An appeal from an order modifying a final decree of divorce. The interlocutory decree, dated December 22, 1930, in favor of plaintiff husband was made and entered upon the ground of defendant wife’s extreme cruelty, an agreement theretofore made between the parties being attached to, approved and made a part of the decree except that instead of following the provision in the agreement that the mother have the custody of the minor child of the parties, with certain privileges reserved to the father of visiting him, etc., the decree gave the parents joint custody of the child.
The agreement provided that the wife should be given the household furnishings, etc.; that the husband assume certain obligations for medical and surgical services rendered, for the balance due on the purchase of a radio and for an indebtedness to a furrier, and that he be given the family automobile. The husband agreed to pay his wife $75 a month “until twelve such payments shall have been made, whereupon said payments of $75 a month shall cease.” He agreed to pay there *140 after the sum of $35 a month “until the minor child of said parties . . . shall have attained the age of majority, namely, 21 years of age, whereupon said payments shall cease.” The final decree was made and entered on December 31, 1931. With reference to the agreement and the custody of the child, the final decree follows the language of the interlocutory.
The original agreement was subsequently modified by two agreements in writing. The first, dated September 1, 1933, reduced the payment to be made to $25 a month; the second, dated May 1, 1934, referred to the first modification and provided for a further reduction to $20 a month. The modifications, as hereinafter appear, are important. The first provides: “That, whereas, on the 1st day of December, 1930 the parties hereto entered into an agreement providing for their respective property rights, rights of support and incidentally for the custody and support of their minor child . . . and it was therein provided that the second party hereto should pay the first party for the support of said child the sum of $35 per month on the first day of each and every month until said child reached the age of majority. ...” The first modification further provides that: “Said second party agrees to pay said sum of $25 per month for the support of said minor child to the said first party. ...” (Italics added.) The second modification referring specifically to the first provides for additional reduction.
A motion was made to modify the decree, on the hearing of which it was stipulated “that the minor child of the parties, Morgan H. Streeter, Jr., was inducted into the armed forces of the United States on July 30, .1943, and ever since has been and now is a member of the armed forces of the United States, and fully supported by same. ’ ’
The court found that all payments provided for in the agreement falling due after November, 1931, “are for the support of the minor child of the parties” and that the support and maintenance of the child “is fully provided for by the United States of America.” The modifying order further provided “that the said decree of divorce be and the same is modified and amended discontinuing any further payments by the plaintiff until such time as the said minor child is discharged from the armed forces of the United States of America and plaintiff is relieved from further payments for said period.”
The validity of a property settlement between spouses
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“must be determined in the light of the factual background of each case and considerations of public policy appropriate thereto.”
(Hill
v.
Hill,
A trial court is not permitted to modify an unqualified property settlement agreement, but must apply thereto the rules applicable to an ordinary judgment. In
Leupe
v.
Leupe,
In
Puckett
v.
Puckett,
There is a vast difference between a property settlement confined to the interests only of husband and wife, and an agreement wherein the rights or the support of a minor is involved. In the final analysis it is the decree in its entirety that must be the guide in determining whether a property agreement incorporated in the decree is a complete settlement of property rights and results in full satisfaction of all claims for support and maintenance. In the Puckett case,
supra,
the court further said (p. 842) : “The presence of the provision that the monthly payments are for the support and maintenance of plaintiff and the child do[es] not necessarily indicate
*143
alimony rather than a property settlement. The agreement must be taken as a whole. (See
Ettlinger
v.
Ettlinger,
There are decisions in this state holding that, regardless of a property settlement approved by the court, an order in a decree directing support for a minor child may in some instances be modified to provide for a reduction. (Civ. Code, § 138; 9 Cal.Jur., pp. 803-804, §144;
Henzgen
v.
Henzgen,
Irrespective of the facts and of judicial views expressed in some of the cases cited in the last paragraph we accept without reservation the rule stated in the Puckett decision as applicable to the facts of that case to the effect that a decree based upon an unqualified property settlement, made a part of the order of the court, directing payments in installments for an unlimited period may not be modified except in a particular affecting a child’s welfare. The amount to be paid may be increased but not reduced.
In the present cáse the court found that the payments made subsequent to the twelve of $75 each “are for the support of the minor child. ’ ’ Inferentially we conclude the court found that, separate and apart from the property settlement and the portion of the decree ordering an apportionment of property between the parties and an assumption by the husband of indebtedness, the award of $35 a month was for the maintenance of the child and was not a part of the property settlement. If the implied finding herein is substantiated by *145 the facts, then the specific holding in the Puckett case, as applied to the facts of that case, should not be followed herein. The parties there did not, as they did here, enter into a subsequent written modification of the original agreement wherein they themselves construed the meaning of the disputed provision. For that reason the decision therein is not here controlling.
The original agreement as incorporated into the decree is ambiguous. In
Johnston
v.
Landucci, 21
Cal.2d 63, 70-71 [
The husband and wife herein modified the original agreement and therein specifically stated that the $35 payment was for the support of the child. A third contract by reference to the first and second further modified the obligation by a further reduction in amount. These modifications clearly show the intent of the parties that the $35 payment was not a part of the property settlement but was for the support of the
*146
minor. An .award of alimony maintenance or support distinguished from a property settlement, is subject to modification.
(Miller
v.
Superior Court,
The contention of appellant is that the amount of $35 is a payment to the wife and not to the child. Referénce to the reduction or the reason therefor, is passed over by her as a fact “wholly immaterial and beside the point.” Under such circumstances it is not necessary to further consider this case. There appears in the record a changed condition justifying a modification. (Civ. Code, §§ 137, 138, 139;
Beal
v.
Beal,
The judgment is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Knight, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied December 30, 1944.
