456 S.E.2d 502 | Ga. | 1995
The appellant, Claudia Moate, initiated this action by filing a complaint for divorce against the appellee, Roy Moate, in which she sought a divorce, alimony, and property division. Mr. Moate counterclaimed, seeking a divorce and property division. After dismissing Ms. Moate’s complaint without prejudice for failure to prosecute, see
We granted Ms. Moate’s application for discretionary appeal to consider two questions. One is whether the dismissal of Ms. Moate’s claim for alimony, coupled with the fact that Mr. Moate did not pray for alimony in his counterclaim, meant that the issue of alimony was not properly before the trial court and deprived it of authority to rule on the issue in the final judgment. The other issue concerns whether, if the trial court did not have the authority to rule on the alimony issue, thus leaving that claim outstanding, the trial court’s grant of a divorce violated USCR 24.7,
We conclude that we need not resolve whether the trial court had the authority to rule that neither party was entitled to alimony, as even assuming the trial court did not have that authority, any error in the trial court’s ruling on alimony is harmless because the trial court’s judgment on Mr. Moate’s counterclaim bars Ms. Moate from raising any future claim for alimony under the doctrine of res judicata.
Further, as the res judicata effect of the judgment effectively disposed of all contestable issues between the parties, the trial court’s
Judgment affirmed.
USCR 24.7 provides that
[although the court may, in appropriate cases, grant judgment on the pleadings or summary judgment that the moving party is entitled to a divorce as a matter of law, no divorce decree shall be granted unless all contestable issues in the case have been finally resolved.
See Edwards v. Edwards, 260 Ga. 440 (396 SE2d 236) (1990).
We need not address whether the trial court’s error in ruling on alimony (again, assuming the ruling was error) would have been harmless if the trial court had awarded alimony to Mr. Moate.