Plаintiff-wife appeals from order dismissing her motion for modification of interlocutory decree of *809 divorce with respect to alimony provisions. The ruling plainly was based upon want of jurisdiction.
The decree granted a divorce to each party and provided: “The defendant and cross-complainant is further hereby Ordered and directed to pay to plaintiff the sum of $150.00 per month by way of alimony, payable in instalments of $150.00 on the first day of each and every month for a period of three full years from and after the date of the entry of this Interlocutory Judgment. ’ ’ It was signed and filed on February 28, 1957, and entered on March 1, 1957. Defendant madе payments on said March 1, 1957, and regularly thereafter to and including January 30, 1960, 36 payments in all. On February 16, 1960, after the making of the thirty-sixth payment, plaintiff procured an order directing defendant to show cause on March 8, 1960, why the alimony provision should not be modified, because of changed circumstances, to require defendаnt to pay $150 a month for plaintiff’s support for the remainder of her lifetime. Her supporting affidavits showed dire need of such relief and seemed to presеnt a case of necessarily relying upon the county for support in the absence of such continued payments by the husband; the trial court, concluding it had no jurisdiction, dismissed the order to show cause on March 16, 1960, and plaintiff thereupon appealed.
Appellant’s position is that the full three-year period did not expire until March 1, 1960, and hence an application initiated on February 16, 1960, was timely, though noticed for March 8, 1960, beyond the three-year period. Opposing counsel makes no point of the fact that the order was not returnable before the end of the three-year period and could not do so successfully (see
Schraier
v.
Schraier,
We have concluded that appellant’s position is correct. The applicable general rule is thus stated in 47 California Jurisprudence 2d, section 11, рage 672: “It is provided by law that the time within which any act provided by law is to be done is computed by excluding the first day and including the last, unless the last is a holiday, and then it alsо is excluded. This is the general or ordinary rule for the compu *810 tation of time. Before a given case will be deemed to come within an exception, thе intention must be clearly expressed to provide a different method of computation.”
It is said in
Municipal Imp. Co.
v.
Thompson,
Scoville
v.
Anderson,
Columbia Pictures Corp.
v.
DeToth,
It thus becomes appаrent that the “three full years” of the decree now under scrutiny began on March 2, 1957, and expired on March 1, 1960, unless perchance there is something in the judgment to indicate the contrary. We find no such intimation in it. The requirement is that monthly payments be made over a period of three full years, not merely one for the making оf 36 payments. They are to start “from and after” date of entry of decree, not the date of signing or filing of same. It is doubtful that any payment was actually due on Mаrch 1, 1957, for that day should be excluded in a proper computation of the three-year period. Had entry occurred on March 2, 1957, it would be clear that the first payment would be due on the first of April and the 36th one on March 1, 1960. The fortuitous circumstance that entry of judgment occurred on March 1 rather than March 2 or some later date cannot affect the manifest intention of the court that the period for payments of alimony should be determined upon a cаlendar basis rather than the number of payments. Of course, respondent’s making of payments in advance could not shorten the period specified in the judgmеnt.
*812 At the time of filing appellant’s petition for modification there was one more payment to be made, on March 1, 1960. Unmistakably that filing was made within the three full yеars prescribed by the court.
It is settled by the authorities that in cases of alimony awarded for a specified limited period an application for modification may be made within that period and the court may grant same though nothing is said in the alimony order or judgment concerning modification or reservation of jurisdiction. On the contrary no such relief can be granted upon an application filed after that period for the court’s jurisdiction ceases with the expiration of the specified term. (See
Tolle
v.
Superior Court,
The instant application for modification having been filed within the prescribed three-year period, it was timеly and the court’s attempt to divest itself of jurisdiction was erroneous.
Order reversed and cause remanded to lower court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Fox, P. J., and Kincaid, J. pro tem., * concurred.
Notes
Assigned by Chairman of Judicial Council.
