Codorniz v. Codorniz

Decision Date28 February 1950
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
PartiesCODORNIZ v. CODORNIZ. Sac. 5935.

Brown, Ford & Cooney, Colusa, for appellant.

Rutledge & Rutledge and Ralph W. Rutledge, Colusa, for respondent.

SCHAUER, Justice.

Plaintiff appeals from an order made by the trial court upon application of defendant, reducing the monthly payments ordered to be paid by defendant to plaintiff under the terms of an interlocutory and a final decree of divorce. Plaintiff contends that the payments were ordered as 'a part of the division of the community property by the Court,' and hence were not subject to modification. We have concluded that the trial court was justified in determining that such payments were in the nature of alimony and child support and could and should be reduced, and that the order appealed from must be affirmed.

In May, 1944, plaintiff sued defendant for divorce on the ground of extreme cruelty. She alleged, among other things, that she was then earning $65 a month and in addition was receiving $140 a month from defendant for her support and that of the three minor children of the parties, and that as community property the parties were possessed of a one-third interest in a dairy business having a value of approximately $30,000. Plaintiff prayed for a decree of divorce, for custody of the three children, that defendant be ordered to pay her attorney's fees and court costs, that he also 'be ordered to pay the sum of $75.00 a month to plaintiff as alimony, and the sum of $105.00 a month for the support and maintenance of said minor children,' and for other 'fit and proper' orders. In his answer defendant denied 'that the parties are possessed of a one-third interest in the dairy * * * and * * * alleges that he is buying said interest on installment payments, most of which are yet unpaid.'

In June, 1944, plaintiff was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce on the ground of cruelty, and was also awarded custody of the three children. The testimony was not reported, and findings were waived. In June, 1945, the final decree was entered. Each of the decrees contains a provision adjudging 'That the community property of the parties hereto consisting of an equity in an undivided one-third (1/3) interest in and to * * * a dairy business (and the land upon which such business is operated 1) * * * be awarded to the Defendant, subject, however, to the following charges, restrictions and conditions:

'1. Defendant herein shall pay to Plaintiff herein the sum of One Hundred Forty Dollars ($140.00) per month, as and for the support and maintenance of Plaintiff and the minor children of the parties hereto, on the first day of each and every calendar month.

'2. Defendant herein shall furnish Plaintiff and the minor children of the parties hereto, until further order of the Court, milk and cream at Defendant's sole cost and expense.'

Defendant paid the $140 a month to plaintiff through August, 1946. He then learned that plaintiff had remarried in July, 1946, and he reduced the payments to $70 a month for September and October, 1946. In the latter month the oldest of the three children, a daughter, also married, and defendant thereafter paid only $50 a month. In November, 1947, plaintiff sought a contempt order against defendant by reason of the reduced payments, and defendant on the ground of changed circumstances applied to the court for a modification of the final decree by eliminating therefrom provisions for the support of plaintiff and of the married daughter. A consolidated hearing on the two matters was held before the same judge who had rendered the divorce decrees. At the hearing the court, over plaintiff's objection that the court was without jurisdiction to change the property and support provisions of the final decree, heard evidence concerning those issues and rendered its order modifying the divorce decrees by relieving the defendant from payments for plaintiff's support as of the date she remarried, reducing the support payments for the three children to the sum of $105 a month to the date of the marriage of the elder daughter (October 15, 1945) and to the sum of $70 a month thereafter, and releasing defendant's one-third interest in the dairy property (including the land) from 'all of the charges, restrictions and conditions' imposed thereon by the interlocutory and final decrees of divorce. This appeal by plaintiff followed.

As declared in Puckett v. Puckett (1943), 21 Cal.2d 833, 840, 136 P.2d 1, 5, 'a provision for the payment of alimony to the wife in a divorce decree, granted to the wife for the offense of the husband, may be modified by the court under appropriate circumstances. Civ.Code, sec. 139. * * * A divorce decree adjusting the property rights of the parties is not subject to modification regardless of whether or not it is based upon the agreement of the parties.' (See also Leupe v. Leupe (1942), 21 Cal.2d 145, 148, 130 P.2d 697; Adams v. Adams (1947), 29 Cal.2d 621, 625, 177 P.2d 265; Dupont v. Dupont (1935), 4 Cal.2d 227, 228, 48 P.2d 677; Ettlinger v. Ettlinger (1935), 3 Cal.2d 172, 178, 44 P.2d 540; Fields v. Fields (1949), 94 Cal.App.2d 56, 209 P.2d 977.

It has also been held that in modification proceedings the trial court has jurisdiction to determine whether the decree was based upon a property settlement agreement with payments provided as a phase of property adjustment and therefore not subject to modification or was based upon alimony or support allowance covenants and threrfore subject to modification. (See Hough v. Hough (1945), 26 Cal.2d 605, 615, 160 P.2d 15, and cases there cited; Alexander v. Alexander (1948), 88 Cal.App.2d 724, 727, 199 P.2d 348. In the Hough case this court pointed out that 'In various cases it has been assumed that the court may pass upon that issue or similar issues in such proceedings.' (26 Cal.2d 605, 160 P.2d 20.) In the same case we quoted with approval the following statement from Wallace v. Wallace (1934), 136 Cal.App. 488, 493, 29 P.2d 314, made on appeal from an order denying a motion for modification: 'Furthermore, this agreement was before the court upon the order for modification, and upon that hearing the court made the findings given above, to the effect that the payments directed to be made were not in the nature of alimony but was the balance of the sums due plaintiff under said contract of property settlement. That being a definite finding upon the issue before the court, we are bound thereby. As the court said in Atlass v. Atlass (1931), 112 Cal.App. 514, 297 P. 53, 54: 'Had the court found the provisions for support to have been in fact by way of property settlement then the said provisions could not have been disturbed * * *' There was ample evidence to support the finding in the instant case, and we must therefore accept the same as true.' (See also Weedon v. Weedon (1949), 92 Cal.App.2d 367, 207 P.2d 78; Fields v. Fields (1949) supra, 94 Cal.App.2d 56, 209 P.2d 977. It follows from the rules just stated that the trial court likewise has jurisdiction, in a proceeding such as this, to determine whether payments ordered under a decree concededly not based (at least not directly or wholly) upon a property settlement agreement were intended to be in lieu of property rights and not subject to modification, or were meant wholly or partially as alimony and child support provisions and were therefore subject to modification, and that that court's findings based upon 'ample evidence to support' such findings are likewise binding upon an appellate court.

At the hearing on the modification application here, the trial judge declared it to be his 'definite recollection that the testimony (at the divorce trial) showed that at that time the community interest in the contract of purchase of the dairy business * * * was very, very slight * * * (T)he Court remembers very distinctly that the defendant testified * * * that as far as he was concerned he was willing and did consider the equity of the community in the contract as being of practically no value and he made the offer in court that he'd be very willing to step down and out and forget about it, and if she wanted the interest in the dairy property she could have it. * * * He was willing to turn it over to her if she wanted it.' The judge further stated that 'the Court, in keeping with that proof introduced at the trial of this, case made a ruling awarding all of the interest in the community property to the defendant so as to enable him to properly comply with the Court's order for the support of the children and of the widow. * * * The testimony at the time was that the community value in the contract of the purchase * * * was practically valueless, and that was the reason the Court made the order. The proof was very very definite on that; there is no question about that.'

Both plaintiff and defendant testified at the modification hearing that at the time of the divorce 'around $3,000' had been paid toward purchase of the interest in the dairy. Defendant further stated that the full purchase price of the onethird share was $7,500, 'not a cent down. I was paying it so much a month,' and that his average income from operation of the dairy, to which he devoted his own services, was $267 monthly. Concerning testimony by plaintiff that the valuation of such share 'was said to be $10,000.00,' the court stated, 'if there had been any testimony at the time of the interlocutory decree that there was a community interest in that property of $10,000.00, the Court certainly would not have made an order awarding all of the community property to the defendant; because that was not the testimony.' At the modification hearing the parties testified further that certain other community property had been divided between them outside of the divorce suit: plaintiff had received furniture and a savings account and defendant...

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