"It is further ordered that the exclusive care, custody and control of the minor child of the parties hereto, namely, Sherry Jean Engle, a daughter, of the approximate age of 2 1/2 years, be, and it hereby is, awarded to plaintiff, with the defendant to have the right to see and visit with said minor child at all reasonable times. The court hereby expressly reserves and retains jurisdiction over the said minor child and may alter, change or modify this order in connection therewith at any time between the date hereof and the arrival of said child at the age of majority."
A motion made by the plaintiff for an order of the court changing and modifying the said decree to provide that said defendant pay to her a reasonable amount of money, to be used by her for the care, support and education of said minor child, came on for hearing on the 10th day of September 1945. The motion was denied by the court on the ground that the decree did not reserve and retain jurisdiction in the court to modify it so as to provide for the support of said minor child, and more than six months had expired from the date of the decree. Hence this appeal by the plaintiff. We will continue to refer to the parties as plaintiff and defendant.
District court rule XLV, which the latter asserted on the hearing of the motion deprived the court of jurisdiction, reads:
"No judgment, order, or other judicial act or proceeding, shall be vacated, amended, modified, or corrected by the court or judge rendering, making, or ordering the same, unless the party desiring such vacation, amendment, modification, or correction shall give notice to the adverse party of a motion therefor, within six months after such judgment was rendered, order made, or action or proceeding taken."
Plaintiff contends (a) that if no reservation had been *Page 100 made in the divorce decree to provide for the support of the child by defendant, the court nevertheless had jurisdiction to so amend it at any time during the minority of the child, and (b) if the court was not so empowered the reservation in the decree concerning the child must be construed as one including child support.
1-3. As to the first branch of the contention, the rule is well established to the contrary. Sweeney v. Sweeney,
The order of the court denying plaintiff's motion for an order changing and modifying the decree so as to *Page 101 provide that said defendant pay her a reasonable amount of money to be used by her for the care, support and education of said minor child, is reversed and the case is remanded to the lower court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
