Court Opinion

ID: 9623195
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-22 06:29:22.233011+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:05:26.411636
License: Public Domain

Felton, Justice,
dissenting. “The general rule is that contracts for the payment of alimony should be given full force and effect and continue for the period provided by the contract which may be beyond the death of the husband.” Donaldson v. Baldwin, 224 Ga. 680, 682 (164 SE2d 141), citing Ramsay v. Sims, 209 Ga. 228 (71 SE2d 639). “A right given by statute to the husband to apply for a modification of an alimony decree after the wife’s remarriage is not personal to the husband, and if he should die, his personal representative may apply for a modification.” 27B CJS 196, Divorce, § 277 (b). Where the *551provisions of the contract fixing alimony are approved and made the decree of the trial court, they become an enforceable part of the divorce decree. Donaldson v. Baldwin, supra, p. 682. “[I]n a case where the question of permanent alimony is not passed upon by the jury, but is disposed of by an agreement of the parties, which agreement is made the judgment of the court, the power thereafter to change or modify the decree may be therein lawfully reserved in the court, and where this is done the judgment remains in the control and power of the court thereafter to change or modify it.” Hardy v. Pennington, 187 Ga. 523, 525 (1 SE2d 667); Chandler v. Chandler, 204 Ga. 40 (1) (48 SE2d 841).
In the present case, the 1953 divorce decree provided that the alimony contract was “by reference made a part of this judgment as fully as though set out in full herein as to all matters covered by said contract.” (Emphasis supplied.) This effectively made the agreement the judgment of the court. Furthermore, it became the judgment “as to all matters covered by the contract.” It is unquestioned that the contract provides for (a) modification of the amount of the payments by the court where the parties are unable to agree thereon; and (b) continuation of alimony payments after the death of the husband. The majority recognizes the court’s jurisdiction to modify its judgment during the husband’s lifetime, but not thereafter, on the ground that the judgment is personal as to him. In my opinion, this holding fails to give effect to the rule in such cases as Hardy and Chandler, supra, as hereinabove stated, whereby the jurisdiction to modify the present judgment was reserved in the judgment itself. How can the judgment be personal to the husband when he specifically agreed and contracted to have payments continue after his death (which he was not ^nligated to do) ? Is it logical to assume that the parties would provide for modification of payments due to changing conditions during the husband’s lifetime and make no similar provision for the benefit of the estate and the widow?
It is clear to me that the contract, by providing for modification of payments and their continuation after the husband’s death, impliedly contemplated and consented to a continuing *552jurisdiction in the court to give effect to the parties’ expressed intention of providing for modifications. It is equally clear that, although the parties could not bestow such jurisdiction on the court merely by their contract alone, the court could, and did, reserve such jurisdiction by necessary implication when it incorporated in its judgment the contract and all of its provisions.
The above is not affected by Code Ann. §§ 30-220- through 30-225, which are not applicable to this case. The only way these statutes could have been made constitutionally applicable to judgments rendered prior to the March 9, 1955, date specified in Ga. L. 1957, pp. 94, 95 (Code Ann. § 30-224) was by requiring the consent of both parties to judgments rendered prior thereto for any modification of said judgments. The written consent to the revision, amendment, alteration, etc., of judgments rendered prior to March 9, 1955, which § 30-224 (a) makes a condition precedent to the applicability of the above Code sections, must mean consent to the last attempted revision, etc., of the judgment in order for said law to be constitutional. Since there is no such agreement or written consent to the attempted revision of the judgment, the above statutes cannot constitutionally apply in this case, with the result that the case is controlled by the law prior to the adoption of these statutes, as set out hereinbefore.
In my view, the majority fails to give the contract the “full force and effect” required by the Donaldson case, supra, when it enforces the provision for payments after the husband’s death, but refuses to enforce the correlative contractual and judicial provision for modification of such payments for the same reasons as made the provisions for such modification necessary and desirable during the husband’s lifetime.
Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment overruling the motion to dismiss the complaint.
I am authorized to state that Presiding Justice Mobley concurs in this dissent.