On July 16, 1934, thе plaintiff and the defendant were divorced in Eeno, Nevada. The defendant then was, and still is, a practicing physician. A separation agreement, hereinafter referred to as the agreement, had been executed on July 9, and at the parties’ request it was approved by the court and incorporated in the divorce decrеe. By the terms of the agreement, jurisdiction was expressly retained by the court to modify, “as circumstances in the future may then warrant,” the provisions with regard to alimony for the plaintiff, support for the three minor children, their custody, and the defendant’s visitation rights. Actually, the decree has never been modified. The minor children have beeome of age and are not involved in the present proceeding. The plaintiff did not remarry, but the defendant did. The agreement provided that the payments for the support of the рlaintiff should cease upon her remarriage, but it did not mention remarriage by the defendant, although the divorce was absolute.
The plaintiff, now a resident of Maine, instituted this action against the defendant, a resident of Connecticut, claiming that he had not made in full the alimony payments due her under the judgment of divorce. The relief sought by her includes money
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damages and a “judgment declaring the rights and liabilities of the parties by virtue of said agreement of . . . [July] 9, 1934.” There was, of course, no claim that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in this suit any accrued arrearages of alimony which she could prove. Her right so to do was settled by eases such as
German
v.
German,
At the time the agreеment was made, alimony payments by a husband were not deductible from his income in determining the amount of his taxable income, and they were not treated as income to thе wife for purposes of determining her income tax liability.
Gould
v.
Gould,
“The intention of the parties to a contract is to be determined from the language used interpreted in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances connected with the transaction. The question is not what intention existed in the minds of the parties but what intention is expressed in the language used.”
Ives
v.
Willimantic,
In general accounting practice, net income, as applied to this casе, would ordinarily consist of the total income received by the defendant from all sources, less the legitimate expenses of realizing it, such as office expenses оr other expenses of practice. See
Gooch
v.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
In some of the assignments of error, the plaintiff sought to eliminate, as without support in the evidence, certain findings essential to the judgment. Practice Boоk § 447. This form of assignment imposed upon the defendant, the appellee, the burden of preparing a narrative of the supporting evidence, if there was any, in an aрpendix. Practice Book § 448. In fact, neither party filed any appendix. With these portions of the finding stricken, as they must be because of the lack of any appendix, there is no adequate support for the judgment, and a new trial is required on this ground alone.
Vitale
v.
Gargiulo,
Since there must be a new trial, it is unnecessary for us to consider other claims of error. In an endeavor to facilitate the final disposition of this litigation, however, we consider the plaintiff’s claim that the court should have rendered a declaratory judgmеnt. Neither in the body of the complaint nor elsewhere were there allegations setting forth what the dispute under the agreement was, nor what particular rights and liabilities the рlaintiff claimed should be adjudicated. Actually, the only part of the agreement in apparent dispute was the definition and application of the phrase “net inсome.” The plaintiff’s general claim for a declaratory judgment fell short of a proper compliance with Practice Book § 278 (b), providing that “[t]he prayer for relief shall state with precision the declaratory judgment desired.” See Practice Book, Forms Nos. 386, 388. There was no error in the court’s failure to
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render a declaratоry judgment. Furthermore, if the plaintiff obtains judgment for whatever arrearages she proves are owing to her, the questions of law would necessarily have been determined in that рroceeding and there would seem to be no need of any further relief, by way of declaratory judgment or otherwise. The court would be fully justified, on this ground, in refusing a declaratоry judgment. Practice Book § 277 (a), (b), (c); see
Holt
v.
Wissinger,
There is error, the judgment is set aside and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion the other judges concurred except Daly, C. J., who died after the cause was argued and before the opinion was adopted by the court.
