Mabel Stevenson, widow and executrix of the will and estate of Joseph Stevenson, plaintiff and cross-defendant in a divorce action with Helen Stevenson, has filed her petition for writs of mandate and prohibition to require the Superior Court of Sonoma County to terminate proceedings in that divorce action. Following our decision in
McClenny
v.
Superior Court
(1964)
ante,
p. 140 [
Joseph Stevenson brought an action for divorce and for a determination and division of the community property against Helen Stevenson, who answered and cross-complained, also seeking a divorce and a determination and division of the community property. On March 1, 1957, the Superior *152 Court of Sonoma County entered an interlocutory decree of divorce in favor of Helen Stevenson upon the ground of extreme cruelty. The decree expressly reserved for further proceedings determination of the community property rights of the parties. On March 3, 1958, the court entered a final divorce decree, but again reserved jurisdiction to determine the rights of the parties in the community property. On the same day Joseph married Mabel Stevenson, the present petitioner. On November 6, 1960, Joseph died; at the time of his death the court still had not divided the community property.
Helen Stevenson thereafter notified the court of Joseph’s death and moved for an order substituting Mabel Stevenson as a party to the action. Petitioner objected to the motion, contending that Joseph’s death abated the divorce action and terminated the court’s jurisdiction to divide the community property. On October 18, 1962, the court ruled that it retained jurisdiction to proceed with the action. On May 22, 1964, it issued its order determining that Helen Stevenson was entitled to approximately 75 per cent of the community property and the estate of Joseph to approximately 25 per cent.
Petitioner contends that Joseph’s death abated the divorce action and deprived respondent court of jurisdiction to award Helen more than one-half of the community property. The sole issue in this ease turns upon whether the respondent court retained jurisdiction, following Joseph’s death, to award Helen more than one-half of the community property. This case thus presents an issue substantially identical to that raised in
McClenny
v.
Superior Court
(1964)
ante,
p. 140 [
Petitioner notes, however, that the instant case differs from McClenny in that here the wrongdoer died, although in McClenny he survived the death of the innocent spouse. Petitioner contends that the right to more than one-half of *153 the community property constitutes a cause of action for punitive damages and thus dies with the wrongdoer. (See Prob. Code, § 573.)
Although petitioner cites dicta suggesting that the purpose of the rule requiring an award of over 50 per cent of the community property to the innocent party is the punishment of the guilty spouse (see, e.g.,
Arnold
v.
Arnold
(1946)
Although petitioner argues that we would now be affording to the divorce hearing “some retroactive effect on disputed fault issues” as to the disposition of the property, the husband did not in the divorce action dispute the issue of fault. In any event, the divorce court, upon the showing of the wife, did find, as the decree evidences, the fault of the husband.
Our opinion in McClenny covers the substance of the remaining points raised by petitioner.
The alternative writ is discharged and the petition for writs of mandate and prohibition is denied.
Traynor, O. J., Peters, J., Peek, J., and Mosk, J., concurred.
