Triola v. Triola

787 S.E.2d 206, 299 Ga. 220, 2016 WL 3144369, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 6, 2016
DocketS16F0336
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 787 S.E.2d 206 (Triola v. Triola) 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.

Bluebook
Triola v. Triola, 787 S.E.2d 206, 299 Ga. 220, 2016 WL 3144369, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 413 (Ga. 2016).

Opinion

Thompson, Chief Justice.

In this divorce action, appellant Joseph Trióla (husband) was ordered to pay appellee Janet Trióla (wife) temporary alimony, and the final judgment, in part, ordered husband to pay wife an $18,000 arrearage owed under the temporary alimony award. We granted husband’s application for discretionary appeal to consider whether the award of temporary alimony, as well as the arrearage provision in the final decree, must be reversed because the first temporary alimony order was made by a judge who entered the award after the effective date of his resignation and the second temporary alimony order, identical to the first, was made by a successor judge who did not conduct an independent review of the evidence before entering the award. We conclude that, under these circumstances, both the award of temporary alimony and the $ 18,000 arrearage provision of the final judgment must be reversed.

The facts in this case, largely undisputed by the parties, are as follows: husband and wife were originally divorced in 2006 by entry of a final judgment and decree of divorce signed by Judge Kenneth Nix. After wife’s subsequently filed motion to set aside the 2006 judgment was granted, she filed a petition for temporary alimony pursuant to OCGA § 19-6-3. Judge Nix held an evidentiary hearing on wife’s motion in September 2010 at which both parties presented evidence and testified at length regarding wife’s need for support, husband’s ability to pay, and allegations of adultery which husband claimed precluded an alimony award. See OCGA § 19-6-1 (b) (precluding moving party from receiving alimony if it is established by a preponderance of the evidence that the separation of the parties is caused by moving party’s adultery); OCGA § 19-6-1 (c) (authorizing alimony in accordance with the needs of the moving party and the ability of the other party to pay); OCGA § 19-6-3 (authorizing award of temporary alimony and identifying factors to be considered in making such award).

On October 4, 2010, before ruling on the motion for temporary alimony, Judge Nix resigned. Two days later, after the effective date of his resignation, Judge Nix signed an order awarding wife temporary alimony of $3,600 per month. Husband moved to set aside Judge Nix’s temporary order, but his motion was denied on October 20, 2010, by Judge Reuben Green, who had assumed responsibility for Judge Nix’s caseload. On the same day, without holding a new hearing, Judge Green entered a temporary alimony order that awarded wife temporary alimony of $3,600 per month.

*221 After a bench trial, a final judgment was entered granting wife permanent alimony of $3,000 per month for 120 months. As previously stated, the final judgment also ordered husband to pay wife an $18,000 arrearage owed under the October 20, 2010 temporary alimony order. On appeal from the final judgment, this Court reversed and remanded to the trial court because the trial court failed to hold a hearing on husband’s motion for new trial. See Triola v. Triola, 292 Ga. 808 (741 SE2d 650) (2013). Husband’s motion for new trial was denied on remand after a hearing, and in December 2014, this Court granted husband’s timely filed application for discretionary appeal, explaining that the Court was particularly concerned with whether Judge Green committed error when he entered his temporary alimony order, an issue relevant in this appeal because of the directive in the final judgment that husband pay the $18,000 arrearage.

1. Husband contends the trial court erred by ordering him to pay the $18,000 arrearage because the first temporary alimony order was issued by Judge Nix who, on the date it was signed, was no longer a sitting superior court judge, and the second temporary order was entered by Judge Green, a judge who did not hear the evidence offered by the parties pertaining to wife’s motion. Wife, in contrast, urges us to uphold Judge Nix’s temporary order by concluding that it “related back” to the September evidentiary hearing over which he presided. Alternatively, she argues that due to the nature of temporary alimony, Judge Green was not required to conduct an independent review of the evidence before ruling, and even if such review was required, we should assume he relied on the record in making his findings and conclusions.

It is beyond all reasonable dispute that Judge Nix had no authority to sign the October 6, 2010 temporary order after the effective date of his resignation and that temporary order was void and of no legal effect. See OCGA § 9-12-16 (judgment void for any cause “is a mere nullity”); Brand v. City of Lawrenceville, 127 Ga. 237, 237 (55 SE 967) (1906) (trial judge has no authority after he or she goes out of office, by resignation or otherwise, to sign writ of error); Grace v. Gordon, 113 Ga. 88, 90 (38 SE 404) (1901) (concluding that judge had no authority, after expiration of term of office, to sign bill of exceptions). It is likewise beyond reasonable dispute that Judge Green, as the successor judge, was authorized to award temporary alimony to either party as long as the litigation was pending. See OCGA § 19-6-3 (a) (providing that in a pending action for divorce, either party may apply to presiding judge for an order granting temporary alimony); Brown v. Brown, 224 Ga. 90, 91 (160 SE2d 343) (1968) (whether to grant or refuse temporary alimony is a question for the court). The question before us relates then not to a trial court’s general authority *222 to award temporary alimony but to the process required when, in a civil action, the order of a predecessor judge who heard the evidence on a party’s motion for temporary alimony is deemed void and a successor judge is called upon to rule on the same motion.

We have found no Georgia case or procedural rule specifically addressing a successor judge’s authority to make findings of fact and conclusions of law under similar circumstances, and the parties have pointed us to none. However, OCGA § 19-6-3 (a) explicitly requires a trial court in considering whether to grant temporary alimony to hear “both parties and the evidence as to all the circumstances of the parties and as to the fact of marriage[.]” Id. See Fried v. Fried, 210 Ga. 457, 459-460 (80 SE2d 796) (1954) (“In arriving at the proper order [on a motion for temporary alimony], the court is under the duty to consider the peculiar necessities of the [moving party] growing out of the pending litigation[.]”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
787 S.E.2d 206, 299 Ga. 220, 2016 WL 3144369, 2016 Ga. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triola-v-triola-ga-2016.