(After stating the foregoing facts.)
The question to be determined in this case is whether the plaintiff in error, after having agreed to a decree being rendered against him, can, after the decree has been complied with by him in part, afterwards file a motion to set aside the decree on the ground that, when the defendant dismissed her answer which is in the nature of a cross-petition asking for alimony and divorce, there are no pleadings to authorize it. In the motion to set aside it is not alleged that the decree was obtained either by fraud, accident, or mistake, but the record clearly shows that the decree was in accordance with the .voluntary agreement on the part of the plaintiff and the defendant. The only contention is, on the part of the plaintiff in error, that he was to pay alimony for the benefit of his minor daughter until she was eighteen years of age, instead of the time stated in the decree, viz., when she arrived at twenty-one years of age. The plaintiff did pay the alimony until his daughter became eighteen years of age, and declined to pay thereafter for the reasons stated above. The evidence for the plaintiff, who testified for himself, and the evidence for the defendant, is conflicting on this point. Alvin L. Bichards, the attorney who represented the
In Adkins v. Bryant, 133 Ga. 465 (
Judgment affirmed.
