Plаintiff and defendant were married in 1932; on December 4, 1957, they separated and plaintiff filed suit for divorce. On June 20, 1958, they executed a property settlement agreement declaring that they thereafter intended to live separate and apart; under its provisions plaintiff was deeded the family home valued at apprоximately $18,000 and waived her right to alimony, defendant retained his business and earnings. On August 27; 1958, plaintiff was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce approving the agreement. In October 1958, the parties reconciled, resuming marital rela *57 tions, and lived together as husband and wife until October 17, 1959, when defendant told plaintiff he had on the night bеfore committed adultery. Thereafter they made various motions in the pending divorce ease. On January 14, 1960, the lower court found that the parties had become reconciled during the interlocutory period, and made its order granting plaintiff’s motion to vacate and set aside the interlocutory judgment of divorce аnd dismiss the action, and denying defendant’s motion for entry of final decree of divorce. No appeal was taken from this order and the same is now final. On December 10, 1959, plaintiff had filed a new complaint for divorce therein charging defendant with extreme cruelty and adultery, alleging certain community property—bank aсcounts, shares of stock and life insurance policies—and praying for the community property, reasonable support and attorneys’ fees. Defendant answered denying the existence of any community property and, relying upon the property settlement agreement of June 20, 1958, alleged that plaintiff had therеin waived alimony and was not entitled to further support. Based upon express findings that defendant was guilty of extreme cruelty and adultery on October 16,1959, the trial court granted plaintiff a divorce and ordered defendant to pay $150 a month alimony for a period of four years and $750 on behalf of attorneys’ fees. Defendant appeals only from that portion of the interlocutory judgment awarding alimony and attorneys’ fees.
The lower court impliedly found that the executory provision of the property settlement agreement waiving alimony had been cancelled by subsequent reconciliation leaving it free to award future support. Appellant claims that the law requires more than a reconciliation to abrogate such an agreement and that the evidence is not sufficient to show that the parties intended to cancel the same, thus the court erred in awarding support in the face of the waiver. Appellant, relying on the agreement of June 20,1958, does not seek the return of the family home but argues that it is inequitable to permit plaintiff to receive support while retaining the property.
At the outset we point out that the order of January 14, 1960, from which no appeal was taken and which is now final, established beyond contradiction here that the parties permanently rеconciled in October 1958. This was conceded by appellant’s counsel during the divorce hearing. Thus there is before this court no question concerning the fact of reconciliation.
*58
In support of his argument that a subsequent reconciliation does not cancel a property settlement agreement, appellant takes advantage of certain gratuitous statements in eases which bear little or no resemblance to the one at bar, such as in
Walsh
v.
Walsh,
It is clearly the rule that whether a property settlement agreement entered into in contemplation of separation thereafter continues in full force and effect depends upon the subsequent mutual intentions and understanding of the parties. Whether they have thereafter in fact abrogated the agreement is an issue of fact for the trial court to be determined from the facts and circumstances of each case
(Margolis
v.
Margolis,
. Apart from reconciliation and resumption of marital relations, there are other factors in the evidence pointing up the clear intent of the parties not only to permanently and fully resume all marital rights and obligations, but to restore the obligation of the right to support. According to plaintiff’s testimony, when the parties reconciled defendant moved back into the family home; without question or discussion he resumed support of plaintiff in the same manner as he had done for the past 25 years of marriage; he рaid all bills and expenses and gave plaintiff the same monies for support he had given before. Thus, it is obvious that neither party relied upon the waiver of support nor intended either to abide by it or that it should deprive her of marital support thereafter; and plaintiff having regained her marital rights, defendant having exercisеd his, and both having performed their marital obligations, the obligation of the husband to support his wife was revived.
(Morgan
v.
Morgan,
The propriety of awarding alimony in the face of a property settlement agreement waiving the same was squarely before the court in the
Morgan
and
Purdy
cases. In
Morgan
v.
Morgan,
In
Purdy
v.
Purdy,
Nor do we believe plaintiff’s retention of the family home under the executed portion of the agreement to be inequitable. Under the circumstances of the previous divorce plaintiff was willing to and did accept the family home and waive alimony, even after 25 years of mаrriage. However, an entirely “different set of circumstances” existed in the last separation resulting in divorce; not only had defendant after the reconciliation conducted himself in a manner inimical to the continuance of marital relations by frequent absences from home, intoxication and other acts, but he аdmittedly committed adultery. While plaintiff may have been willing to waive alimony under the circumstances of her first divorce, she obviously was not willing, nor could she be expected, to do so under the additional acts of extreme cruelty and adultery. Further, had she upon reconciliation reeonveyed the family home to community status, the trial court, under the proof, could well have awarded the same to her, as well as all of the community property—including bank accounts, stocks, trust deeds, et cetera (Civ. Code, § 146, subd. (a)), and in addition, alimony for the rest of her life. Instead, no doubt taking into consideration plaintiff’s retention of the family home, the trial judgе not only did not award her any of the community property but limited her alimony to four years. We find defendant to have been treated fairly, particularly in light of his personal conduct. Moreover, at no time did he complain of his wife’s retention of the property or ask for its reconveyance. In October 1958, defendant returned to live with plaintiff in the family home. They had no discussion relative to the property settlement agreement or the property which plaintiff had received under its terms, nor was its reconveyance to community ownership ever mentioned. It was only when plaintiff asked for alimony in the instant divorce proceeding that hе asserted she still had the property; even then, he relied upon the validity of the agreement in denying there was any community property, and thus could not and did not ask for either a reconveyance of the same or reimbursement therefor.
(Morgan
v.
Morgan,
In both the
Morgan
and
Purdy
cases,
supra,
the wife retained property she had acquired under the executed pоrtions of the prior agreement; in neither did this prevent the court from awarding alimony. In
Purdy
v.
Purdy,
Having held that the reconciliation operated to cancel the executory provisions of the property settlement agreement of June 20, 1958, thus reviving the obligation of the husband to support his wife and restoring her right to support, it was proper for the court upon a subsequent divorce to award alimony upon a proper showing. She tеstified extensively concerning her expenses, needs and lack of sufficient funds to cover them; and defendant’s ability to pay was established. We find no abuse of the trial court’s discretion in fixing the amount and duration of alimony and the sum for attorneys’ fees, and we will not disturb the trial court’s findings in that regard.
(McClellan
v.
McClellan,
For the foregoing reasons the judgment is affirmed.
Wood, P. J., and Fourt, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 29, 1962.
