Formerly a final decree for alimony,- unexcepted to, passed beyond the discretionary control of the trial judge, and he had no authority to modify its terms.
Coffee
v.
Coffee,
101
Ga.
787 (
Retroactive laws are prohibited by the Constitution and statutes of this State. Constitution, art. I, sec. III, par. II (Code, Ann., § 2-302); Code § 102-104. The rights of parties as fixed by a solemn judgment, which has long since passed beyond the rules of law applicable to review, can not be vacated, abrogated, modified, or set aside under the contention that the General Assembly has modified the remedy applicable to such judgments.
Moore
v.
Gill,
43
Ga.
388;
Home Insurance Co.
v.
Willis,
179
Ga.
509 (
Laws prescribe for the future. Unless a statute, either expressly or by necessary implication, shows that the General Assembly intended that it operate retroactively, it will be given only prospective application.
Bond
v.
Munro,
28
Ga.
597;
Moore
v.
Gill,
supra;
Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World
v.
Thornton,
115
Ga.
798 (
The demurrers of the defendant should have been sustained, and the action dismissed.
Judgment reversed.
