Motion to dismiss appeal from order refusing to amend final decree of divorce to conform to oral agreement of parties that such amendment he made. Trial judge found that the agreement was made in fact but that he had no jurisdiction to make the requested amendment, the decree having become final.
The parties were in litigation with the government over their income taxes at the time of the divorce. Both the interlocutory decree and the final provided that certain property should go to the wife subject to the government’s lien; that each party should be responsible for one-half the debt to the government up to $10,000; in the event it exceeded that amount the wife should pay the next $3,000 and the parties were to share equally any excess over $13,000; the husband to pay all penalties imposed on either or both parties. After the time for appeal from the final decree had expired it was orally agreed between the parties that each of them should negotiate and settle separately with the government and that the above mentioned portion of the divorce decree should be eliminated therefrom by stipulation. Each of them did effect a settlement of the tax claim, but the husband refused to go through with his agreement to amend the judgment, claiming through substituted counsel that he had never agreed to that. The appeal is from the order denying plaintiff’s motion to amend the judgment.
Defendant’s motion is made upon the ground that the order is not appealable. The test of appealability of an order not mentioned in section 963, Code of Civil Procedure, is stated in the cited case of
Sjoberg
v.
Hastorf,
Lande
v.
Southern Calif. Freight Lines,
The order at bar leaves the judgment intact; it neithei adds to it nor subtracts from it. Had the motion been granted the order doubtless would be appealable for it would make a material change in the obligations of the judgment. But the order actually made has no such effect and is not appealable.
The motion is granted and the appeal is dismissed.
Moore, P. J., and Pox, J., concurred.
