Collins v. Billow
This text of 592 S.E.2d 843 (Collins v. Billow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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We granted the application for discretionary appeal in this domestic case to consider whether the trial court erred in holding Wife in contempt of its previously entered child support order. Because we find that Wife made the child support payments required under such order, we reverse.
Husband and Wife were divorced in February 1996 by a final decree awarding primary custody of the parties’ two children to Husband and directing Wife to pay 23% of her annual income, or $115 per week, to Husband in child support. A year later, Husband filed a contempt action asserting Wife was $2,000 in arrears in child support payments. Wife subsequently filed a separate action to modify visitation and child support in order to provide a sum certain award rather than a percentage of income. After a consolidated hearing on the two actions, on February 27,1998, the trial court entered a single order under the contempt action case number in which it modified visitation and directed that child support be set at $140 per week. Apparently realizing that the single order was issued under the contempt case number and omitted any reference to the visitation action, counsel for the parties drafted two separate orders addressing the same issues. The orders were entered on March 10, 1998. The first order addressed the modification of visitation in Wife’s action. The second order, entered in Husband’s contempt action, vacated the February 27, 1998 order and set child support at $140 per week.
On August 28, 2001, Husband again filed a contempt action asserting that Wife owed more than $20,000 in child support because she failed to pay child support in the amount of 23% of her gross income. Wife argued that the March 10, 1998 contempt order modified the child support award and that she had paid the $140 modified amount every week since the entry of the March 1998 order.
[605]*605After a hearing at which both parties presented evidence, the court held Wife in contempt for failure to pay child support in accordance with the March 10, 1998 order. The court held that the language in that order setting child support at $140 did not constitute a modification of Wife’s child support obligation under the divorce decree but merely reflected the amount of child support then owed by Wife under the decree’s provision for payment of 23% of gross income. Wife was ordered to pay $17,194 in arrearages and weekly child support in the amount of $140. We granted Wife’s application for discretionary appeal to consider: (1) whether the language of the March 10, 1998 judgment setting child support at $140 per week erroneously modified the award of child support within a contempt proceeding; and (2) if the March 10,1998 judgment was erroneously entered, was it void, and if not, is the judgment still in effect because it was not appealed and there has been no motion to set aside the judgment. See State of Ga. v. Harrell, 260 Ga. 202 (391 SE2d 641) (1990); OCGA § 9-11-60.
1. A trial court has no authority to modify the terms of a divorce decree in a contempt proceeding. Harper v. Smith, 261 Ga. 286 (404 SE2d 120) (1991). In the present case, the divorce decree required Wife to pay weekly child support payments equal to 23% of her gross income, or $115 per week. The March 10, 1998 contempt order adjusted child support upward to $140 per week. Husband argues that the $140 award constituted 23% of Wife’s weekly gross income at the time of the contempt hearing and, thus, was simply a clarification of the child support award in the original decree. We disagree. The record reflects that 23% of Wife’s then current gross income would have required an award of $158 per week. Had the upward adjustment been a clarification of the amount of support due pursuant to the language of the original decree, Wife’s child support obligation would have been set at this greater amount. Accordingly, the March 1998 contempt order increasing Wife’s child support obligation to $140 was an improper modification of the final judgment.
2. Although we find the $140 child support award was erroneously entered, it is not void as long as it was entered by a court of competent jurisdiction. See State of Ga. v. Harrell, supra, 260 Ga. at 202. In Harrell, we held that:
[a] judgment which is erroneous but not void may be attacked only by direct appeal or by motion to set aside the judgment. [Cit.] There was no appeal and there has been no action to set aside the [previous] judgment. In fact, since more than three years have passed since the entry of that judgment, the time for setting it aside has passed. OCGA § 9-11-60 (f).
[606]*606Id. at 203. Here, the trial court uncontestedly had both subject matter and personal jurisdiction over the parties, and it is undisputed that Husband did not appeal from the March 10,1998 order. Because more than three years have passed without the filing of a motion to set aside that order, the March 10, 1998 order is still in force, and Wife’s child support obligation is limited to the $140 per week ordered by that judgment until otherwise modified in a proper proceeding. Inasmuch as Wife paid child support in the amount of $140 per week from the entry of the March 10,1998 order, we find the trial court abused its discretion in holding Wife in contempt for failing to pay more than the required amount.
Judgment reversed.
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592 S.E.2d 843, 277 Ga. 604, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 588, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-billow-ga-2004.