Petition for a writ of prohibition to restrain the respondent court and the judge thereof from further proceeding with the hearing of an application for the modification of an order granting alimony to the divorced wife of petitioner. The final decree, made April 16, 1919, directed the defendant, petitioner here, to “pay plaintiff [his wife] the sum of $50.00 per month alimony for the support and maintenance of herself and said minor child [of the parties], Irma Pauline Tolle, and that he pay the same monthly in advance on the 15th day of each month until said minor child, Irma Pauline Tolle, reaches the age of eighteen years”. Irma was then sixteen years of age, and reached the age of eighteen years in February, 1921.
It is not disputed that petitioner complied with the terms of the order and paid the sum of $50 per month until the minor reached the designated “age of eighteen years”, and is nowise in default. Seventeen years after the payments of alimony ceased, the divorced wife has moved the superior court to modify the decree of divorce and “make a further, different or additional order” requiring petitioner to pay her for “her support and maintenance the sum of $400 per month from and after the date of the modification”. (Italics added.) Petitioner, contending that he has fully performed the terms of the decree of 1921, moved the court to dismiss the application of his former wife. The motion was denied, *97 and petitioner seeks by prohibition to restrain the court from proceeding with hearing the application.
Petitioner's contention that he has fully complied with the requirements of the decree that he pay alimony is supported by the authorities. Our decision in
McClure
v.
McClure,
4 Cal. (2d) 356 [
There is no express answer to this question, but impliedly there is. The order provided for the payment “until said minor child reaches the age of eighteen years ’ ’. The effect of this order was to fix a period as definitely as though payment-had been ordered from the date of the decree to and including the 4th day of February, 1921. The use of the word “until” determines the question. It is a restrictive word—a word of limitation. Its use in the order before us meant, and can only mean, that the payment of the alimony continued to the date of the minor’s eighteenth birthday.
{State
v.
Kehoe,
The contention that prohibition is not the proper remedy in this case is answered by the fact that this petitioner appeared in the trial court in answer to the order to show cause, and objected to the making of any order therein on the ground that the court was without jurisdiction in the' matter.
Two authorities strongly relied on by the respondents may be distinguished as not applicable to the cause here, for the orders there under consideration were not made after the judgments providing for alimony had been fully executed, as in this case. In
Smith
v.
Superior Court,
Let a writ of prohibition issue as prayed for, restraining the respondent court from proceeding further in the matter of the application for modification of the order providing for alimony.
Edmonds, J., Curtis, J., Langdon, J., Shenk, J., and Seawell, J., concurred.
