In February of 1985, plaintiff Judy Faye Hammontree and defendant Johnny Mac Hammontree entered into a divorce decree in which they consented to the wife having custody of their minor child with child support of a stated amount to be paid by the husband. It appears that over time, by mutual agreement, the husband assumed primary custody of the child and adjusted his child support payments to the wife accordingly. However, in August of 1986 the wife filed, in the Superior Court of Clayton County where the divorce decree was originally entered and where she still resided, a motion for contempt against the husband for non-payment of child support. The husband responded and counterclaimed for modification of the divorce decree, requesting a change in custody. After a hearing, the court issued an order finding the parties had mutually agreed to modification of the custody agreement but awarding the wife overdue child support payments in the amount of $450. The court also awarded custody of the child to the husband. Timely notice of appeal was filed by the wife on December 9, 1986. However, a transcript of the hearing was not filed with the clerk of the trial court until April 8, 1987. On April 16, 1987 the husband filed with the trial court a motion to dismiss the appeal for the wife's failure to cause the transcript of the proceedings to be filed within thirty days as required by OCGA 5-6-42. The trial court dismissed the notice of appeal. The wife hereby appeals the dismissal of her notice of appeal (Case No. 75858) and also appeals the order granting the counterclaim for change of custody (Case No. 75857). Case No. 75858 Case No. 75857 Having determined that the wife's appeal was improperly dismissed, we now turn to the substantive grounds for her appeal of the order granting a change in custody. Reliance by the lower court upon the opinion of the Georgia Supreme Court in Buckholts v. Buckholts, 251 Ga. 58 (1) (302 SE2d 676) (1983), is misplaced. That case stands for the proposition that where one party files a petition to modify a divorce decree, then the responding party may raise the issue of the plaintiff's contempt of the original order, even if the petition for modification is brought in a different county from that issuing the original decree. Buckholts does not change the longstanding rule that when a plaintiff files nothing more than an application to hold the defendant in contempt of a divorce decree, a counterclaim seeking modification of the decree is not cognizable. Frasca v. Frasca, 254 Ga. 532 (1) (330 SE2d 889) (1985). We note that in all but one of the cases addressing this issue which were decided prior to the enactment of the Child Custody Intrastate Jurisdiction Act of 1978 (OCGA 19-9-20 through 24), one ground for holding the counterclaim for change of custody to be improper was lack of jurisdiction over the person against whom the counterclaim was brought. See McNeal v. McNeal, supra; Word v. Word, supra; Davis v. Davis, supra. Jurisdiction to bring a complaint for change of custody is not lacking in this case because the contempt proceeding was brought in the county in which the appellant wife resides. While it may seem contrary to the goal of promoting judicial economy to require a separate action to be brought in a case, such as the one now before us, where the court hearing the contempt proceeding also has jurisdiction over a change of custody proceeding, we are nevertheless constrained by the clear and unequivocal language of OCGA 19-9-23 to rule that these two issues must be brought before the court as separate actions. Accordingly, that portion of the order granting the husband's counterclaim for a change in custody is reversed. Nancy F. Lawler, for appellee. |