There is no merit in the contention of the appellant that the complaint was subject to be dismissed because no process as prescribed by the Civil Practice Act was attached to the original complaint and served therewith upon the defendant. The complaint in this case is clearly and unmistakably a petition for a habeas corpus brought by the father of a minor child against thе mother. The order attached to the complaint and signed by the trial judge, while not exactly conforming to the form of writ prescribed by
Code
§ 50-106, was substantially a writ of habeas corpus in that it required the defendant to produce the body of the minor child involved before the court within 20 days from the date of the order and to show cause, if any she had, why the custody of the said minor child should not be taken from her and givеn to the petitioner. This court expressly approved the use of a rule nisi in lieu of the summons prescribed by
Code
§ 81A-104 in
Lowery v. Adams,
The purpose of process and service is to bring the dеfendant into court.
Branch v. Mechanics’ Bank,
One ground of appellant’s enumeration of errors complains; because the court, as appellant contends, dismissed a peace warrant and an abandonment warrant taken out by the defendant against the plaintiff. While it appears from the reporter’s transcript of the hearing that a colloquy between the court and counsel concerning a peace warrant and an abandonment warrant was had, no written order dismissing the warrants appears in the record nor do the warrants themselves appeаr in the record. The superior court is a court of record and what the judge orally declares is no judgment until the same has been reduced to writing and entered as such.
Pulliam v. Jenkins,
The remaining grounds of enumerated error may all be considered together. In substance, appellant contends that the court tried the case on the basis of the fitness of the parties to* have custody of the child rather than on the issue of change in conditions affecting the welfare of the child; that the court erred in admitting certain testimony and excluding other testimony; and, that the court abused its discretion in entering the order and judgment changing the custody of the minor child from the mother to the father because, as аppellant contends, the evidence fails to show any material or substantial change in conditions or circumstances affecting the welfare of the child.
At the commencement of the hеaring, a colloquy ensued between court and counsel. Counsel for the appellant at the conclusion of the colloquy said, “As I understand this proceeding, it is strictly limited in testimony to anything concerning change of conditions. Am I right?”, to which the judge replied, “Yes, sir. Now the court might make this observation. At this point the court is now going to determine the fitness of the parties.”
*695
Also, at other times during the trial of the case the trial judge indicated by his remarks that the question for his decision was the fitness of the mother. None of these remarks necessarily shows, however, that the case was tried or decided by the trial judge оn an erroneous theory of law. Of course, under the principle of res judicata an award made in a divorce decree granting custody of the child, or children, of the parents to one of them is prima facie evidence of the legal right of that parent to have such custody.
Hammond v. Hammond,
The evidence in this case, while in conflict on virtually all material points, when viewed so as to uphold the judgment rather than defeat it, was clearly sufficient to authorize the trial court to find that there had been such a change in the circumstances surrounding the child while in the custody of the defendant that
*696
the best interest and welfare of the child would be served by changing the custody to the father. There was evidence that, the mother had more or less systematically and regularly attempted to hinder and thwart the father in the exercise of his visitation rights granted under the former decree, and that, on at least one occasion, without notice to the plaintiff, she had' taken the child оut of the State at a time when the plaintiff was entitled to visit with the child under the terms of the former-decree, thus rendering the visit impossible. This- alone would authorize a modification of such decree.
Barlow v. Barlow,
It follows upоn application of the foregoing rules of law to-the evidence in this case that the trial judge did not abuse his-discretion in modifying the previous custody order and in awarding custody to the father. It is not apparent that the court proceeded upon an erroneous legal theory. In cases of this nature-where the evidence is heard before the judge alone and without the intervention оf a jury, and where the principal considération is the welfare of the child involved, the proceeding is not to be governed by strict rules applicable to ordinary trials.
Simmons v. Georgia Iron &c. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
