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CALIFORNIA FAMILY LAW FOR PARALEGALS, 5th Ed.

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Title: CALIFORNIA FAMILY LAW FOR PARALEGALS, 5th Ed.


1
CALIFORNIA FAMILY LAW FOR PARALEGALS, 5th Ed.
  • Chapter Seven
  • Property Rights and Obligations

2
A. INTRODUCTION
  • Historically, the California community property
    system traces its roots back to Mexico and Spain
    and their community property law, which was first
    adopted by the State of California in 1848.
  • The California constitution (adopted in 1849)
    recognized and guaranteed the separate property
    rights of individuals and further instructed the
    legislature to devise a statutory scheme to
    define these rights and responsibilities.

3
A. INTRODUCTION
  • In the early 1950s, wives finally won the right
    to manage and control their earnings during
    marriage, and in 1975 they won the right to
    manage and control the community property as
    equals to their husbands.
  • These concepts of equal management and control
    over marital property are found in sections 1100
    et seq. of the Family Code under the heading,
    Management and Control of Marital Property.

4
B. GENERAL CONCEPTS
  • Exclusive jurisdiction over the division of
    property in the context of Family Code
    proceedings is vested in the superior court.
  • For purposes of making this determination, the
    property need not necessarily be located within
    the State of California.
  • There are generally four basic categories of
    property over which the court has jurisdiction in
    this context community property, separate
    property, quasi-community property, and
    quasi-marital property.

5
B. GENERAL CONCEPTS
  • All property acquired during the marriage by the
    parties while domiciled in this state that is not
    separate property is, by process of elimination,
    community property.
  • Property acquired before the marriage (together
    with all rents, issues and profits) is separate
    property, as are certain other items that are
    simply deemed by statute to be separate property
    by their very nature (gifts and inheritances for
    example, together with certain categories of
    personal injury damages).

6
B. GENERAL CONCEPTS
  • The term quasi-community property is used to
    describe property that would have been community
    property had it been acquired by the parties
    while they were married and domiciled in this
    state.
  • Inasmuch as this is a very mobile society, many
    people will live in one state for some period of
    time during their marriage, acquire property
    there, relocate to California, and then
    ultimately seek a divorce.

7
B. GENERAL CONCEPTS
  • Quasi-marital property refers to property
    acquired by the parties during a putative
    marriage, which would have been community or
    quasi-community property had the marriage in fact
    been valid.
  • This property is divided upon dissolution as if
    it were community property, a concept that
    generally works to the benefit of the putative
    spouse.
  • Many assets will be hybrids of one of the
    categories.
  • A house purchased prior to the marriage and paid
    for with premarital funds will, following the
    marriage (assuming payments are made on the house
    with community funds during the marriage),
    acquire community property characteristics.

8
C. PROPERTY IN GENERAL
  • The general definition of property includes the
    language everything which is capable of being
    owned.
  • Real or personal, tangible or intangible, visible
    or invisible all of this falls within the
    context of property and can thus be recognized,
    valued, and divided by the superior court.
  • See list on pages 238 and 239.

9
D. CHARACTIZATION OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • Living separate and apart is a fundamental
    requirement for a finding of post separation
    earnings and accumulations.
  • The date of separation is a discretionary,
    factual determination to be made by the trier of
    fact (i.e., the judge).
  • The determination of the date of separation is
    purely a function of case law.
  • See cases on pages 240-242.
  • The courts have stated the test for a date of
    separation to include the following basic
    factors see page 242.

10
D. CHARACTIZATION OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • The bottom line in these date of separation cases
    is that the trend of the courts is to favor later
    dates of separation.
  • Some basic rules to follow in advising clients on
    what to do to ensure a date of separation can
    thus be summed up as follows.
  • The party leaving must see page 243.

11
D. CHARACTIZATION OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • A conclusive presumption is one that cannot be
    rebutted, regardless of what the actual facts
    are.
  • A rebuttable presumption, on the other hand,
    simply shifts the burden of proof to the party
    contesting the presumption.
  • Providing the party can establish a sufficient
    basis for rebutting the presumption, however, it
    will be rebutted.
  • Most presumptions are rebuttable rather than
    conclusive due in no small part to the draconian
    nature of the conclusive presumption.

12
1. PRESUMPTIONS RE CHARACTERIZATION
  • Family Code section 760 state in pertinent part,
    that all property acquired by the parties during
    the marriage is presumed to be community
    property.
  • This can be rebutted with an affirmative showing
    that the property was not intended by the parties
    to community in nature.
  • The burden of carrying this proof is on the party
    contending that the property is not, in fact,
    community.

13
2. PROPERTY HELD IN JOINT FORM
  • The focus of Family Code section 2581 is to
    clearly establish that whenever married persons
    take title to a piece of property such that both
    of their names are jointly set forth thereon,
    then the statutory presumption will be that this
    property is community in nature and, upon
    termination of the marriage, should be divided
    between them.
  • The statute continues and indicates that this
    presumption may only be rebutted by a clear
    statement in the deed or other documentary
    evidence of title by which the property is
    acquired that the property is separate property
    and not community property, or by proof that
    the parties have made a written agreement that
    the property is separate property.

14
2. PROPERTY HELD IN JOINT FORM
  • When a joint tenant dies, the property passes to
    the other joint tenant by right of survivorship.
  • This means that the surviving joint tenant
    receives 100 percent of the property.
  • If that same property is divided upon dissolution
    or legal separation, however, each joint tenant
    only receives 50 percent since the property must
    be divided equally.

15
3. TRACING
  • In general, tracing allows the tracing party to
    rebut the general presumption of section 760 that
    property acquired during marriage is community in
    nature.
  • This is done by tracing the source of the funds
    used to acquire the property to a separate
    property source.
  • This concept of general tracing has less
    application with titled assets as these are
    controlled by section 2581.
  • If section 2581 operates to presume that an asset
    is a community asset, unless that presumption is
    rebutted in accordance with the provision of that
    section, general tracing becomes irrelevant.
  • See example on page 253.

16
4. TRANSMUTATIONS
  • This term generally describes an agreement
    between the spouses to change the status of an
    asset from either separate to community or
    community to separate.
  • It has long been recognized that the spouses are
    free to agree between each other to change the
    status of either a single asset or all of their
    assets in bulk in this manner.

17
4. TRANSMUTATIONS
  • Family Code section 852 provides in pertinent
    part, as follows A transmutation of real or
    personal property is not valid unless made in
    writing by an express declaration that is made,
    joined in, consented to, or accepted by the
    spouse whose interest in the property is
    adversely affected.

18
5. PERSONAL INJURY AWARDS
  • If the cause of action giving rise to the
    personal injury claim arose during the marriage,
    then the recovery will be community property.
  • If, however, the cause of action arose after
    either a judgment of dissolution or legal
    separation or while the parties were living
    separate from the other spouse, the recovery
    shall be characterized as the separate property
    of the injured spouse.

19
6. EARNINGS EMPLOYMENT BENEFITS
  • To the extent that these are earned during the
    marriage by one of the spouses, they constitute
    community property.
  • If someone performs services and is given
    compensation for those services, and those
    services are performed during the marriage and
    before separation, then that compensation will be
    deemed to be community property regardless of the
    form of compensation.

20
6. EARNINGS EMPLOYMENT BENEFITS
  • Retirement benefits, pensions, and deferred
    compensation packages also fall within the
    context of earnings and accumulations because
    they constitute income that is earned currently
    but paid later.
  • For purposes of the division of community
    property, income as a divisible community asset
    obtains its character as either separate or
    community not necessarily when the income is paid
    but rather when the income is earned.

21
7. GIFTS AND INHERITANCES
  • Family Code section 770 specifically mandates
    that property received by gift, bequest,
    devise, or descent constitutes separate
    property.
  • A gift, simply put, constitutes some item of
    value that is transferred by one person to
    another gratuitously and without receiving
    anything in return for the transfer.
  • An inheritance is somewhat similar to a gift,
    except that it takes place after the death of the
    donor.
  • A gift is made while the donor is living.

22
8. RENTS, INCOME, AND PROFITS
  • All forms of income produced by an asset will
    maintain the character of the assets from which
    they flow.
  • Family Code section 770 also mandates that the
    rents, issues and profits of property
    constitute separate property as well, when those
    rents, issues, and profits flow from the separate
    property of the spouses.

23
9. EDUCATION AND TRAINING
  • There is a right of reimbursement for community
    contributions made to education or training that
    substantially enhances the earning capacity of
    the professional spouse.
  • These reimbursement rights are not absolute.
  • Family Code section 2641 provides that the
    community will be reimbursed for all
    contributions to the education and training of
    the party that have substantially enhanced that
    partys earning capacity.

24
9. EDUCATION AND TRAINING
  • The question of whether the education or training
    has substantially enhanced the student spouses
    earning capacity is one of fact for the judge to
    decide.
  • Family Code section 2641 limits this
    reimbursement right by providing that such
    reimbursement will only be appropriate if the
    community has not already substantially
    benefited from the education or training.
  • In that regard, the statute further establishes a
    rebuttable presumption that the community has not
    substantially benefited from the community
    contributions to this education or training if
    they were made less than ten years before the
    commencement of the proceeding.

25
9. EDUCATION AND TRAINING
  • Family Code section 26419(b)(2) makes it clear
    that any student loans incurred during the
    marriage for the education and training of a
    party shall not be included among the liabilities
    of the community for the purpose of division but
    shall be assigned for payment by the party.
  • This essentially provides that student loans are,
    for all practical purposes, treated as the
    separate property of that spouse incurring the
    debt.

26
10. BUSINESS INTERESTS
  • The interests of a spouse (or both spouses) in an
    ongoing business are indeed property, and is also
    capable of being valued for the purposes of
    division.

27
10. BUSINESS INTERESTS
  • a) Valuation of the Business
  • The term goodwill refers to that portion of a
    business that represents the likelihood that it
    will have repeat business.
  • As a general rule, the concept of goodwill finds
    application in the context of sole
    proprietorships or business ventures in which the
    spouse who owns the goodwill owns a significant
    share of that business.

28
10. BUSINESS INTERESTS
  • b) Valuation Methods
  • The business must be valued in order for it to be
    divided or awarded in the context of the
    dissolution, and there a variety of methods.
  • The law instructs us to use the simplest
    valuation method available.
  • They include (going from most simple to most
    complex) see pages 264 and 265.

29
10. BUSINESS INTERESTS
  • c) Date of Valuation
  • Once the determination of the value of a business
    has been made, the next step is to consider the
    date at which the business will be valued.
  • As a general rule marital assets are valued as of
    the date of the trial of the dissolution action.
  • However, it is generally considered appropriate
    to value a small business, typically owned and
    operated by one person (one of the spouses), such
    as a professional practice (doctor, lawyer, etc.)
    or other small business, by using a date close to
    the date of separation as the valuation date.

30
10. BUSINESS INTERESTS
  • d) Elements of Business Valuation
  • Any business evaluation will involve that
    analysis of all of the myriad components of a
    business, the aggregate of which will constitute
    the valuation figure.
  • These items include the following see pages 266
    and 267.

31
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • a) Types of Plans
  • The concepts of deferred compensation and
    retirement benefit plans all refer to
    compensation that is earned by the employee
    currently but paid at some later date.
  • With a defined contribution plan, the ultimate
    amount of the benefits to be provided at
    retirement will not be known until the date of
    such retirement because they depend upon the
    future investment performance of the fund.
  • The benefits are simply defined by a formula for
    contribution.

32
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • With the defined benefit plan, the known variable
    is the amount of the benefit to received at
    retirement, and the required contribution over
    time is adjusted to meet that goal.
  • Under either kind of plan, the employee spouse
    typically has the option to contribute his own
    funds to the plan in addition to those funds
    being contributed by the employer.

33
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • b) Division of Retirement Benefits
  • In the Marriage of Brown, the court opens the
    door for the valuation of both vested and
    non-vested rights in employer-granted pension
    plans.
  • The court further indicated that to the extent
    that these rights are not vested and thus not
    capable of valuation with certainty, then the
    trial court is free to fashion a formula by which
    each spouse will participate in the benefits of
    the fund when (and most importantly if) those
    benefits are received by the employee spouse.
  • This has given way to a significant body of law
    focusing not only on the valuation of pension
    plans, but on their division as well.

34
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • c) Special Issues Regarding Retirement Benefits
  • 1) Disability Pay
  • Disability pay is not in fact a retirement
    benefit.
  • Rather, it is simply compensation for income that
    is lost by premature retirement that is a result
    of diminished ability to earn a living.
  • Under these circumstances, the inquiry turns upon
    when the disability occurred, and exactly for
    what the disability payments are designed to
    compensate the employee.
  • In general, disability benefits received after
    separation are the separate property of the
    recipient.

35
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • 2) Joinder
  • A joinder brings the pension plan into the
    dissolution action as a party litigant.
  • Once that happens, the pension plan becomes
    subject to the powers of the superior court.
  • If the pension plan chooses to ignore the orders
    of the superior court with respect to the manner
    in which it is to be divided, then various
    penalties and remedies will follow on behalf of
    the nonemployee spouse whose interests are
    adversely affected.

36
11. RETIREMENT BENEFITS
  • 3) Qualified Domestic Relations Order
  • A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is a
    document that requires approval from the pension
    plan administrator and the court in order to
    divide a pension plan amongst the two parties.

37
E. LIABILITY OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • Family Code sections 900 et seq. provide the
    basic rules with respect to the liability of the
    marital property for the debts of the parties.

38
1. LIABILITY OF COMMUNITY ESTATE
  • The community estate is liable for a debt
    incurred by either spouse before or during
    marriage and prior to separation, regardless of
    who has the management and control over the
    community property.
  • As such, even debts that are incurred by either
    spouse before marriage can be satisfied by the
    current community property.

39
2. LIABILITY OF SEPARATE PROPERTY
  • As a general rule, a spouses separate property
    is liable only for that spouses own debts which
    he incurs both before and during marriage.
  • That separate property is immune from liability
    for debts incurred by the other spouse either
    before or during the marriage.
  • There is separate property liability for
    necessaries of life while the parties are living
    together and also while the parties are living
    separately.

40
3. DEBT LIABILITY
  • Once a dissolution or legal separation matter has
    been concluded, the general rule is that all of
    the property that has been subject to the
    proceeding must be distributed to the spouses
    either as per the terms of a settlement agreement
    or as per the terms of a judicial decree.
  • Not only will the court distribute the assets
    equitably to the parties, but it will also
    allocate an equitable share of the community debt
    to them as well.

41
4. TORT LIABILITY
  • Family Code section 1000 establishes the
    statutory ground rules, which basically provide
    that if the tort is committed while the spouse is
    engaged in an activity for the benefit of the
    community, then the liability must first be paid
    out of community funds, and then (after the
    exhaustion of community property) from the
    separate property of the spouse who has committed
    the tort.
  • If the liability did not occur during the course
    of an activity for the benefit of the community,
    then the preference is reversed This debt must
    first be satisfied from the tortfeasors separate
    property and then, to the extent there is an
    insufficient amount of such separate property,
    the debt will be satisfied from the community
    property.

42
F. MANAGEMENT AND CONTROL
  • Family Code section 1100 through 1103 provide the
    statutory framework for defining the rights and
    obligations of spouses to each other with regard
    to the management and control over property of
    the marriage.
  • Family Code section 1100 provides that each
    spouse is given equal management and control over
    the community personal property.
  • This Code section also provides that each party
    has absolute power of disposition over the
    community estate as if that spouse was disposing
    of his own separate property.

43
G. THE DIVISION OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • 1. Dividing the Community Estate
  • The easiest and most preferable method of
    division awards certain assets to one spouse and
    certain other assets to the other spouse, and in
    so doing tries to ensure that each spouse ends up
    with assets totaling the same amount of value.
  • To the extent that one spouse ends up with a
    little more than the other spouse, then the court
    will order that spouse to make an equalizing
    payment to the other spouse so as to equal out
    the division of these assets.

44
G. THE DIVISION OF MARITAL PROPERTY
  • The court also can award assets in kind to the
    extent that they lend themselves to such
    division, i.e., shares of stock.
  • Somewhat related to an in-kind division is the
    conversion of title to a property from whatever
    its status during marriage was to tenancy in
    common.
  • The fourth method involves simply selling the
    properties and dividing the money equally.
  • The fifth method typically employed by the courts
    simply contemplates a reservation of jurisdiction
    over the issue until such time as the asset can
    be valued and divided.

45
2. DIVISION OF RETIREMENT PLAN BENEFITS
  • It is incumbent upon the trial court to determine
    the value of only the community interest in
    retirement plans.
  • As such, plan increases and contributions
    resulting from pre-marital and post-separation
    efforts of the employee spouse are not to be
    included in the calculation of the community
    value.
  • Once these values have been determined, it then
    becomes necessary for the court to actually
    divide the present value of the community
    interest so determined.

46
2. DIVISION OF RETIREMENT PLAN BENEFITS
  • Such division can take two distinct forms either
    the employee spouse cashes out the nonemployees
    interest in the plan pursuant to one lump sum
    payment of money, or the employee and nonemployee
    spouse will continue to participate in the plan
    until such time as the employee spouse is first
    eligible for retirement, at which time the
    monthly proceeds of the plan will divided between
    the parties pursuant to the ratio derived at the
    time of trial.

47
3. DIVIDING DEBTS AND LIABILITIES
  • When dividing community debts there is a
    statutory system of preference.
  • Family Code sections 2620 to 2627 establish this
    system in some detail, as follows see pages 289
    and 290.
  • Debts incurred by a spouse prior to the date of
    marriage or following the date of separation are
    confirmed to that spouse without right of offset.
  • Similarly, debts incurred by a spouse during the
    period of marriage are simply divided equally, as
    is all other community property.

48
H. SPECIAL ISSUES REGARDING MARITAL PROPERTY
  • 1. Tracing and Commingling
  • The concepts of tracing and commingling find most
    of their application when requests for
    reimbursement are being made.
  • The term commingling is simply a way of
    describing what happens when separate property
    and community property becomes so mixed together
    that a person can no longer tell one from the
    other.

49
1. TRACING AND COMMINGLING
  • This is where the concept of tracing comes in.
  • The term tracing simply describes the procedure
    employed to determine the source of these funds
    that have been so commingled.
  • To the extent that the parties can demonstrate
    either a separate or community property source
    for the funds that have been commingled then the
    spouse who contributed the separate property may
    obtain reimbursement.

50
1. TRACING AND COMMINGLING
  • Property that is commingled does not necessarily
    lose its character simply by virtue of
    commingling.
  • Of course, if funds have been so commingled that
    it is virtually impossible to trace them back to
    their source, then the entire fund will be
    presumed to be community.
  • There are two basic methods of tracing that the
    courts will use when assets have been commingled.

51
1. TRACING AND COMMINGLING
  • Direct tracing to the extent that the spouse
    claiming a separate property interest in a
    commingled asset can directly trace its
    acquisition (or a portion thereof) to a separate
    property source, then that spouse will be
    entitled to recover that separate property share
    from the community.
  • Family expense or recapitulation to the extent
    that an asset was acquired at a time when the
    community expenses had exceeded the community
    income, then (and to that extent) the balance on
    the acquisition of the asset must have been
    supplied from a separate property source.

52
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • The concept of apportionment deals with sorting
    out the separate and community aspects of any
    given asset.
  • Apportionment occurs most often in current family
    law practice in two specific situations.
  • The first involves a diversion of community
    assets for the improvement or management of a
    separate property asset, and the second situation
    arises out to mixed interests in real property,
    typically the family home.

53
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • a) Pereira and Van Camp
  • This first area in which the concept of
    apportionment has regular application is the use
    of community property assets for the improvement
    of a separate property asset with specific
    emphasis on that community property asset which
    is found in a spouses time, energy, skill,
    talent, and labor.
  • And when this valuable community asset is
    diverted (or devoted) to that spouses separate
    property asset, it becomes necessary to determine
    to what extent, if any, the community obtains an
    interest in that asset as a result of this
    diversion.
  • See example on pages 294 and 295.

54
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • The courts have developed two basic approaches to
    solving this problem, both of which were defined
    by case law.
  • These are known as the Pereira and the Van Camp
    methods, so named after the cases in which the
    methods were first devised.
  • The case of Pereira v. Pereira focused on the
    courts finding that the principal source of
    gains in that case was the skill and labor of the
    spouse.

55
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • Following the Pereira approach, the court will
    allocate a fair rate of return on the separate
    property investment and call that separate
    property.
  • Any excess in value over this amount so
    determined will, by process of elimination,
    belong to the community as arising out of the
    owner spouses labor and efforts.
  • See example on page 295.

56
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • The other approach to apportioning these mixed
    interests in this context is defined by the case
    of Van Camp v. Van Camp.
  • Under the Van Camp approach the court will
    determine how much the owner spouses effort and
    labor was worth and assign that figure to the
    community property, with the balance of the
    increase in value being characterized as separate
    property by process of elimination.
  • See example on page 296.

57
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • b) Moore/Marsden
  • The second area in which apportionment is
    commonly used concerns acquisitions of both
    separate and community property, most often with
    respect to purchases involving the family
    residence and assets purchased before the
    marriage.
  • The issue of apportionment in this context comes
    up when somebody purchases an asset before
    marriage, makes some of the payments (thus
    acquiring a slightly larger interest in the house
    before marriage), gets married, and then
    continues to make these monthly payments using
    community property funds.

58
2. APPORTIONMENT
  • In circumstances such as this, it is necessary to
    apportion the interests between separate and
    community so as to preserve the reimbursement
    rights of the respective parties.
  • An additional component necessary to a thorough
    understanding of this aspect of an apportionment
    analysis requires an understanding of the manner
    in which acquisitions on credit are paid off over
    time.
  • See examples on pages 297 to 300.

59
3. REIMBURSEMENT CLAIMS
  • In the Epstein case, the court found that it
    would be appropriate to allow the spouse making
    the post-separation contribution to be reimbursed
    for those amounts unless the spouses had agreed
    between each other that payments would not be
    reimbursed.
  • Pursuant to the Watts case, if one spouse has
    exclusive use of a community property asset
    post-separation, then the community may be
    entitled to a reimbursement on the value of that
    exclusive use between the date of separation and
    the date of trial.

60
4. QUASI-COMMUNITY AND MARITAL PROPERTY
  • Under certain circumstances the property
    accumulated by person living together as husband
    and wife can fall into two additional categories
    beyond those already discussed.
  • These categories are quasi-community and
    quasi-marital property.
  • The concept of each is essentially the same
    property which, but for the occurrence of some
    particular set of circumstances, would otherwise
    be treated as community property.
  • Family Code section 125 defines quasi-community
    property as follows see page 302.

61
4. QUASI-COMMUNITY AND MARITAL PROPERTY
  • Family Code section 2660 governs the division of
    property located outside the State of California
    (which by definition would include
    quasi-community property).
  • That section provides as follows see page 303.
  • Quasi-marital property is similar to
    quasi-community property.
  • With respect to quasi-marital property, the
    extenuating circumstance is the fact of the
    invalidity of the marriage.

62
4. QUASI-COMMUNITY AND MARITAL PROPERTY
  • This innocent spouse has been given the name
    putative spouse and the property involved, which
    would have been community property but for the
    invalidity of the marriage, is deemed to be
    quasi-marital property.
  • Family Code section 2251 addresses this
    circumstance.
  • This section provides that see page 304.
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