The first contention of the plaintiff in error is that the court, at the interlocutory hearing in an action for divorce where the custody of two minor children was awarded to the wife, was without jurisdiction of the person of one of the children who was not present in court. The record shows that at the hearing the husband was represented by an attorney. There was no suggestion that the wife, husband, or minor child was not within the territorial jurisdiction of the court, nor was any plea to the jurisdiction filed. By statute the court is authorized, in an action for divorce, to determine who shall have custody of the children of the marriage. Pending an application for divorce the court in the exercise of a sound discretion may, as between the parties, withdraw minor children from the custody of either. Code, § 30-127. In suits for divorce the presiding judge may, either in term or vacation, hear and determine who shall be entitled to the care and custody of the children pending the litigation. § 30-206. We do not find any requirement in any of the statutes relating to the
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award of custody of children in an action for divorce that the children be brought personally into court. In this respect the statutes authorizing the court to determine who shall have the custody of children in an action for divorce differ from habeas corpus. In a habeas-corpus proceeding the form of writ specified by the Code, § 50-106, commands the production of the body of the person alleged to be illegally detained. No such writ is required in an action for divorce where the custody of the children is one of - the matters to be passed on by the trial judge. While the particular question presented by this contention does not appear to have been passed upon previously by this court, it has been decided in other jurisdictions, in the cases viz.: Mollring
v.
Mollring,
In paragraph 9 of the petition, after naming Lois Moody and William Moody, minor children, it is alleged that the plaintiff “sues in this action for the custody and control of said children,” and she prays “that the custody of the two minor children be awarded to petitioner.” The order and rule nisi issued by the-judge for the interlocutory hearing provided that the defendant be served with a copy of the petition and order. Thus the defendant was apprised that the custody of both minor children was contemplated as a part of the subject-matter of the interlocutory hearing. The contention of the plaintiff in error that the pleadings did not authorize any award of the custody of the minor, Lois Moody, is without merit.
Another contention is made, that the hearing was without the county on interlocutory hearing, and that the court was without authority to make any final award of the custody of the children. Interpreting this assignment of error as an attack solely on the premise assumed by the plaintiff in error, that the award was final, we examine that part of the order relating to the custody of
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the children, to determine if it was a final award or simply a temporary disposition of the children. The applicable portion of said order reads: “It is further ordered that the custody of both minor children, to wit: Lois Moody and William Moody, be and they are awarded to the plaintiff, Mary Moody, and their custody is by this order placed in her.” An almost identical order was passed on by the court in
Cason
v.
Cason,
158
Ga.
395, 401 (
The plaintiff in error insists that there was pending before the ordinary of Habersham County, at the time the present suit for divorce, alimony, attorney’s fees, custody of children, and injunction was filed and pending in Habersham superior court, a habeascorpus suit between the same parties, undisposed of, which gave to the ordinary exclusive jurisdiction of the minor Lois Moody, and that neither the superior court of Habersham County nor Honorable T. S. Candler, Judge thereof, had any jurisdiction of the said minor, so as to make any award of her custody or allowance of alimony. In
Duke
v.
Duke,
181
Ga.
21 (3) (
The next contention is that at the time the present suit was
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filed and the interlocutory order entered another suit between the parties, for divorce, alimony, attorney’s fees, and custody of the children was pending, and that because of a certificate of the clerk of court, introduced in evidence at the interlocutory hearing, showing that the said former suit had not been disposed of, the pendency of the former suit operated to prevent the judge from making an award of the custody of the minor child, Lois Moody, or making any allowance of temporary alimony. The pendency of a former suit for the same cause of action, between the same parties, in any court that has jurisdiction, constitutes a good cause of abatement, provided the first action is not so defective as to prevent a recovery therein. Code, § 3-607;
Atlanta, Knoxville & Northern Railway Co.
v.
Wilson,
119
Ga.
781 (
The contention of the plaintiff in error that the award of the custody of the children, attorney’s fees, and temporary alimony is without evidence to support it, and that the amount awarded as temporary alimony is excessive under the evidence, should be examined under certain well-established principles of law. ' Pending a libel for divorce the judge in the exercise of a sound discretion may, as between the parties, temporarily award custody of the children.
Cason
v.
Cason,
supra; Code, §§ 30-127, 30-206. An award of temporary alimony, attorney’s fees, and custody of the children, although made on conflicting evidence, will not be disturbed where it does not appear that the discretion of the trial court was abused.
Kelly
v.
Kelly,
146
Ga.
362 (
The evidence authorized the judge to award temporary alimony, attorney’s fees, and custody of the children pending the litigation, and there was no abuse of his discretion in so doing. Under *705 the evidence the sum of $12 per month awarded for temporary alimony was not excessive.
Judgment affirmed.
