So, do you think your "
chart" states it more plainly when it makes no differentiation between "
passive" and "
active" appreciation? Or where it fails to cite any legal authority in support of its self proclaimed state-wide-statistical findings?
And yes I am very well aware that New Mexico is a community property state. Also to my awareness there are no reported decisions out of your state.
However, the matter of resolving the character of the enhanced value of a spouse's separate property for purposes of allocation in a divorce proceeding is not confined to community property states! And hours upon hours could be spent collating, analyzing and comparing the decisions across the country. All which could result in finding such diversity in opinions as in Texas which has adopted the "
inception-of-title-rule" described as follows:
". . . .
separate asset brought into the marriage remains exclusively separate property, even if community funds or labor enhance its value . . . " (See:
The Partnership Theory of Marriage: A Borrowed Solution Fails, 68 Tex. L. Rev. 689)
Or New Jersey and other jurisdictions under which the appreciation of a separate or immune asset is equitably distributed provided it is caused by direct or indirect marital contribution.
And notably that the efforts of a non-owning spouse as a homemaker and caretaker of children is an indirect contribution entitling that spouse to an equitable distribution of an enhanced business asset. (Article: "Allocating Active and Passive Appreciation of a Separate Business Asset for Equitable Distribution" by David M. Wildstein -
www.wilentz.com/files/articlesandpublicationsfilefiles/42/article...
Or vague and inconclusive as from the Arizona Supreme where it speaks of profits from separate property and appreciation of separate property; fails to define what it means by "
both factors" and what is meant by "
capital investment itself" as in
Cockrill vs. Cockrill, 601 Pac2nd 1334:
"We now depart from the all or nothing approach and announce the rule that the increase in the value of separate property during marriage should be apportioned between the separate property of the owner and the community property of the spouses. Profit or increase in value of property may result either from the capital investment itself, or from the labor, skill and industry of one or both spouses or from both the investment of separate property and the labor and skill of the parties. Where both factors (?) contribute to the increase in value of a business, that increase should be apportioned between separate and community property. "
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So in sum, unless you can point to some controlling precedent you will just have to take your chances with a New Mexico family court.
And here we haven't even touched on the question of the burden of proof, have no knowledge of the nature of the asset and can only presume that your definition of "
passive" will stand up under judicial scrutiny.
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