Plаintiff and appellant procured an interlocutory decree of divorce from respondent’s intestate in 1925 and the final decree was entered in 1926. The court awarded her $50 per month alimony. Only $55 was paid by the decedent to appellant and after his dеath in 1945 she sued his administrator for the accrued balance amounting to $11,850.
The court found thаt the claim to all instalments which accrued over.five years before the intestatе’s death was barred by limitation and the correctness of this adjudication is not questioned. Thе court further found that appellant was remarried on August 28, 1937, and that by reason of such remarriage the obligation of the decedent to pay alimony was terminated on that dаte. This finding of the court was based on an amendment to section 139, Civil Code, in 1933 which added the following language to that section: “Upon the remarriage of the wife, the husband shall no longer be obligated to provide for her support . . ..”
Appellant contends: 1. That this statute is not self-executing and did not automatically release the decedent from the оbligation of the judgment; and 2. That if so construed the amendment is unconstitutional as impairing her vеsted rights embodied in the judgment.
A bare reading of the language of the amendment is sufficient answer to the first contention. It is couched in mandatory language, calls for no court aсtion to make it effective and provides explicitly that.the husband “shall no longer be obligated” to provide support for a divorced wife after her remarriage. The only question is as to the constitutional power of the Legislature to provide for the аutomatic termination upon the divorced wife’s remarriage of the éontinuing obligation to pay alimony imposed on a divorced husband by *845 a judgment entered before the enаctment of the statute providing for such termination.
Appellant relies on the rule that thе plaintiff has a vested right in instalments of alimony already accrued.
(Keck
v.
Keck,
By express provision of section 139 as it read when the divorce decrees in this case were entered in 1925 and 1926 there was no vested right in instalments not yet accrued, that section then providing as it still does that “the court may, from time to time, modify its orders in these respects.” This provision constitutes a statutory reservation of the power of modification, including termination, of the provisions for future alimony instalments in all decrees of divorce entered in the courts of California.
(McClure
v.
McClure,
The аmendment to section 139, Civil Code, operates prospectively, from the date оf remarriage, only upon instalments of alimony not yet accrued at that time. It therefore cannot be said to deprive the divorced wife of any right which has already vestеd in her by virtue of the decree. The case is controlled by
Rosher
v.
Superior Court,
Judgment affirmed.
Goodell, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 13, 1949, and appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied September 12, 1949.
