Plaintiff appeals from a “supplemental” judgment in the sum of $11,300 as the amount “due, owing and unpaid to her [defendant] from the plaintiff for alimony, support and maintenance in accordance with the terms of the final decree of divorce herein ... to June 1, 1938, . . . and that execution issue out of this court in aid of the collection of said judgment”.
Plaintiff and defendant were married June 4, 1912, and seрarated November 1, 1918. On the following day, they entered into a contract, in the preamble of which they declared that they “now are living separate and apart and expect in the future to live separate and apart and are desirous of settling their obligations to each other growing out of their marriage relation and for the purpose of avoiding all litigation and contention, both present and future as regards their marriage obligations . . . and to adjust the same amicably and finally as between themselves ’ ’. By the covenants of the contract, plaintiff agreed to pay defendant $100 on the first day of every month thereafter “for the support and maintenance” of defendant. By other provisions plaintiff obligated himself to pay his wife the sum of $500 six months later and to keep his life insured in thе sum of $5,000 in her favor. It was further agreed that in the event either party should institute an action for divorce “this contract and the *211 provisions hereof shall be confirmed by such court” whereby the court should by its orders and decrees in such action require plaintiff to do and perform all of his obligations as set forth in said contract. In the event of such court action, plaintiff would allow and pay forthwith to defendant upon the commencement of such action the sum of $150 at attorney fees and such additional sums as the court might order him to pay to defendant, together with the sum of $25 and such additional sums thereafter as the court might direct for costs and expenses to enable the wife to prosecute or defend such action. The contract contained mutual releases of the parties upon any property then owned or thereafter to be acquired except as specifically provided in the agreement.
Thereafter, on or about the 19th day of August, 1921, plaintiff instituted his action for divorce in the Superior Court of San Diego County alleging that “wilfully and without cause, defendant deserted and abandoned the plaintiff against his will and without his consent” and attached said contract as an exhibit. In his complaint, plaintiff requested “that this court should . . . require said plaintiff ... to comply with and to perform each and all of the terms of said contract to be performed by him in accordance with the terms therein ...”
On September 3, 1921, the court awarded the husband an interlocutory decree of divorce which recited the contract аnd ordered “that said property settlement agreement and each and all of the terms and covenants thereof be, and the same are, by the court, confirmed” and “that said plaintiff . . . be and he is hereby ordered and required and directed to comply with each and all of the terms and covenants thereof”. Said decree proceeded then to order the plaintiff to pay $100 per month for and during the term of defendant’s natural life and to keep said life insurance in her favor in the sum of $5,000 in force and adjudged that in the event said insurance in said sum shall fail at the time of the death of plaintiff, then defendant shall be entitled to receive from the estate of plaintiff in lieu of such insurance the sum of $5,000. Thereafter on the 8th day of September, 1922, the final deсree was entered containing in substance all that was embodied in said interlocutory decree.
Plaintiff ceased making the payments after the expiration of some years following the execution of the contract.
*212
In his brief, he says that on April 3, 1929, after proper notice, he moved said superior court for a modification of said final decree with respect to said monthly payments. It is now claimed that at the hearing of said motion defendant made objection to any alteration of the decree on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction to do so because of the fact that the payments therein provided were fixed by the parties themselves in said contract. The court properly declined to amend the provisions of said final decree with respect to said payments for the reason that it had “neither authority nor jurisdiction to change the decree”.
(Ettlinger
v.
Ettlinger,
3 Cal. (2d) 172 [
Plaintiff sets forth in his brief that on October 20, 1931, defendant moved said court for an order- requiring plaintiff to show cause why he should not be held in contempt for his refusal to make said monthly payments as provided by said decree. An order was issued, returnable Nоvember 9, 1931, to which hearing plaintiff objected on the ground that the judgment was not an ordinary judgment for support and maintenance but that it was based upon the contract of the parties and therefore was not such judgment as would justify contempt proceedings for its enforcement, while defendant contended that the judgment should be classified as a judgment for alimony. After overruling plaintiff’s said objection, the court adjourned proceedings to December 14, 1931. In the interim, plaintiff filed his petition in the Supreme Court for a writ of prohibition to prohibit said superior court from hearing said motion. No return to said petition was filed. The petition was disposed of as a default by issuing the peremptory writ.
Thereafter, on the 4th day of August, 1937, plaintiff was adjudged a bankrupt. Defendant filed her сlaim in the bankruptcy proceeding setting forth that under said final decree there was unpaid “alimony” as of November 29,1937, amounting to $10,300 and in the schedules of the bankrupt plaintiff listed his liability to defendant as a debt of $10,300 “the amount due under the property settlement contract ... reduced to and contained in a final decree of divorce”.
On January 5, 1938, plaintiff received his discharge. On May 10th defendant, after proper notice, applied to the court for an order for judgment “covering the accrued alimony, support and maintenance moneys due and owing”. At the *213 hearing she presented an affidavit reciting that the amount due her “as and for alimony, support and maintenance” under said agreement and final decree aggregated $11,000. Plaintiff’s answer therеto was his discharge in bankruptcy and that by virtue of the discharge he was released from all obligations under said contract and final decree. On June 25, 1938, over objection of plaintiff, the superior "court made the order from which this appeal is taken.
Plaintiff now contends as follows: (1) that the provisions for monthly payments contained in the final decree are not a judgment for alimony or support and maintenance but that it is based solely upon the contract between the parties; (2) that defendant is estopped now to assert that the final decree is of the nature of a judgment for support and maintenance for the reason that she had contended at various stages of the litigation that the judgment was based upon the property settlemеnt contract; and (3) res judicata in that the issuance of the writ of prohibition by the Supreme Court was a determination that the order for said monthly payments was not for support money.
The contention that the monthly payments of $10,0 were not “support money” cannot be maintained. That defendant was entitled to be supported by plaintiff was conceded by plaintiff himself when he executed the contract for separate maintenance immediately following the separation. That contract contains no provision that defendant was entitled to money for any reason other than plaintiff’s obligation arising from the marital status. They had intermarried more than six years prior to the separation. Upon their marriage they constituted a social unit. Plaintiff’s obligation to support defendant arose immediately out of such unity and that obligation was to continue as long as they both should live. By the contract he relieved the court of the task of determining the extent and amount of defendant’s support. Having thereby settled that question as between them, there being no children, and their terms having been confirmed by the court, the final decree determined that plaintiff should pay the money specified for the support and maintenance of defendant. This was a final adjudication of plaintiff’s obligation to defendant arising out of the marriage and memoralized by their contract.
That the defendant was to have no further claims against plaintiff’s earning power or upon his estate at his *214 death other than those contained in the decree, was a substantial consideration passing to the plaintiff for his promise to make the payments mentioned in the contract. Moreover, not only did plaintiff promise to make the payments to defendant during her natural life but he requested that the court make an order requiring him to perform the terms and provisions of his contract. In view of the foregoing, we find no reason for holding that the order for the monthly payments contained in the final decree was not an order for the payment of support money, and was, therefore, not discharge-able in bankruptcy.
The fact that the judgment of divorce is one that may by suit be enforced against plaintiff even in another jurisdiction
(Lynde
v.
Lynde,
No question is raised against the propositiоn that a husband and wife may contract with regard to their properties. It is equally well settled that where monthly payments are to be made for the ‘‘support and maintenance” of the wife, such provision constitutes an integral element of their adjustment of their respective obligation and when approved by the court it “becomes immune from subsequent modification”. (Ettlinger v. Ettlinger, supra.) Neither is it any thе less a judgment for alimoixy because the court’s order does not so designate it. It is shown to be for that purpose in reciting the language of the contract “for the support and maintenance” of defendant, and in approving the “agreement as to amounts and time of payment. . . . The court was therefore without jurisdiction to thereafter modify its provisions.” (Ibid.)
The Tropp case,
Tropp
v.
Tropp,
Plaintiff suggests that he obtained the decree by reason of the “fault” of his wife. He cites a number of authorities to^the effect that it is beyond the power of the court to compel the payment of alimony to the guilty spouse.
(Lampson
v.
Lampson,
The contract indicates that there was ho property, community, commingled or otherwise, which might explain the promise of plaintiff to make the monthly payments. The modest sums which are provided by the contract and which are the basis of the “supplemental” judgment could have *217 been intended for no purpose other than defendant’s “support”. But even if she had been at fault, the decree specifically provides for Tier support and maintenance by plaintiff. It was clearly then within the jurisdiction of the court to confirm thе contract upon plaintiff’s request.
Defendant is not estopped to contend that the judgment for money in the final decree is for her support and maintenance. By filing her judgment as a claim in the bankruptcy proceedings, plaintiff was not acting inconsistently with her present claim. The order of the court could be complied with only by the payment of money and was enforceable only in the event plaintiff had money or other valuable property. In distributing the assets of the bankrupt estate there is no reason why plaintiff’s obligation to his wife should not have been treated as fairly as any other obligation owed by him. If the parties had never been separated she might have withheld from the trustee a home and all of those chattels that are exempted for the benefit of a man’s family. (Civ. Code, sec. 690; 4th Remington, 3d ed., 739; 7th Remington, 5th ed., 825.)
In presenting a claim she made no pretenses that the superior court had not ordered plaintiff to make payments as he had consented should be done. Furthermore, by filing such claim, plaintiff suffered no prejudice. Her act indicated a desire on her part to cooperate with plaintiff as she hаd done with rare patience in allowing him to become in arrears to an amount in excess of $10,000. If we reckon the merits of the parties upon the basis of a “change of front” we might observe that the only radical departure from a position formerly taken is that of plaintiff. When he applied to the superior court for a reduction of the amounts of his monthly payments, he thereby acknowledged the judgment to be for the support of his wife and that he was subject to the order of the court in the performance of such obligations imposed by the judgment. That order to support his wife was made necessary by the nature of his obligation to support her, which in turn was the basis of the provisions of the Civil Code. (Secs. 136, 137, 137.5, 159.) These statutes were legislative authority for the court’s confirming the contract, ordering its performance and thereafter enforcing it.
The third point presented by plaintiff, although he terms it estoppel, is in fact a plea of res judicata or that the *218 order of the Supreme Court in granting a writ of prohibition against the superior court determined “the law of the case”. That writ was issued upon the application of plaintiff at a time when defendant was seeking to enforce her judgment by contempt proceedings. It was brought by plaintiff not against defendant, but against the superior court. For reasons not appearing, no answer was filed to plaintiff’s petition for said writ. It thus appears that said petition for a writ of prohibition was decided as a default. No pleading presented the claims of defendant. Hence, plaintiff’s verified petition, we must assume, on its face stated ground for the issuance of the writ. In order for a decision of an appellate court to be res judicata, it must be final and the action must have been between the same parties as those who appeared in the trial court. (50 C. J. 712.) It is not suggested that the superior court and defendant are in effect identical or that they are in privity. In order for such decision to become the law of the case, it must have been a decision on appeal upon the identical issues tried before the court below. Had the merits of defendant’s cause been pleaded, it is not unlikely that a different result would have followed the hearing. In his petition to the Supreme Court plaintiff failed to allege that the final decree followed the contract and provided for ‘ ‘ the support and maintenance ’ ’ of defendant.
The “judgment” is affirmed.
Wood, J., and McComb, J., concurred.
Subsequent to the filing of the above opinion, the court made the following order:
Stipulation having been filed on the 9th day of August, 1940, that the above-entitled action might be submitted on the briefs, and it appearing that respondent departed this life on the 7th day of October, 1940, prior to the submission and decision herein,
It is ordered that the submission of said cause and the filing of the opinion be dated
nunc pro tunc
as of October 5, 1940.
(Estate of Randall,
