marriedwithfear
Junior Member
Probably the best written answer I've seen on the topic. I couldn't find anything setting a legal precedent in California. Yes, I couldn't find anything, but I'm a layman though.For openers Florida is an equitable division state whereas yours is community property state.
Secondly the decision in Mathers v. Brown is governed by a Florida statute that defines a marital asset as: "the enhancement in value and appreciation of nonmarital assets resulting . . . . from the efforts of either party during the marriage . . . " (F. S. Section 61.0785 (6) (b).
California does not have a comparable statute. There the statute simply states that a spouse's separate property includes the rents, issues and profits from that that spouse's separate property.
Also, I'll bet you were unable to find a California court decision treating with the appreciated value of a spouse's separate stock portfolio.
Furthermore, and taking for granted that the community estate does include active appreciation of a spouses separate property, the facts in the Mathers case provide perhaps stronger evidence of the title holder's labor and skill contributing to that increased value than in your instance. As it wasn't so much the number of trades of the husband's portfolio, but the variety of the investments and different species, foreign stocks, money markets, etc., that influenced the decision in Mathers. Plus, the husband conceded that his active and skillful efforts in managing the portfolio largely contributed to its appreciation. (Notable that increase was awarded 64% to the husband.)
Additionally, under Florida law once the appreciation in value was established, it become the burden of the husband to prove that it was due to market conditions alone. This he failed to do and it was so found by the trial court and affirmed on the appeal.
Also as far as I know there is a dearth of California decisions on this issue. And I recall reading such in a rather exhaustive treatise sometime back. Perhaps someone in here can lead us to a specific case in California. Until persuaded otherwise I lean towards placing the burden of proof on the non titled spouse.
Lastly with regard to the S&P index. Any discussion of the index in Mathers is pure dictum because it was not a factor in the decision. Other than that the husband was unable to connect his constantantly evolving folio with it or any recognized dependable such index.
Does that mean that when filing taxes and paying the tax liability, a separate return should do? My understanding it doesn't transmute separate property.
Also, it sounds like that unless written to do so, separate property generally cannot be transmuted to community property?
Last edited: