Husband and wife were divorced in Clayton County in 1980, and an award of child support was entered. Subsequently, wife moved to Clinch County with the children, and husband moved to another state.
In 1982, husband appeared in Clinch County, filing a petition for downward modification of the child support. Wife answered, denying personal service of the complaint and she counterclaimed for *59 contempt, alleging the husband had refused to meet his child support obligations under the 1980 divorce decree. Husband filed a motion to dismiss the counterclaim for contempt for lack of jurisdiction and venue since the decree sought to be enforced by counterclaim was an order of the Clayton County Superior Court, which would retain jurisdiction over contempt matters.
The trial court denied husband’s motion, and the issues of modification of child support and contempt were tried before a Clinch County jury in November 1982. Neither husband nor his attorney appeared at trial. Child support was not modified, and husband was found to be in willful contempt of the original divorce decree.
Husband submitted an Application for Discretionary Appeal pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-35 (Code Ann. § 6-701.1), which we granted. For reasons which appear below, we affirm.
1. It has clearly been the rule in Georgia as in other states that contempt applications must be filed in the county where the divorce and alimony decree was entered. See
Austin v. Austin,
We have stated the reason for this rule as follows in
Goodrum v. Goodrum,
Similar considerations served as the basis for our earlier statutory provision requiring an action against a state resident to modify an alimony and divorce decree to be filed in the same county in which the original judgment was granted. See
Davis v. Davis,
Consequently, we are left with the anomalous result that actions to modify alimony and divorce decrees must proceed in the county where the defendant currently resides, but a counterclaim in that same proceeding to enforce the original judgment by contempt will not lie unless that is also the county where the original judgment was issued. This case clearly shows the injustice of such a rule. We have already expressed our dissatisfaction with such an inequitable result in another context in
Austin v. Austin,
We have previously stated that, “Rulings made in divorce cases stand upon a different footing from [other rulings]. The status of the marriage relation has been dealt with somewhat in the nature of a proceeding in rem.”
Askew v. Bassett Furniture Co.,
Notwithstanding our state constitutional venue provisions, we held in
Ledford v. Bowers,
In Austin v. Austin, supra, we held that where the former husband, who had become a non-resident of Georgia, sued the former wife for modification of the alimony judgment in the county of the court rendering the judgment, the wife could obtain personal jurisdiction over the husband in an application to hold him in contempt of the judgment by serving the attorney representing him in the modification proceeding.
In
Hathcock v. Hathcock,
In line with these cases, we find it necessary in the context of divorce and alimony cases to depart from the general rule that a contempt action must be brought in the offended court. 2 We now hold that where a superior court other than the superior court rendering the original divorce decree acquires jurisdiction and venue to modify that decree, it likewise possesses the jurisdiction and venue to entertain a counterclaim alleging the plaintiff is in contempt of the original decree. Such a change is necessary to ensure that in the bitter battles which too often follow divorce, neither spouse is legally left at the mercy of the other.
The trial court properly denied husband’s motion to dismiss the counterclaim for contempt for lack of jurisdiction and venue.
2. We have examined appellant’s remaining enumerations of error and find them to be without merit.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
In other states, a proceeding to modify an alimony and divorce decree must proceed by motion in the court rendering the decree. See 24 AmJur2d 966, Divorce and Separation, § 852 (1966).
There are other recognized exceptions to the general rule that no court other than the one contemned has jurisdiction over the contempt proceeding. See 99 ALR2d 1100. One such exception, similar to the case presented here, is that where the proceedings are transferred from the court rendering the judgment to another court, the latter court thereby acquires jurisdiction to hold a party in contempt of the judgment. See Graham v. Florida, 144 S2d 97, 99 ALR2d 1097 (Fla. App. 1962).
