An appeal from a judgment ordering that a certain divorce judgment and decree rendered in the State of Nevada be entered as a foreign judgment with the same force and effect as if it had been granted by the Superior Court of the State of California, and that plaintiff herein be given judgment against defendant in the sum of $4,103, together with interest.
Chronologically the facts are as follows: On May 17, 1930, in San Francisco, Maybelle M. Morrow and George W. Morrow, at that time wife and husband, madе an agreement for immediate separation whereby the wife obtained certain real and personal property, declared therein to be her separate property, and it was provided that all other property in the possession of, or thereafter acquired by, the husband, should be his sole and separate property. No other provision was made for maintenance or support of the wife, but it was agreed that the contract would not bar her in any future divorce action from claiming support money or alimony; and that the extent of such right should be determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.
In April, 1931, the husband having in the meantime become a bona fide resident of the State of Nevada, the same parties agreed in writing upon monthly payments of $75 by the husband for the support and maintenance of the wife, and $25 for their child. The wife waived any greater amount for a period of one year, and the husband agreed to pay any additional amount that should, after such period, be awarded by any court of competent jurisdiction. The agreement refers to the previous property settlement by designation and date and provides: “This agreement shall not modify the hereinbefore mentioned agreement of May 17th, 1930, save and except in the particular hereinabove set forth.”
*477 On the date of this second agreement, April 17, 1931, the parties entered into a stipulation, which was filed in a divorce proceeding in Nevada, providing that the custody of their child be given the mother; that $25 a month be paid by the husband for the child’s support and maintenance, and that $75 a month be paid to the wife as and for alimony.' The husband also agreed to pay the defendant wife’s costs and attorney’s fee. The wife stipulated that the trial should be had and final judgment entered on motion of the husband without further notice to her.
In the divorce action, heard on the same date, a decree in favor of the husband was granted, which refеrs to the stipulation on file, also to the property settlement of May 17, 1930, which was approved and adopted as a complete and full settlement of all property rights of the parties. While no mention was made therein of the agreement of April 17, 1931, which was not introduced in evidence, the terms of the decree are in accordance with the property settlement, the subsequent agreement and the stipulation.
The complaint in the present actiоn, filed by the wife in the State of California, is in two counts. The first count alleges: ‘ ‘ That at the time hereinafter mentioned the District Court of the Third Judicial District, County of Eureka, State of Nevada, was a court of general jurisdiction, duly created and organized under and by virtue of the laws and Constitution of the State of Nevada”; that defendant husband received a decree of divorce from plaintiff which provided for the payment of $75 a month as alimony for the wife; that the decree is still in full force and effect; that no part of the judgment awarded has been paid except the sum of $892, and that there is due the sum of $5,108, with interest. The second count alleges that on the 17th day of April, 1931, the husband and wife entered into a property settlement agreement providing for the payment of $75 a month for the wife's maintenance and support. Plaintiff prayed for judgment in the sum of $5,108, together with interest and costs, and for such other and further relief as the court might deem proper.
At the outsеt it is proper to state that, independent of the Nevada decree, the judgment, so far as it applies to the alleged property settlement agreement set forth in the second cause of action may not be affirmed, being predicated
*478
upon the agreement of April 17, 1931, which is not in fact a property settlement, but a mere agreement that for one year $75 a month will be accepted by the wife as maintenance and support, subsequent to which period she shall not be barred or prevented from asking any court of competent jurisdiction to increase the amount.
(Fitch
v.
Tyler,
Respondent contends that the two documents should be read together; that the second is a modification of the first. As above noted, the second specifically provides that its terms shall not modify the agreement of May 17, 1930, except in the matter of the monthly payments for support and maintenance, for which there was no provision in the first agreement. There was no duty imposed upon the husband, before the second agreement was signed, to support the wife. Respondent contends that the promise to forbear asking any amount in excess of the $75 a month for one year was a valid consideration for the second agreement. However, the agreement provides that a court, of competent jurisdiction may increase the amount. The court could in fact decrease the amount, thus taking from the wife any practical advantage she might have obtained under the terms of the second agreement. The record discloses that the decree of divorce was signed on the same day that the agreement was made. Obviously the agreement was not made as a modification of the property settlement, but as an instrument reciting the intention of the parties in anticipation of the divorce decree. The trial court in its discretion could adopt or reject the terms of the agreement as to maintenance. The wife at any time could have withdrawn her promise to forbear and become entitled to a larger amount within the year had a court of competent jurisdiction so decreed. Under these circumstances we fail to find a good consideration, and the second cause of action must fall. The Nevada court did not have jurisdiction to pass upon the contractual rights of the parties except in connection with matters specifically referred *479 to in the agreement of May, 1930, which is not the basis of the second cause of action.
We will now consider the judgment as based upon the 'first cause of action, namely, the statutory power of the court to make an order for support, maintenance or alimony.
(Ross
v.
Ross,
1 Cal. (2d) 368 [
To summarize, California allows alimony in a suitable amount by way of compensation for a wrong done to the wife. (Cal. Civ. Code, sec. 139;
Ex parte Spencer,
The cases principally relied upon by appellant
(Marrs
v.
Superior Court, supra, Armstrong
v.
Armstrong,
We desire to call attentiоn to an additional reason why the Nevada decree should be recognized in California or any other state. The general rule is that jurisdiction may not be conferred by stipulation of the parties made in open court or filed in a proceeding.
(Marrs
v.
Superior Court, supra.)
This rule seems to have been modified under the circumstances stated in
Miller
v.
Superior Court,
9 Cal. (2d) 733 [
Providing the court independently has jurisdiction over the proceedings, we fail to find any good reason why a husband, who sought the entry of a decree and allowed it to become final, should thereafter in another jurisdiction be permitted to defeat the judgment. The theory of one-sided guilt in divorce actions does not always accord with reality. The fault is usually divided and the respective position of. the parties as plaintiff or defendant may sometimes be determined by the chivalrous attitude of the husband or sometimes by sentimental or religious reasons of the wife, which induces him or her to adopt a passive role in the dissolution of the marriage. The failure of the wife to press a defense or a cross-complaint may be in reliance upon an understanding that the decree will provide for her support. When that understanding is in the form of a signed stipulation, filed in the proceeding, and the court otherwise has jurisdiction, the husband should be and in this instance is estopped from attacking the judgment except in the absence of a clearly expressed intent or a legal obstacle to the contrary. The amount may be the subject of revision to meet changed circumstances; if legally flexible, courts should grant relief, but not declare that portion of the decree invalid unless it is void as contra bonos mores. This last question as applicable to the instant case may be considered immediately.
The stipulation was not obtained by the wife through fraud. It did not tend to interfere with the real, substantial status of their marriage contract as the parties were already separated.
*483
They occupied the position of husband and wife in name only. It did not facilitate the divorce any more than the numerous valid property settlements which the courts of this state have recognized and approved. In fact, it was nothing more than a written statement made by the husband and presented to the court that he consented to pay to the wife the sum of $75 a month. Under all the circumstances, we cannot say that the signing of the stipulation by the wife was against public policy. This case is entirely different from
Pereira
v.
Pereira,
The jurisdiction of the State of Nevada having been established, the judgment rendered therein and presented in this state for the determination of its regularity and validity is to be settled by the laws of Nevada. “The judicial proceedings of a state are not susceptible of control or limitation by other states to the extent to which contracts are. A contract made in one state, to be pеrformed in another, whose public policy it contravenes, need not be enforced by its courts; but the law of another state or judgment of its courts stands upon a higher footing. The courts of one state cannot refuse to respect the decision of the courts of another state because it is founded upon a law which does not obtain in the former state. A judgment of a sister state is entitled to respect and full faith and credit in other states, however different the law might be. ...” (15 R. C. L., p. 916.) (See, also, 4 A. L. R 968; 10 A. L. R 716; 24 A. L. R 1434] ; 15 Cal. Jur. 240;
Bruton
v.
Tearle,
7 Cal. (2d) 48 [
*485
We may now consider the subject specifically under another phase, namely, estoppel. “As a general rule, however, one may be estopped by an agreement or stipulation made in a judicial proceeding. . . . The case for estoppel by stipulation is greatly strengthened, of course, where the stipulation has been acted upon and the adverse party would be injured if it were not given effect.” (19 Am. Jur., pp. 715, 716;
Helpling
v.
Helpling,
The last point urged by appellant is that the complaint in its allegations is merely one for a money judgment and does not allege in the body or mention in the prayer that plаintiff sought to have the Nevada decree entered as a California judgment. The statement is correct. Though the prayer may be imperfectly or incompletely framed, if the allegations of the complaint are sufficient, the court in some instances, where the prayer contains the stereotyped phrase
*486
“such other and further relief as the court may deem proper”, may render a judgment beyond the specific relief requested. But, not so, if the allegаtions of the complaint do not raise an issue that justifies such finding and judgment. The present judgment provides that it “be entered herein as a foreign judgment, with the same force and effect as if said Decree and Judgment had been granted in this Court. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that plaintiff herein be given judgment against said defendant herein in the sum of Four Thousand One Hundred Three ($4,103.00) Dollars, together with interest thereon from the date hereof at the rate of seven percent (7%) per annum.” Respondent seeks to justify the first part of thе judgment, that is, its entry as a continuing judgment in California, upon the theory that the word “issue”, as used in Code of Civil Procedure section 590, “is broader than the complaint where the answer enlarges the same by introducing new matter”
(McAllister
v.
Union Indemnity Co., 2
Cal. (2d) 457 [
That part of the decree based upon the first cause of action and founded upon the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution, giving judgment for arrearages due under the Nevada decree, is affirmed; that part of the judgment which purports to establish in this state the Nevada judgment as a continuing judgment is reversed.
Peters, P. J., and Knight, J., concurred.
A petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on October 17, 1940.
