In this case, the plaintiff Mrs. Roverda Clements *673 Frost sought to set aside and vacate the judgment of divorce entered against her by a petition styled "Motion to Vacate and Set Aside Judgment.” At the hearing in the trial court, the wife claimed that antecedent to the original divorce the husband had threatened that he had the money to take their eighteen-month-old son away from her unless she cooperated with him in obtaining the divorce. As a result, since she knew he had money and feared he could do this, and because she had no money of her own and suffered from rheumatoid arthritis which made working difficult for her, the wife went to the husband’s attorney’s office and signed an agreement whereby she got custody of the child and $50 a month child support. But he obtained visitation rights for two weeks of every month, and retained the family’s car, and house and all furniture and furnishings, and paid her no alimony.
This contract was made the judgment and order of the court on November 21, 1974. 1 On January 21, 1975, the wife filed her petition to set aside the decree, which prayers were granted on May 27, 1975. The husband appeals.
1. The husband’s enumerations of error 1, 5 and 7, attack the form of the wife’s pleading for failing to state a cause of action, for lack of jurisdiction since the term of court in which the decree was entered had expired, and because time for filing a motion to set aside, a motion for a new trial, and for taking an appeal had expired.
Code Ann. § 81A-160 (e) provides that a "[cjomplaint in equity may be brought to set aside a judgment. . .” A separate complaint and proper service, are required under Code Ann. § 81A-160 (f); both of these provisions have been complied with by the wife in this case.
Newman v. Greer,
Code Ann. § 81A-160 (f) provides "all motions, complaints or other proceedings to set aside or attack judgments shall be brought
within three years
from entry of the judgment complained of.” (Emphasis supplied.) Here, the petition to set aside was filed only two months after the judgment was entered and thus well within the statute of limitation. The fact that the time for a motion for new trial, motion to set aside or for an appeal has passed is consequently irrelevant. Additionally, there is no issue of laches presented. See
Field v. Jordan,
2. In Enumerations 2, 3, 4, 6 and 8, the husband attacks the merits of the wife’s claim under Code Ann. § 81A-160 (e) on the general grounds, urging that the wife has failed to prove "fraud, accident or mistake, or the acts of the adverse party unmixed with the negligence or fault of the complainant.”
It is clear in
Kitchens v. Clay,
The wife relies on
Young v. Young,
Similarly the wife alleged at the hearing in the present case that she had been threatened with the loss of her child if she did not consent to the divorce. Knowing that her husband had the financial resources he claimed he could use against her for that purpose, she feared her husband would carry out that threat. On this basis, she complied with the conditions of the prior divorce decree.
Before, however, a judgment will be set aside for duress, it must appear that the complainant had a good defense which she was prevented from asserting at the original hearing or trial.
Young v. Young,
supra. See
Adair v. Adair,
The decree here under attack was rendered on a contract which was signed under duress, but which was presumably considered at the final hearing of the original divorce. As such, its unfairness and the
*676
circumstances of duress which occurred before this proceeding should have been litigated at that time. However, since the circumstances of the original divorce do not appear in the record, we do not know whether the wife was given notice of these proceedings or whether, even if given such notice, she was prevented by duress from appearing at that time to present her defenses to the contract. For example, she may have been forced by the same duress into signing a waiver and acknowledgment of service which resulted in her receiving no notice of the final hearing of the divorce. See
Bach v. Phillips,
3. In the husband’s ninth enumeration of error, he urges that the trial court erred in modifying the earlier divorce decree by changing the amount of child support and the visitation rights of the husband where no material change of condition was alleged by the wife. See Code Ann. §§ 30-220, 30-221;
Roberts v. Mandeville,
The judgment of the court below is thus vacated and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Judgment vacated and remanded.
Notes
The record and judgment in the original divorce proceeding are not included in the record of the case now on appeal.
These sections are tracked by the language in Code Ann. § 81A-160 (e). Code Ann. § 37-219 appears in the title on Equity; Code Ann. § 110-710, under Verdict and Judgment.
We in no way intend to imply that the trial court may not now enter a temporary order in the divorce case pending the outcome of the litigation here before us.
