On June 17, 1966, a few months after a final decree of divorce was entered in this action, plaintiff-appellant Norma Berkely went through a marriage ceremony in Duluth, Minnesota, with Joseph Pineda. About six months later appellant took a decree in a Wisconsin court annulling the purported new marriage on the ground that a prior subsisting marriage of Pineda rendered his marriage to Norma bigamous and void. Thereupon, in August of 1967, appellant moved the California court for an order determining that because the new marriage was void she was entitled to receive alimony from respondent under terms of the divorce decree. Hearing evidence that respondent had paid all alimony accrued at the time of appellant’s purported marriage to Pineda, and concluding that the Pineda marriage, though void, extinguished appellant’s right to further alimony, the court denied the motion. In this appeal Norma concedes that under Civil Code, section 139,
1
alimony would have been
*873
extinguished had the Pineda marriage been merely voidable; but citing such eases as
Sefton
v.
Sefton
(1955)
In
Sefton
v.
Sefton, supra,
*873 1. The former husband is entitled to rely upon his ex-wife ’s apparent marital status after a new marriage ceremony and should thereafter be permitted to recommit assets previously chargeable to alimony obligations.
2. The basis for the annulment proceedings will likely be known by and of concern to only the individual parties involved, and relief by way of annulment may well never be sought by the offended party.
3. Although the former husband is innocent of any wrongdoing, and the wife may be so, “it accords with the policy of the law tó look less favorably upon the more active of two innocent parties when by reason of such activity a loss is
*874 Because of the existence of section 139 of the Civil Code, decisions from other states are of only illustrative valu e most states do not have similar statutes providing for termination of alimony as a matter of law. As a result, the foreign decisions are concerned either with the effect of the annulled remarriage as a “changed circumstance” between the divorced parties or are involved in interpreting a separation agreement according to the parties’ assumed intentions.
Nevertheless, a review of these cases puts the void-voidable marriage question in perspective.
Sutton
v.
Leib
(7th Cir. 1952)
We find no persuasive reason for distinguishing between the effects upon alimony of a void and a voidable remarriage. Either constitutes a remarriage under section 139 of the Civil Code; either terminates the alimony rights of the remarried spouse.
The order denying appellant’s motion is affirmed.
Devine, P. J., and Rattigan, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied April 17, 1969. Peters, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
*873 tenance of the other party shall terminate upon the death of the obligor or. upon the remarriage of the other party. ’ ’
Civil Code, section 86:
“A
judgment of nullity of marriage rendered, is conclusive only as against the parties to the action and those elaimingunder them.” (See also Price v. Price (1938)
