Mrs. Frances Hutcheson filed in Johnson superior court a petition against her husband,-William L. Hutcheson, :for temporary and permanent alimony, based on a pending suit for divorce. The husband was in the military service of the *604 United States. The writ of error presented by the husband recites: • “After hearing evidence . . and . . conduct and relationship of the parties, including the necessities of the wife,” the court;; “awarded temporary alimony in an amount not to exceed the al- • lotment made to [by?] Captain William L. Hutcheson for the support of his wife, or the amount to which he is entitled under the • act of Congress relating thereto for such support, or the rules and regulations of the government of the United States, the exact; amount of said allotment to be ascertained and hereafter added by the court. And that this temporary alimony continue until a finaLi hearing.”
"“Every judgment must be certain and definite as to its amount. This element of certainty is present when the exact amount of the-judgment may be ascertained by the subtraction of one named sum. from another named sum, as provided in the judgment.”
Moody
v.
Muscogee Manufacturing Co.,
134
Ga.
721 (3) (
In its present state, the instant judgment is incomplete, ineffective, and may be termed an inchoate judgment. It shows on its face that it is not final, but premature, and the writ of error-'is accordingly dismissed.
IFrii of error dismissed.
