The Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (Ga. Code Ch. 74-5) does not destroy the jurisdiction of a Georgia court to hear contempt proceedings filed by a Georgia-resident, non-custodial mother against an Ohio-resident, custodial father for his breach of the visitation provisions of the Georgia court’s child custody decree solely because an Ohio court previously has accepted jurisdiction of visitation modification proceedings filed by father. Had the Ohio court entered an order modifying the visitation provisions of the Georgia court’s decree before the Georgia contempt proceedings were filed, the rule, of course, would be otherwise. See
Roehl v. O’Keefe,
This rule is consistent with the public policy underlying the Act, and with our recent decision of
Steele v. Steele,
It is immaterial that the mother might have sought enforcement of the Georgia decree in the pending Ohio proceedings.
Judgment affirmed.
