Anderson v. Anderson

276 P.2d 862, 129 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1620
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 7, 1954
DocketCiv. 16142
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 276 P.2d 862 (Anderson v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Anderson, 276 P.2d 862, 129 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1620 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BRAY, J.

Defendant appeals from an “Order for Execution and Modification of Decree” (of divorce). Plaintiff appeals from certain portions of said order.

Questions Presented

I. Does a divorce decree providing alimony and support of two children, without segregation as to amount, become void when one child reaches majority?

*405 II. Did the court have power to modify the decree to reduce the support either retroactively or prospectively!

III. Did the court abuse its discretion in modifying the decree and in the amount for which it ordered execution to issue ?

IV. Was interest allowable!

V. Effect of admission of summary of defendant’s books.

Record

In 1935 a final decree of divorce was entered providing that defendant pay plaintiff for the support of herself and the two minor children, Lynwood and Walter, the sum of $120 per month. Lynwood became of age November 17, 1946, Walter, February 5, 1950. Defendant, paid the $120 monthly payments regularly until November 30, 1951. Thereafter he paid lesser amounts which, applied on the $120 monthly payments ordered, paid up to March 1, 1952, with $35 over. Defendant made no further payments. In September, 1952, plaintiff executed on defendant’s bank account. The amount received on execution, added to the previous payments, computed at $120 per month, paid up to June 1, 1952, with a $35.32 credit on the payment due June 15, 1952. In July, 1953, there was unpaid under said decree $1,524.68. Plaintiff then filed a motion for execution for that amount and asked that the decree be modified to increase the amount payable to her to $150 per month and for attorney’s fees. After a hearing, contested by defendant, the court found that $120 per month was a reasonable sum for defendant to pay plaintiff for the support of plaintiff and Walter, from November 7, 1946, the date when Lynwood became of age, to February 5, 1950, when Walter became of age, and that defendant should be required to pay said sum under the previous decree. It further found that $100 per month was a reasonable sum for plaintiff’s support alone, from February 5, 1950, ou. It then found that, figuring the amounts due under said judgment at $100 per month from February 5, 1950, instead of $120 per month as provided therein, defendant owed plaintiff to date $804.68. The court ordered execution to issue for that amount plus interest from January 1, 1953, and $250 attorney’s fees. It modified the previous decree by reducing the support to be paid plaintiff thereafter to $100 per month. Defendant appealed from the entire decree, plaintiff from those portions denying execution for the full $120 per month and reducing the order for support to $100 per month.

*406 I. Did the Decree Become Void?

Defendant claims it did when the first son reached majority, because the amounts were not apportioned in the decree as between support for the wife and each of the children. His sole authority in his brief for this proposition is Kahn v. Kahn, 123 Cal.App.2d 819 [268 P.2d 151], which, however, does-not support his contention. That was a suit in California on a decree of a sister state which, as here, ordered support payments for wife and children without segregating amounts between them. The children had become of age. The court held the decree unenforceable in this state, saying: ‘ ‘... it is clearly the established law that if a wife seeks to recover the unpaid installments on her decree from another court and the amount of her reward is the combined sum of alimony and child support and her children have obtained their majorities and the court is unable to determine the portion intended for alimony as distinguished from the part allowed for child support, then the entire award of such decree is illegal and nonenforceable. [Citation.] The judgment in suit can serve no purpose unless it he first resubmitted to the court of its origin for modification(P. 824.) (See footnote on p. 824 for additional citations.) (Emphasis added.) Thus the court held merely that a decree of a sister state is unenforceable here after the children reach majority. But it pointed out, in effect, that the decree was still valid in the state of issuance, for it could be modified there.

The position of the California courts as to unsegregated decrees for support of wife and children after majority of any of the latter is well settled. In Wilkins v. Wilkins, 95 Cal.App.2d 605 [213 P.2d 748], there appears an excellent review of the cases on the subject. The rule is that the court may modify the prior decree prospectively but may not make a modification operative on payments already accrued. But execution on the latter payments may not issue as a matter of right. ' The court has the discretion of determining under the equities of the situation whether execution should issue for all or any portion of the accrued amounts. (See also Parker v. Parker, 203 Cal. 787 [266 P. 283].) Thus, here, the court properly refused to consider the prior decree void, properly proceeded to determine whether execution should issue, and, if so, for what amount, and whether the decree should be modified prospectively.

However, the court ordered that defendant should only be required to pay “$100.00 of the $120.00 per month heretofore *407 ordered by judgment” from February 5, 1950, the date when the younger son reached majority. The effect of this action was to give defendant on the unpaid balance a credit of $20 per month for 28 months, totaling $560, out of the $120 per month which defendant had already paid. Thus, in charging defendant $100 per month between those dates the court was, in effect, modifying the judgment retroactively for that period, a power which the court did not have. “It is the settled rule that an award for alimony may be modified as to installments to become due in the future, but as to accrued installments it is final.” (Zaragoza v. Zaragoza, 48 Cal.App.2d 27, 28 [119 P.2d 162]; see Wilkins v. Wilkins, supra, 95 Cal.App.2d 605.) It was not a case of refusing execution on that amount for it had already been paid. It was a ease of attempted modification of the decree as to payments already made. The true amount for which execution should issue is $804.68 allowed by the court plus $560 erroneously credited against accrued but unpaid installments, making a total of $1,364.68. Interest, too, should be figured on this latter sum from January 1, 1953, the date fixed by the court.

II. Court’s Power.

Plaintiff contends that as defendant made no motion to reduce the monthly payments, but sought only to avoid all payments, the court had no power to modify the decree to reduce the monthly payments. The only motion before the court, says plaintiff, was her motion to

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Bluebook (online)
276 P.2d 862, 129 Cal. App. 2d 403, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-anderson-calctapp-1954.