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Following a three-day non-jury trial, a final judgment and decree of divorce was entered for appellant husband Joel Thompson and appellee wife Heather Thompson. Husband filed timely combined motions for new trial, clarification, and reconsideration, asserting that the trial court erred in equitably dividing certain funds and personal property which he claims are non-marital assets. The parties agreed that the issues would be decided on briefs; consequently, no hearing was held on the post-judgment motions. The motions were denied in their entirety and husband filed an application for discretionary appeal. We granted review under this Court’s pilot project as a non-frivolous application for discretionary appeal from a final judgment of divorce. In denying husband’s motions, the trial court found that he had availed himself of the benefits of the final order and is thereby estopped from challenging it. On that basis, the court did not reach husband’s claims relating to the division of property. On appeal, husband asserts that the trial court erred in ruling that he has waived his right to challenge the final judgment, and he reasserts the same claims which were presented to the trial court in his post-judgment motions.

1. Until the decision in Grissom v. Grissom , 282 Ga. 267 647 SE2d 1 2007, the law in Georgia was well settled that “one who has accepted benefits such as alimony under a divorce decree is estopped from seeking to set aside that decree without first returning the benefits.” White v. White , 274 Ga. 884, 885 1 561 SE2d 801 2002. See also Smith v. Smith , 281 Ga. 204, 207 2, fn. 11 636 SE2d 519 2006; Curtis v. Curtis , 255 Ga. 288 336 SE2d 770 1985; Coley v. Coley , 128 Ga. 654, 655 1 58 SE 205 1907.1 In Grissom , however, a plurality of the Court departed from long-standing precedent and purported to overrule Curtis , supra, and other cases which adhered to the rule that “acceptance of any benefit under a final judgment and decree of divorce results in an automatic waiver of the right to appeal any aspect of that judgment.” Grissom , supra at 268 1. While Grissom attempted to create exceptions to the estoppel doctrine, it provided little guidance as to how and when such exceptions are to be applied. The result has been that trial courts and litigants are left with uncertainty as to what financial benefits of the final decree can be accepted without a resulting waiver of the right to appeal. That the decision in Grissom has created confusion is evidenced by the trial court’s order in this case. Although Grissom purported to expressly overrule Curtis , supra, the trial court nonetheless applied the Curtis estoppel doctrine concluding that Grissom merely explained the Curtis decision and refused to consider husband’s claims on motion for new trial after finding that husband accepted financial benefits of the final order.2 We now believe the better course is to reinstate a bright-line rule as articulated in Coley and its progeny including Curtis , and disapprove Grissom . Thus, we reiterate the long-standing principle that one who has accepted benefits such as spousal support or equitable division of property under a divorce decree is estopped from seeking to set aside that decree without first returning the benefits. See Smith , supra at 2. Our ruling today does not invalidate that line of cases which continue to hold that a former spouse may collect an award of child support and still repudiate a final judgment, as those benefits belong to the child. See Coley , supra at 1; Fried v. Fried , 209 Ga. 854 76 SE2d 395 1953.

 
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