This is аn appeal by defendant from a decree of divorce in a default action. It is taken only from the provisions which refused approval of a property settlement agreement and awarded plaintiff one dollar per month for support. The marriаge was without issue. Defendant’s contention is that these provisions were in excess of the relief sought by the amended complaint and that they were based upon implied findings which were without support in the evidence. The action was commenced September 23,1944; on October 6,1944, the parties entered into a written property settlement agreement; on October 10, 1944, plaintiff filed an amended complaint; defendant accepted service but made no appearance in the action and his default was duly entered. The original complaint alleged that there was community property of unstated value, consisting of a residence, furniture and furnishings therein, an automobile and a “community interest in the Group Diagnostic Offices.” The cause of action was for cruelty and the prayеr was for a divorce, for an award of all the community property to plaintiff except the interest in the Group Diagnostic Offices, and for temporary and permanent alimony, attorney’s fees and costs. In the amended complaint the foregoing allegations were omitted and it was alleged that the parties had entered into an agreement dispos *623 ing of their property interests and that the agreement was satisfactory to plaintiff, and the prayer was for a divorce and “that the community property settlement agreement entered into between the parties be approved and that the court make its order in accordance therewith, and for such other and further relief as the court may deem just.” Upon the trial it was proved that the parties had been marriеd for a little over eight years; that defendant had been guilty of cruelty; that a property settlement agreement had been entered into under which plaintiff had conveyed her interest in the home, the furnishings and the automobile to defendant, in consideration of $500 in cash аnd $3,000, payable at the rate of $30 per month, evidenced by defendant’s promissory note and a trust deed on the property, subject to existing encumbrances. She relinquished all other claims to property and to support. Plaintiff testified that she was working at the time of triаl as a graduate nurse; that she had been so employed during all of her married life, and that she was satisfied with the terms of the property settlement agreement. She also testified that she had some small bank accounts of her own. There was no evidence as to the value of the residence, the furniture or the automobile, and no evidence as to the amount of defendant’s earnings nor as to the age or condition of health of either of the parties. No suggestion was made to the court that the agreement was in any rеspect unreasonable or unjust to either party nor that plaintiff’s consent thereto had not been given voluntarily and advisedly. At the conclusion of the trial the cause was taken under submission. The decree contained no reference to the agreement оther than the provision “The property settlement agreement is not approved. ’ ’
The relief awarded plaintiff was in excess of that which she sought by the amended complaint; her demand for a money judgment was based upon the contract, while the judgment for supрort was predicated upon a statutory right which she did not assert. She did not pray for support, as such, nor allege facts which would have entitled her to it. Defendant having defaulted, the court could not properly award plaintiff a judgment for support. The late cаses of
Eddy
v.
Eddy
(1944),
The agreement contained the following provision: “It is hereby agreed that this agreement may be submitted to the court for apрroval in the aforesaid divorce action and shall be incorporated in any interlocutory decree of divorce rendered by such court in such proceedings, and such decree shall provide for the division of the property of the parties and рayments to wife as herein provided.” Defendant was justified in believing that plaintiff would not be granted relief which was altogether different from or in excess of that which she sought by her amended complaint. Even if there had been no property settlement agreement and thе complaint had made a demand for a specific division of the community property, without a separate prayer for support, a decree in accordance with the demands, defendant having defaulted, would have had the force of a binding cоntract.
(Franklin
v.
Franklin
(1945),
This, however, is not the only reason why the provisions of the judgment appealed from cannot be sustained. There were issues in the case which it was necessary for the court to decide and which have not been decided. The agreement purported to adjust not only the community property rights of the parties, but it also fixed and settled plaintiff’s right to receive support. By section 146 of the Civil Code it is made the duty of the court upоn dissolution of the marriage to assign the community property to the respective parties in such proportions as the court, from all of the facts of the case and the condition of the parties may deem just, if the decree is rendered upon the ground оf adultery, incurable insanity, or extreme cruelty, and equally between the parties if the decree is rendered upon any other ground. If there is no prayer for an assignment of the community property in the divorce action the court is not required to do anything about it. But if there is a prayer for the assignment or division of it, it is the duty of the court to decide how it should be divided and to render judgment accordingly. The action is not fully tried until this has been done. Furthermore, when plaintiff filed her action for divorce, her right to receive a judgment for support wаs necessarily involved. If the complaint of a wife does not pray for support or if none is awarded her by the judgment, she cannot obtain a judgment for support later. The question of her right to support by virtue of the statute must be determined in the divorce action. If the agreement which plaintiff placed in evidence was valid, she was entitled to the unpaid balance of $3,500 which she was to receive for her interest in the property and in lieu of support. She could not be given a judgment for support unless the validity of the agreemеnt had been placed in issue and it had been held invalid. The fact that the validity of the agreement was not questioned did not require the court to approve it. If the evidence had *626 disclosed facts which caused the court to question either its validity or fairness, the pаrties should have been given an opportunity to raise the issue' by proper pleadings and it should have been tried and determined. Plaintiff had sought approval of the agreement and had testified that she was satisfied with it. It stood in the way of any division of the community property and of any judgment for plaintiff’s support contrary to or inconsistent with its provisions, and the court could not properly ignore its existence. If there was no good reason for questioning the validity or fairness of the agreement and for placing that matter in issue, then therе was no good reason for refusing to approve it. In order to dispose of the matters of community property and support, the agreement had to be regarded as valid, in which case the judgment should have followed it, or it had to be found invalid and therefore inеffective to influence or control the judgment.
Plaintiff insists that it was within the discretion of the court to approve the agreement or to refuse to approve it and to give a general judgment for support, and that no abuse of discretion has been shown. There аre several answers to this contention. As already stated, the mere refusal to approve the agreement left the court in a position where the issues as to the community property and plaintiff’s right to support could not be determined. The discretion of thе court had to be exercised with due consideration for the pleadings and the undisputed facts in evidence; otherwise it would not have been the exercise of judicial discretion.
(Gossman
v.
Gossmm
(1942),
The provisions of the judgment appealed from are reversed for further proceedings in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Desmond, P. J., and Wood (Parker), J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied September 28, 1945, and respondent’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court • was denied October 25, 1945.
