The respondent herein moves to dismiss the appeal taken in this case on the ground that appellant has received partial satisfaction of an award made to her of certain community property in an interlocutory judgment of divorce which was granted to her because of respondent’s extreme cruelty.
*625 The appeal is from (1) the portion of the judgment awarding certain community property to the respondent; (2) the order of the court denying a new trial to appellant; and (3) an order nunc pro tunc reducing the award for attorney’s fees as set forth in the judgment from $750 to $400.
The general rule that a voluntary acceptance of the benefits of a judgment is a bar to the prosecution of an appeal therefrom “has no application where the benefits accepted are such that appellant is admittedly entitled to them or would not be affected or put in jeopardy by the appeal.”
(Schubert
v.
Reich,
It follows that the motion to dismiss the appeal from the judgment and from the order nunc pro tunc reducing the award for attorney’s fees must be and it is denied, but that the appeal from the order denying a new trial must be and it is dismissed for the reason that no appeal lies from such an order.
White, P. J., and Drapeau, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied March 21, 1951.
