In this case it appears that in October, 1898, in the circuit court of Davison county, plaintiff commenced an action for divorce against defendant; that both plaintiff and defendant were residents of this state; that the summons was personally served upon defendant, and that he appeared and answered in said action, which answer was subsequently withdrawn; and that thereafter, on the 3d day of May, 1900, the following judgment, omitting formal parts, was, rendered and entered: “And now, on this 3d day of May, A. D. 1900, comes the plaintiff, who alleges
Plaintiff based her contention and right to a modification of said judgment upon section 92 of the Civil Code, providing as follows : “Where a divorce is granted for an offense of the 'husband, the court may compel him to provide for the maintenance of the
The original decree not having made any allowance of or reference whatsoever to alimony or support money for plaintiff, we are constrained to the view that there was nothing in said judgment to be, or that could be, modified in relation to the subject of alimony; that by not including alimony in the original judgment such judgment became final and conclusive upon the subject of alimony; and that no power or jurisdiction existed'thereafter .in that respect. If an allowance of alimony had been ordered and adjudged to be paid to plaintiff by defendant on the said motion ánd petition to modify the original judgment; it would not have been modification at all, but the creation, of a new judgment on the subject of alimony, not theretofore existing in the cause. The continuing power to modify, comprehended in section 92, Civil Code, does not apply to any part of the original judgment in this case, but only applies to the subject of alimony, which might originally have been a portion of said judgment, but which was not.
There is also pending in this court in this same case an application on the part of plaintiff for suit money and attorney’s fees pending appeal, and also a motion to correct decision oía appéal by ■defendant from an order of the trial court allowing plaintiff suit money and attorney’s fees pending this appeal. The view we have
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.