On July 12, 1967, the ten-year old female plaintiff and her father filed this bill in equity against the Ladies Professional Golf Association (LPGA), its officers and tournament director, and Pleasant Valley, Inc. and an officer. Prayers are, among others, for temporary orders restraining the defendants from preventing her from registering to play in the LPGA tournament at the Pleasant Valley course beginning on July 13, 1967. The restraining orders were denied on the day of filing.
On July 14, 1967, the plaintiffs filed a motion to dismiss their suit without prejudice. On July 17 a judge in the Superior Court allowed the motion with prejudice and with costs of $43.75. On July 21 the defendants moved that the decree be amended by increasing costs to $120 and by adding an order to pay $200 for counsel fees to each of the seven defendants, a total of $1,400. On July 26 a so called “interlocutory” decree was entered allowing the motion. From this, described as a “final” decree, the plaintiffs appealed on August 15.
*247An appeal on August 15 from a final decree of July 17 was too late. G. L. c. 214, § 19. That decree was a definite dismissal of the cause with a stated amount of costs. “Apart from the correction of some purely clerical error, no change in a final decree can be made after it has been entered.” Enterprises, Inc. v. Cardinale, 331 Mass. 244, 246. The so called “interlocutory” decree of July 26, 1967, allowing the defendants' “motion to amend decree dismissing the bill,” was not a correction of a purely clerical error. No error was shown in the original amount of costs or in the omission of counsel fees. Neither is this situation within the statement in Godard v. Babson-Dow Mfg. Co. 319 Mass. 345, 350: “A court has power by a supplementary decree to alter the details of performance or enforcement of even a final decree.” The alteration attempted by the July 26 decree is a nullity. It should be expunged and the plaintiffs ’ appeal along with it. Wilde v. Wilde, 350 Mass. 333, 335.
In reaching our conclusion we make no intimation as to the correctness, instead of denying the motion for leave to dismiss without prejudice, of converting it into a dismissal with prejudice (see Shea v. Lexington, 290 Mass. 361, 373-374); or as to the propriety of allowing any counsel fees at all. See Chartrand v. Riley, ante, 242.
The final decree of July 17, 1967, is affirmed. The so called “interlocutory” decree of July 26, 1967, and the appeal therefrom are expunged.
So ordered.