This is an appeal by a debtor, Richard Comer, arising from the judgment of the bankruptcy court. The bankruptcy court determined that a judgment debt which Elaine Comer, Richard Comer’s former wife, had obtained in the state courts was nondischargeable, pursuant to 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5), 1 and excluded Richard’s evidence attacking the validity and extent of his obligation to Elaine as irrelevant to its determination of dischargeability. We affirm.
FACTS
Richard Comer and Elaine Comer are former husband and wife. In 1967, while residents of New York, they executed a marital separation agreement calling for weekly alimony and child support. In 1973, Richard Comer, having moved to California, obtained an interlocutory judgment of dissolution of the marriage in the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, California. In 1979, Elaine sued Richard in the New York State Supreme Court for breach of the original marital separation agreement executed in 1967. Richard was duly served in the action but failed to appear, and Elaine obtained a default judgment. About two months later, Elaine obtained a sister state money judgment in the Superior Court of Santa Clara County, California based upon the New York default judgment. Richard moved to vacate the sister state judgment on various grounds, including his contention that: (1) the New York Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction; (2) the default judgment was obtained through fraud; (3) the New York court failed to credit him for amounts paid; and (4) the California interlocutory order of dissolution of marriage was res judicata.
In 1980 the California Superior Court denied Richard’s motion to vacate the judgment and specifically found that the New York court had jurisdiction over him and that Elaine had properly obtained the New York default judgment. That decision has not been appealed.
In 1981, about two months after Richard filed his Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition, Elaine filed a complaint to determine the dischargeability of the judgment debt and to terminate the stay of execution in the bankruptcy proceedings. Richard tried to introduce evidence attacking the validity and extent of his obligation to Elaine, including much of the same evidence he had previously offered in his motion to vacate the sister state judgment. The bankruptcy court held that the judgment debt was non-dischargeable and that Richard’s evidence was inadmissible as irrelevant to the bankruptcy proceedings.
Subsequently, Richard moved to amend the judgment of the bankruptcy court and the findings of fact therein. He presented much the same evidence as he had earlier offered to attack the validity and extent of his obligation to Elaine, and admitted that he owed her about $8,000 in spousal and child support. The bankruptcy court denied Richard’s motion to amend.
Richard appealed to the United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel of the Ninth Circuit,
*739 On appeal before this court, Richard contends that the bankruptcy court erred in not admitting his evidence and in not looking behind the default judgment to determine the actual amount of his obligation to Elaine.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court, as an appellate court, is in as good a position as the bankruptcy appellate panel to review the findings of the bankruptcy court. In re
Mistura, Inc.,
ANALYSIS
Bankruptcy courts recognize and apply the basic principles of
res judicata
in determining the effect to be given in bankruptcy proceedings to judgments rendered in other forums. IB J. Moore, J. Lucas, and T. Currier,
Moore’s Federal Practice
¶ 0.419 (3.-6), at 672 (2d ed. 1983). Richard argues that this case falls within the exception to this general rule created by the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brown v. Felsen,
The issue before the Supreme Court in Brown v. Felsen, supra, was whether a bankruptcy court could consider evidence extrinsic to the judgment and record of a prior state collection suit when determining whether a debt previously reduced to judgment was dischargeable under 11 U.S.C. § 35, the predecessor to 11 U.S.C. § 523. The state court suit was settled by a stipulation, and neither the stipulation nor the resulting judgment indicated the cause of action on which the bankrupt’s liability was based. Brown sought to establish that Fel-sen’s judgment debt to him was nondis-chargeable since the debt was allegedly the product of the bankrupt’s fraud, deceit, and malicious conversion and so came within the discharge provisions of the Bankruptcy Act. The bankrupt argued that the prior state court proceeding did not result in a finding of fraud, and contended that res judicata barred relitigation of the nature of his debt to Brown.
The Supreme Court refused to allow the principle of
res judicata
to bar the bankruptcy court from looking beyond the state court judgment to determine whether the debt came within one of the exceptions to discharge. The
Brown
Court noted that applying
res judicata
would force a consolidation of claims in the state court which would “undercut a statutory policy of resolving § 17 questions in bankruptcy court, and would force state courts to decide these questions at a stage when they are not directly in issue and neither party has a full incentive to litigate them.”
Brown,
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Brown,
this court determined that the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court precluded the bankruptcy judge from relying exclusively on prior state court proceedings when determining dischargeability.
In re Houtman,
The main concern of both the Supreme Court in Brown and of this court in Houtman was to preserve the exclusive jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court to determine dischargeability. Res judicata should not be applied to bar a claim by a party in bankruptcy proceedings, nor should a bankruptcy judge rely solely on state court judgments when determining the nature of a debt for purposes of dischargeability, if doing so would prohibit the bankruptcy court from exercising its exclusive jurisdiction to determine dischargeability. In the present case, applying res judicata to bar the bankruptcy court from looking behind the default judgment to determine the actual amount of the obligation would not preclude the exercise of the bankruptcy court’s exclusive jurisdiction to determine the nature of the subject debt for purposes of dischargeability.
The evidence Richard sought to have admitted attacked the extent of his obligation to Elaine, not the nature of that debt, and was thus irrelevant to the bankruptcy court’s determination of dischargeability. Richard conceded that the nature of the debt is one of child and spousal support, and the bankruptcy court determined that the debt arose in connection with a separation agreement. Such a debt clearly falls within an exception to discharge. 11 U.S.C. § 523(a)(5). Richard had offered the same evidence before the California Superior Court to attack the extent of his obligation, and that court decided the issues which that evidence raised adversely to him. Since Richard never appealed the decision of that court, it must be taken as final. See 4 B. Witkin, California Procedure, § 163, p. 3307 (2d ed. 1971).
Applying res judicata to bar Richard’s evidence does not fall within the Brown exception barring the application of res ju-dicata, since that evidence had no relevancy to the bankruptcy court’s determination of the nature of the debt. Failing to apply res judicata under these circumstances would allow a bankrupt who has had full incentive to litigate, and who has fully litigated, an issue in state court — an issue which has no relevancy to the nature of a debt for purposes of dischargeability — to have that same issue relitigated in the bankruptcy courts. The application of res judicata in a case such as this would not hinder the bankruptcy judge from determining discharge-ability, but instead would stimulate vexatious litigation. The bankruptcy judge properly refused to admit Richard’s evidence attacking the extent of his obligation to Elaine because it was irrelevant to his determination of dischargeability, and because res judicata barred the bankruptcy court from looking behind the default judgment to determine the actual amount of the obligation.
The bankruptcy court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. 11 U.S.C. §'523(a)(5) provides, in part, that an individual is not discharged from any debt: to a spouse, former spouse, or child of the debtor, for alimony to, maintenance for, or support of such spouse or child in connection with a separation agreement, divorce decree, or property settlement agreement ....
. Discharge provisions substantially similar to section 17 of the Bankruptcy Act appear in section 523 of the new law. 11 U.S.C. § 523.
