, unless the power to dp so is reserved in the decree. The *522power to revise and review allowances of alimony, which is vested in the judges of the superior courts by the Civil Code, § 2978, applies exclusively to the revision and review of allowances of temporary alimony. Coffee v. Coffee, 101 Ga. 787 (28 S. E. 977).” In the case first cited it was held that a decree like the one in the present case, allowing alimony, passed beyond the discretion and control of the circuit judge, and that he had no authority afterwards to either abrogate it or modify its terms, unless the power to do so was reserved in the decree. In neither the Coffee ease nor the Willems case, as will be seen from the reports of them, was the power to abrogate or modify the terms of the decree reserved; and the decisions in those cases amount simply to a ruling that the decrees there under consideration could not be changed or modified by the judge. If the expression, “ unless the power to do so is reserved in the decree,” used in the decisions in those cases, is an intimation that where the power is so reserved the court can modify the decree, it is obiter dictum; for that question was not involved in those cases, there being no such reserved power, and is not controlling as authority upon the issue made in this record. Section 2954 of the Civil Code reads as follows: “ In all suits for divorce, the party applying shall render a schedule, on oath, of the property owned or possessed by the parties at the time of the application — or at the time of the separation, if the parties have separated, — distinguishing the separate estate of the wife, if there be any, which shall be filed with the petition, or pending the suit, under the order of the court. The jury rendering the final verdict in the cause may provide permanent alimony for the wife, either from the corpus of the estate or otherwise, according to the condition of the husband and the source from which the property came into the coverture.” Section 295G declares: “The verdict of the jury shall specify the kind of divorce granted, and the disposition to be made of the scheduled property.” And section 2961 is in the following language : “ The verdicts of juries disposing of the property in divorce cases shall be carried into effect by the courts, by entering up such judgment or decree, or taking such other steps usual in chancery courts, as will effectually and fully execute the same.” And in section 2981 it is provided: “If the jury, on the second or final verdict, find in favor of the wife, they shall also, in providing permanent alimony for her, specify what amount the minor chil*523■dren shall be entitled to for their permanent support.” Thus it will be seen that it is the duty of the jury to fix the amount of the alimony and the amount the minor children shall be entitled to for their permanent support. See, in this connection, Gholston v. Gholston, 54 Ga. 285, and Odom v. Odom, 36 Ga. 286. The statutes clearly _ contemplate that the jury shall fix the amount of alimony and the allowance for the support of the minor children, and we find no provision authorizing the judge to change or alter this amount; and in the absence of an express provision in the statute, we are not authorized to hold that the court can do this, thus altering the finding of the jury. Cases from other States, under the rulings of which the judge would be authorized to modify a decree allowing permanent alimony, will be found to have- been rendered in the construction of the statutes of those States which differ from ours, and not binding as authority here, in view of our statutes placing it within the province of the jury to fix the amount of alimony and allowance for the support of the minor children. The amount allowable as alimony as support for the children in the instant case was res adjudicata, and the court did not err in dismissing the petition.

Judgment affirmed.

All the Justices concur.