151 Ga. 520 | Ga. | 1921
(After stating the foregoing facts.) Some three years prior to the filing of the present suit the marriage relations between the plaintiff and the defendant had been dissolved-by a verdict and decree of divorce then rendered. The suit upon which the verdict and decree was rendered, dissolving the marital relations between the plaintiff and the defendant and awarding stated sums as permanent alimony for the wife and for the support and maintenance of the children, was between the same parties and involved the same subject-matters as are here involved. And that judgment and decree was final in its nature, and passed beyond the control of the court for purposes of change or modification. In the case of Wilkins v. Wilkins, 146 Ga. 382 (91 S. E. 415), it was said: “ After the termination of a suit for permanent alimony and the rendition of a final decree therein, not excepted to, the decree allowing alimony passes beyond the discretionary control of the trial judge; and he has then no authority either to abrogate it or to modify its terms, unless the power to dp so is reserved in the decree. The
Judgment affirmed.