14 S.E.2d 680 | Ga. | 1941
A judgment for alimony based upon an agreement of the parties provided that the husband should pay $55 per month to the wife for the support of herself and minor child, and awarded to the wife certain realty. The husband brought a petition seeking to have the court declare that the judgment had been fulfilled, and that no further payments were due thereunder, based upon an alleged understanding between the parties, at the time the agreement was entered into, that the payments provided for should cease upon the marriage or arrival at majority of the child. Held, that the petition was subject to general demurrer.
The judgment entered provided, in so far as material here, that the "plaintiff . . pay to defendant as alimony for the support of herself and minor child the sum of fifty-five dollars per month, payable on the first day of each month. Defendant is also awarded the property of plaintiff including furniture located at 1490 Lanier Place, Atlanta, Georgia, subject to a certain loan made to the grantor by the Atlanta Postal Credit Union of Fulton County, Georgia, for the principal sum of three thousand, two hundred and fifty dollars, which loan is assumed solely and entirely by defendant, and plaintiff shall not be required under this order to pay all or any part of said loan, the taxes, repairs, upkeep, or any expenses or obligations whatsoever in connection with said property." The plaintiff alleged, in support of his prayer, that the court should adjudge that the judgment had been fulfilled; that "the agreement was signed with the distinct understanding that the sum of $55 per month would be paid to the defendant only until the minor child, Thelma Estes, reached the age of majority, married, or became self-supporting; and petitioner further shows that the defendant well knew and agreed that said contract would terminate at the marriage of said child or when she became of age, or self-supporting, and accepted in lieu of further payments the house located at 1490 Lanier Place N.E., reasonably worth $10,500 and the furniture and household furnishing reasonably worth $3500 for the support of herself."
We have held, in the case next before, that the judgment entered by the court based upon the agreement of the parties was a valid judgment for alimony, and accordingly entitled to all the force and effect of such a judgment. A judgment awarding to the wife a stated monthly sum as alimony for the joint support of herself and minor child is not, upon the marriage or arrival at majority of the child, even vitiated pro tanto; much less would such events annul the entire award (see Crouch v. Crouch,
Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Atkinson,P. J., who dissents.