Appeal by the city of Los Angeles and the board of pension commissioners of the city from a judgment ordering that a writ of mandate issue requiring the city and board to order reinstatement of Mrs. Clark’s (petitioner’s) pension rights as the widow of Edwin I. Clark; and requiring payment, from the fire and police pension fund of the city, to petitioner as such widow, amounts accrued and payable to her from February 21, 1958, to entry of the judgment; and requiring payment of a monthly pension, from said fund, from entry of the judgment until her remarriage or death.
Edwin I. Clark, who was a retired lieutenant of the police department of the city, died on January 12, 1949. A pension of $156.21 a month was paid from said pension fund to petitioner, as Clark’s widow, from January 13, 1949, until her marriage to Herman Peterson on September 20, 1952. (An additional amount of $39.05 a month was paid from the fund to petitioner for the benefit of a minor child of petitioner and Clark. That amount was paid from January 13, 1949, until January 10, 1950, when the child became 18 years of age.) Petitioner and Peterson lived together in Los Angeles County until June 15, 1956, when they separated. On May 27, 1957, petitioner commenced an action in Los Angeles County for an annulment of her marriage to Peterson.
There were two causes of action in the complaint for an annulment. In the first cause of action, it was alleged that defendant (Peterson), at the time of said marriage, falsely stated that he intended to live as husband and wife with plaintiff, and that he intended to perform all marital obligations. He refused to have marital intercourse with plaintiff and refused to live with her. About June 15, 1956, he stated that he had no intentions of performing any marital obligations,
On February 21, 1958, petitioner requested, in writing, that the Board of Pension Commissioners reinstate her pension. On April 1, 1958, the board denied her request. On June 27, 1958, petitioner filed a claim with the Los Angeles city clerk wherein she demanded the payment to her, in the future, of a pension based upon the salary attached to the rank of a lieutenant of the police department, and the payment to her of $1,200, representing a pension for six months prior to filing the claim. (She did not make a claim for the discontinued payments covering the time from her marriage to Peterson to the making of her claim; and she did not seek such payments in this mandamus proceeding.) On July 30, 1958, petitioner filed a claim with the city clerk for “the pension due me [her] in the amount of $11,000.00 in addition to the claim I [she] filed on June 27, 1958. Amount waived, pursuant to Sec. 376 of the Charter of the City of Los Angeles, $9000.00.” On November 18, 1958, the board denied the claims of petitioner.
On July 15, 1959, she filed a petition for a writ of mandate compelling the city and the board to reinstate her pension rights as the widow of Clark, and to order payment, from the fire and police fund of the city, to petitioner, as such widow, sums accrued and payable to her at the rate of $320.50 a month from January 29, 1958 (date of entry of annulment judgment), through November 30, 1958, and at the rate of $338.50
The city and the board, in a reply to the alternative writ, alleged as affirmative defenses that petitioner did not seek an annulment in good faith but did so with the intent to defraud them and to “restore herself to their pension rolls”; petitioner’s action for an annulment was barred by the provisions of section 83, subdivisions 4 and 6, of the Civil Code; petitioner’s right to be paid a pension as the widow of Clark ceased upon her marriage to Peterson; the judgment of annulment constitutes a fraud upon them and is ineffective and invalid as to them; and that petitioner failed to comply with sections 363 and 376 of the charter of the city.
The court found as follows: The annulment judgment has become final. By virtue of the annulment judgment it was judicially determined that no valid marriage ever existed between petitioner and Peterson, and therefore petitioner remains the unremarried widow of Clark. Petitioner participated in a marriage ceremony with Peterson on September 20, 1952, “but it is not true that any valid marriage ever existed between” them. Petitioner sought and obtained the annulment in good faith without any fraud or collusion as to Peterson or as to the city and board in this mandamus proceeding. The city and board have not changed their position, to their detriment, in reliance upon petitioner’s purported marriage or by the annulment of the purported marriage. The city and board herein have not been, and will not be, prejudiced by the purported marriage or by the reinstatement of petitioner’s pension benefits as requested in the proceedings. Petitioner’s action for annulment was not, and is not, barred by the provisions of section 83, subdivision 4 or 6, of the Civil Code, as to Peterson or as to the city and the board.
The judgment was that a peremptory writ of mandate should issue requiring the city and board: (1) to order reinstatement of petitioner’s pension rights “as the unremarried widow of Edwin I. Clark”; (2) to order payment, from the pension fund, to petitioner as such widow amounts accrued and payable to her from February 21, 1958, to entry of judgment; and (3) to order payment to her of a monthly pension (specified therein) from the pension fund, beginning with the date of
Appellants (city and board) contend that the trial court erred in “holding” that the judgment obtained by petitioner, annulling her marriage to Peterson, is conclusive as to.the city and board; that the court erred in deciding that petitioner’s causes of action for an annulment were not, or are not, barred by the provisions of section 83, subdivision 4 or 6, of the Civil Code; and that petitioner failed to prove that she was entitled to an annulment of her marriage to Peterson.
With respect to appellants’ contention that the court erred in “holding” that the annulment judgment was conclusive as to them, appellants argue to the effect that since they were riot parties to the annulment action and are not claiming under either of the parties to the action (Clark or Peterson), the annulment judgment is not conclusive as to appellants, and that the petitioner herein (Mrs. Clark) “must prove anew as against appellants” that her marriage to Peterson was subject to annulment. Appellants cite section 86 of the Civil Code which provides: “A judgment of nullity of marriage rendered is conclusive only as against the parties to the action and those claiming under them.” They also cite
Price
v.
Price,
In the Price case, wherein the wife had obtained a divorce, the property settlement agreement provided that the husband should pay alimony but such obligation should cease if the wife remarried. The wife married Bergstedt in Mexico, and obtained an annulment in California, and then sought to compel the former husband Price to pay alimony in accordance with their property settlement agreement. On appeal therein the court said, at page 467: “Regardless of the question of the right of the superior court in Los Angeles to render a judgment of nullity of the marriage contracted in Mexico in so far as it concerns plaintiff and Bergstedt, a question we consider unnecessary to decide, we are satisfied that the decree is not conclusive as to defendant in the present litigation, is not binding upon him and does not have the effect of obligating him to carry out the terms of the property settlement agreement. ’ ’
In the
Estate of Gosnell, supra,
Evalou Gosnell married Ira Gosnell in July 1941, and he died in July 1942. In November 1942, she married Willey in Nevada. In March 1943, she
In the Sefton case, supra, wherein the wife had obtained a divorce, a property settlement agreement which was incorporated in the decree provided that the husband should pay alimony. In that case, the wife married Marble, and thereafter obtained an annulment on the ground of fraud, and then sought to compel the former husband Sefton to pay alimony in accordance with their property settlement. On appeal therein the court said, at pages 876 and 877 : “If Mrs. Sefton’s new marriage was subject to annulment for fraud as provided for in subdivision four of section 82 of the Civil Code, or for the incapacity of her new husband ... as provided in subdivision six, or for any reason stated in subdivisions one, three "and five of that section, the marriage would be voidable only. . . . The divorced spouse, the defendant here, may never know of the circumstances which makes his former wife’s new marriage voidable. . . . After the ceremony [of the new marriage] took place he could properly assume . . . that his obligation to pay alimony had ceased. He was then entitled to recommit his assets previously chargeable to alimony to other purposes. Under such circumstances it would be improper to reinstate his alimony obligation.”
Appellant argues further that the trial court in the present case should have followed the “rule laid down” in those cases just referred to
{Price, Gosnell,
and
Sefton),
and should not have applied the rule stated in
Pearsall
v.
Folsom,
“In order to determine whether or not the Sefton case is controlling herein, one must analyze the reasoning of the California Supreme Court in arriving at its decision. The court stated [
“Immediately it is apparent that the rationale of the Sefton decision is that the innocent divorced husband had the right to rely on his wife’s holding herself out as ‘remarried,’ as otherwise his rights might be prejudiced. In the court’s view no such prejudice appears in the instant case, and for this reason the Sefton case is not in point. After all, plaintiff is an innocent party who will lose rights she otherwise would have enjoyed except for a third party’s misconduct. An exception should not be made to the California rule of ‘relation back’ so as to deprive an innocent plaintiff of Social Security benefits at least where, as here, it is clear that defendant has not been prejudiced. Plaintiff’s benefits did not arise because of divorce but because of the death of her husband, Delbert Pearsall. The payments which he made into the Social Security Fund were completed at his death and in no way can be increased. Defendant has stood ready under the Social Security
“The courts of other jurisdictions, when considering the word ‘remarriage’ as used in statutes similar to the liberally construed Social Security statutes, have reinstated benefits, and have not considered voidable marriages which have been annulled ab initio as ‘remarriages’ within the meaning of the statutes construed. [Citations.] ”
Section 183 of the Charter of the city of Los Angeles provides that whenever a member of the police department dies after retirement, an annual pension shall be paid, in equal monthly installments, to his widow during her lifetime or until she remarries.
In the present case it is to be noted that the court did not expressly state that the annulment judgment was conclusive as to appellants. It seems that there is an implication in the findings in the present case that the annulment judgment was conclusive as to appellants herein (city and board). It is to be noted, however, that the superior court file and the reporter’s transcript in the annulment case were in evidence in the trial of the present case, and that the appellants herein called Mrs. Clark as a witness (under Code Civ. Proe., § 2055) and asked her questions pertaining to the grounds or basis for the annulment. Counsel for appellants asked such questions on the theory or legal principle that, under the alleged defenses, the appellants were not bound by the annulment judgment but they could “go behind” that judgment and try to prove that there was no proper factual background for an annulment. Mrs. Clark’s testimony, in response to such questions by counsel for appellants, included statements to the effect that she never had sexual intercourse with Peterson, that he was impotent at the time of and since their marriage, that they never slept in the same room, and he said that he wanted to live alone. While counsel for appellants was proceeding to question Mrs. Clark, as such witness, the trial judge said: “For the record, before we go any further, Mr. Jones [who was attorney for Mrs. Clark and who had objected to the questions], all this testimony is on the claimed defense that the City can go behind the annulment in connection with
Appellants contend further, as above indicated, that the court erred in deciding that Mrs. Clark’s causes of action for annulment were not, or are not, barred by the statute of limitations “either as to Peterson or as to appellants.” They argue that petitioner Mrs. Clark was required to prove anew, as against appellants, that she is entitled to an annulment judgment, and they argue further that she could not make such proof because her causes of action are barred by section 83, subdivisions 4 and 6, of the Civil Code. In
Brownrigg
v.
de Frees,
In view of the above conclusions, it is not necessary to discuss other contentions on appeal.
The judgment is affirmed.
Fourt, J., and Lillie, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied January 25, 1961, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied February 21, 1961.
