Opinion
SILLS, P. J.
Introduction
Nineteen years ago, in
In re Marriage of Lucas
(1980) 27 Cal.3d 808 [166 Cal.Rptr. 853, 614 P.2d 285], our Supreme Court ruled that a wife’s contribution from a separate property trust fund to the down payment of a house bought during a marriage was forfeited to the marital community when she made the mistake of allowing title to be taken, as real estate agents typically
advise, in joint tenancy. Because the wife had no agreement that property traceable to separate property should remain separate, she lost out, at the time of divorce, on any reimbursement for her separate property contribution. (See
id.
at pp. 815-816.) The court reasoned that it was
unfair
to the Tioncontributing spouse to allow reimbursement because “[t]he act of taking title in a joint and equal ownership form is inconsistent with an intention to preserve a separate property interest.”
(Id.
at p. 815.)
Lucas,
in short, was a case in which the “title presumption” controlled the outcome.
As the high court would point out some 18 years later in
In re Marriage of Walrath
(1998) 17 Cal.4th 907 [72 Cal.Rptr.2d 856, 952 P.2d 1124], the result in
Lucas
did not sit well with the Legislature, which enacted a specific statute to undo its result. That statute — originally Civil Code section 4800.2, now Family Code section 2640 — provides for dollar-for-dollar reimbursement, but
without interest,
to a spouse who contributes separate property to the “acquisition” of community property to the extent he or she “traces the contributions to a separate property source.” (Fam. Code, § 2640, subds. (a) &
(b).)
With the enactment of the reimbursement statute, however, it becomes too easy to forget that the Legislature never intended to overturn the much older line of cases stemming from
Pereira
v.
Pereira
(1909) 156 Cal. 1 [103 P. 488]. Those cases focus on the problem of separating out the respective contributions of effort and return on capital from the value of a spouse-operated business.
In the present case, for example, one spouse started a single proprietorship business prior to marriage, but incorporated it during
the marriage. The trial court applied the reimbursement statute instead of a
Pereira
approach, reasoning that the community “acquired” the business by virtue of the incorporation, though no stock certificates were ever issued in which title somehow was transferred to the community. The spouse received reimbursement for the value of the business at the date of incorporation, but nothing by way of return on investment.
As we explain below, a community does not “acquire” a separate property business merely because it is incorporated during the marriage. Here, there was nothing to trigger the “title presumption” on which the
Lucas
decision turned and which the Legislature endeavored to correct by passing the reimbursement statute. The judgment must therefore be reversed.
Facts
Prior to his marriage to Jeanne in November 1986, Frederick W. Koester owned a sole proprietorship, Koester Electric. In October 1989 the business was incorporated. No stock was ever issued. At the conclusion of the trial of the dissolution of Jeanne and Frederick’s marriage in April 1996, the judge ruled that the incorporation of the business made the business community property because the community “acquired” the incorporated business during the marriage. The judge said, “The court rejects a
Pereira
approach because in fact there was an acquisition. There was an acquisition in 1989 when they acquired this corporation.”
The characterization of the business as community property made a big difference. The parties agreed the business was worth about $622,000. After the trial judge allowed Frederick a credit for about $337,500 — the value of the business at the time of the marriage — so he was charged with about $284,000 in community assets when the business was awarded to him.
Had the property been characterized as separate, Frederick was prepared to show that his investment had appreciated from $337,500 to $558,000, based on a 10 percent return since the marriage. (Cf.
Pereira
v.
Pereira, supra,
156 Cal. 1.) In that case Frederick would only have been charged with $64,000 in community property.
Discussion
The Facts Require Application of Pereira, Not the Reimbursement Statute
There are two reasons the trial court should have applied the classic
Pereira
analysis (i.e., award the value of the separate property at the time of marriage plus a reasonable return to represent the appreciation of separate capital, with the balance going to the community) rather than a section 2640 reimbursement approach (i.e., reimburse the spouse for separate money contributed to what is now a community asset). The first is that section 2640 was never designed to apply to separate property businesses and is inherently not applicable to businesses, at least when there is no compliance with the rigorous requirements for transmutation set forth in section 852 (requiring transmutations be made by express written declaration). The second is that the mere incorporation of a business is not a change in its character.
Section 2640 Not Applicable
It should be remembered that the original
Pereira
case involved a separate saloon and cigar business, which was “very profitable.” (See
Pereira,
v.
Pereira supra,
156 Cal. at pp. 6-7.) The trial court allocated
all
the “gains” from the business after marriage to the community, but the California Supreme Court reversed, reasoning that the “capital” of the business was “undoubtedly” the owner spouse’s separate estate and, further, “some of the profits were justly due to the capital invested.”
(Id.
at p. 7.) The high court said it was error to classify those “gains” as community property.
(Id.
at p. 8.)
By contrast with
Pereira,
what is now section 2640 arose out of the case of a
residence
which was purchased with separate property, but the title to the residence was taken in joint tenancy. Thus, as one might expect knowing the origins of the statute, published decisions involving the reimbursement statute typically arise out of conveyances or acquisitions of residences. (E.g.,
In re Marriage of Walrath, supra,
17 Cal.4th 907, 911 [husband’s separate property house deeded to himself and wife as joint tenants];
In re Marriage ofHeikes
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Opinion
SILLS, P. J.
Introduction
Nineteen years ago, in
In re Marriage of Lucas
(1980) 27 Cal.3d 808 [166 Cal.Rptr. 853, 614 P.2d 285], our Supreme Court ruled that a wife’s contribution from a separate property trust fund to the down payment of a house bought during a marriage was forfeited to the marital community when she made the mistake of allowing title to be taken, as real estate agents typically
advise, in joint tenancy. Because the wife had no agreement that property traceable to separate property should remain separate, she lost out, at the time of divorce, on any reimbursement for her separate property contribution. (See
id.
at pp. 815-816.) The court reasoned that it was
unfair
to the Tioncontributing spouse to allow reimbursement because “[t]he act of taking title in a joint and equal ownership form is inconsistent with an intention to preserve a separate property interest.”
(Id.
at p. 815.)
Lucas,
in short, was a case in which the “title presumption” controlled the outcome.
As the high court would point out some 18 years later in
In re Marriage of Walrath
(1998) 17 Cal.4th 907 [72 Cal.Rptr.2d 856, 952 P.2d 1124], the result in
Lucas
did not sit well with the Legislature, which enacted a specific statute to undo its result. That statute — originally Civil Code section 4800.2, now Family Code section 2640 — provides for dollar-for-dollar reimbursement, but
without interest,
to a spouse who contributes separate property to the “acquisition” of community property to the extent he or she “traces the contributions to a separate property source.” (Fam. Code, § 2640, subds. (a) &
(b).)
With the enactment of the reimbursement statute, however, it becomes too easy to forget that the Legislature never intended to overturn the much older line of cases stemming from
Pereira
v.
Pereira
(1909) 156 Cal. 1 [103 P. 488]. Those cases focus on the problem of separating out the respective contributions of effort and return on capital from the value of a spouse-operated business.
In the present case, for example, one spouse started a single proprietorship business prior to marriage, but incorporated it during
the marriage. The trial court applied the reimbursement statute instead of a
Pereira
approach, reasoning that the community “acquired” the business by virtue of the incorporation, though no stock certificates were ever issued in which title somehow was transferred to the community. The spouse received reimbursement for the value of the business at the date of incorporation, but nothing by way of return on investment.
As we explain below, a community does not “acquire” a separate property business merely because it is incorporated during the marriage. Here, there was nothing to trigger the “title presumption” on which the
Lucas
decision turned and which the Legislature endeavored to correct by passing the reimbursement statute. The judgment must therefore be reversed.
Facts
Prior to his marriage to Jeanne in November 1986, Frederick W. Koester owned a sole proprietorship, Koester Electric. In October 1989 the business was incorporated. No stock was ever issued. At the conclusion of the trial of the dissolution of Jeanne and Frederick’s marriage in April 1996, the judge ruled that the incorporation of the business made the business community property because the community “acquired” the incorporated business during the marriage. The judge said, “The court rejects a
Pereira
approach because in fact there was an acquisition. There was an acquisition in 1989 when they acquired this corporation.”
The characterization of the business as community property made a big difference. The parties agreed the business was worth about $622,000. After the trial judge allowed Frederick a credit for about $337,500 — the value of the business at the time of the marriage — so he was charged with about $284,000 in community assets when the business was awarded to him.
Had the property been characterized as separate, Frederick was prepared to show that his investment had appreciated from $337,500 to $558,000, based on a 10 percent return since the marriage. (Cf.
Pereira
v.
Pereira, supra,
156 Cal. 1.) In that case Frederick would only have been charged with $64,000 in community property.
Discussion
The Facts Require Application of Pereira, Not the Reimbursement Statute
There are two reasons the trial court should have applied the classic
Pereira
analysis (i.e., award the value of the separate property at the time of marriage plus a reasonable return to represent the appreciation of separate capital, with the balance going to the community) rather than a section 2640 reimbursement approach (i.e., reimburse the spouse for separate money contributed to what is now a community asset). The first is that section 2640 was never designed to apply to separate property businesses and is inherently not applicable to businesses, at least when there is no compliance with the rigorous requirements for transmutation set forth in section 852 (requiring transmutations be made by express written declaration). The second is that the mere incorporation of a business is not a change in its character.
Section 2640 Not Applicable
It should be remembered that the original
Pereira
case involved a separate saloon and cigar business, which was “very profitable.” (See
Pereira,
v.
Pereira supra,
156 Cal. at pp. 6-7.) The trial court allocated
all
the “gains” from the business after marriage to the community, but the California Supreme Court reversed, reasoning that the “capital” of the business was “undoubtedly” the owner spouse’s separate estate and, further, “some of the profits were justly due to the capital invested.”
(Id.
at p. 7.) The high court said it was error to classify those “gains” as community property.
(Id.
at p. 8.)
By contrast with
Pereira,
what is now section 2640 arose out of the case of a
residence
which was purchased with separate property, but the title to the residence was taken in joint tenancy. Thus, as one might expect knowing the origins of the statute, published decisions involving the reimbursement statute typically arise out of conveyances or acquisitions of residences. (E.g.,
In re Marriage of Walrath, supra,
17 Cal.4th 907, 911 [husband’s separate property house deeded to himself and wife as joint tenants];
In re Marriage ofHeikes
(1995) 10 Cal.4th 1211, 1214 [44 Cal.Rptr.2d 155, 899 P.2d 1349] [husband’s separate property home and vacant lot conveyed to himself and wife as joint tenants];
In re Marriage of Braud
(1996) 45 Cal.App.4th 797, 805 [53 Cal.Rptr.2d 179] [husband applied money from inheritance to pay off loan used to buy family home];
In re Marriage of Haines
(1995) 33 Cal.App.4th 277, 283-284 [39 Cal.Rptr.2d 673] [husband’s separate residence from previous marriage conveyed by quitclaim deed to himself and wife as joint tenants];
In re Marriage of Tollman
(1994) 22 Cal.App.4th
1697, 1698 [28 Cal.Rptr.2d 323] [wife contributed separate funds to pay off debt on family home].)
In contrast with the way title is taken when a married couple own residential property, the incorporation of a sole proprietorship business is typically done for reasons extrinsic to the marital relationship. Except in the unusual case where a married couple might use the occasion of the incorporation of a separate business to expressly transmute that business into community property — and that would certainly entail much more than mere incorporation without the issuance of stock certificates (cf.
In re Marriage of Barneson
(1999) 69 Cal.App.4th 583, 590-591 [81 Cal.Rptr.2d 726])
—couples usually don’t go around changing the way title is held in ongoing businesses to mark the occasion of a marriage.
Mere Incorporation Is Not Acquisition
The reimbursement problem raised by the
Lucas
case and the Legislature’s reaction to it can also easily obscure the basic principle that separate property does not change its character because of a change in
form or identity.
(E.g.,
In re Marriage of Weaver
(1990) 224 Cal.App.3d 478, 484 [273 Cal.Rptr. 696].)
Here, there is nothing to indicate that the incorporation of the separate property business represented anything other than a mere change in the legal form under which the business was conducted. As the trial judge noted, Jeanne herself testified that the customers and accounts receivable were the same after the incorporation as before.
Kenney
v.
Kenney
(1950) 97 Cal.App.2d 60 [217 P.2d 151] is on point. In
Kenney
a single man acquired an interest in an oil partnership about a month before marriage. The partnership was incorporated about two weeks before the marriage, but the one hundred twenty-five shares of stock he was to receive for interest was not issued until about seven weeks
after
the marriage. (See
id.
at p. 64.) The trial court held that the assets of the partnership and the 125 shares of stock were community property, a decision which the appellate court held to be error.
(Ibid.)
Confronting the argument that the shares were escrowed (i.e., acquired) during the marriage, the
Kenney
court said: “The shares belonged to [the
husband] by virtue of the exchange of his interest in the drilling partnership for them and of his having obtained that interest at the time of the partnership’s organization and its acquisition of [a certain oil well drilling] contract on May 1, 1923 [i.e., before the marriage]. The exchange did not in the slightest tend to transmute the stock from separate to community property.” (97 Cal.App.2d at p. 65.)
If the fact that the shares in a business interest acquired before marriage but not
issued
to a spouse until after marriage did not “transmute” them into community property in
Kenney,
the fact that a separate business was not incorporated until after marriage should not transmute it here. In either case one might say that
something
was “acquired” during the marriage, but only by ignoring the reality of what was really happening, i.e., that a separate property asset was merely changing its legal form. To say in either case that an asset was “acquired” by the community (in
Kenney,
the actual stock shares, here the business itself) because some aspect of corporate formation took place during the marriage is to elevate semantics over substance.
There Was No Invited Error
Jeanne contends that Frederick’s trial counsel
waived his client’s right to receive a
Pereira
return by stipulating to the community character of the business. And, it is indeed true that the parties filed a stipulation which, in two places, describes the business not as a separate property business in which there may be a community interest but as a “community corp.”
The description in the stipulation was inaccurate, as we have shown. In retrospect it appears to have been sloppy drafting. Still, there are two
reasons the issue was preserved for appeal: (1) Despite the description, the stipulation still managed to present
to the trial court judge
the reduced essence of the issue which Frederick has presented in this appeal, i.e., whether he could receive a fair rate of
return on
the $337,500 value of the separate business at the time of marriage; and (2) the trial judge understood precisely the nature of the legal issue before him (better, indeed, than Frederick’s own trial counsel).
First, the stipulation provides that Frederick would receive credit for his “sep contrib” of the value of the business at the time of marriage
plus
have the opportunity to litigate the
issue
of a “Pereira return” (a phrase also used twice in the stipulation) on that contribution.
To preserve the issue of a “Pereira return” necessarily required
the trial judge
to determine the character of the business, rather than simply accept a stipulation that it was community.
While it is true that the stipulation uses the phrase “if traced” in connection to tracing Frederick’s separate property contribution to the “community corp,” it does not follow that Frederick’s attorney was stipulating to the use of section 2640
in lieu of
a
Pereira
return. If that really were the case, then there should have been no reference to any “Pereira return” at all, because by definition a “Pereira return” exists where a section 2640 zero interest reimbursement does not. The stipulation merely contemplates that Frederick would receive
at least
a $337,500 reimbursement plus have the chance to argue for a
Pereira
return. When looked at that way, the incorrect description of the business as “community” becomes academic: As long as Frederick was to receive a return on the $337,500, it really didn’t make any difference whether the business was described as community or separate. He was going to get the business anyway, and if $337,500 plus a “Pereira return” was ascribed to his separate estate, calling it a “community corp” with a
Pereira
return was functionally the same as if the business were separate with a community interest determined by
Pereira.
The second reason the issue was preserved for appeal despite the stipulation is even more basic: The trial judge was not misled. The trial judge saw
the issue
correctly. On the record the judge predicated his decision on the determination that incorporation of the business entailed its “acquisition” by the community as a matter of law. He didn’t simply rubber stamp a stipulation.
There is no indication that the trial judge was misled or fooled by the description of the business in the stipulation.
Rather he acknowledged, on the record, that he had given Frederick “an appealable issue” by his refusal to apply
Pereira
and did so in language unmistakably clear that he was ruling as a matter of a disputed point of law concerning the effect of the incorporation rather than as a mere consequence of an improvidently worded stipulation.
Disposition
Reversal of the Judgment
The judgment must be reversed, as the application of
Pereira,
as distinct from the reimbursement statute affects the division of community property.
The remaining issues concern a forced sale of a certain Lexus automobile. The auto had been purchased by the corporation for $19,071, which was apparently a bargain because, at the time of trial, it had a fair market value of $24,400. The trial judge ordered Frederick, on “behalf of Koester Electric,” to transfer the car to Jeanne for the bargain price of $19,071.
The portion of the judgment concerning the transfer of the Lexus must therefore also be reversed. The transfer order was premised on the idea that
the business itself was community property, which it is not. The car is the property of a separate property corporation, not otherwise joined to the dissolution. Because the transfer order was incorrect, we need not deal with Frederick’s contention that the transfer should have been for fair market value instead of the bargain price which the corporation got.
To summarize: The judgment as to the property division is reversed and the case remanded to the trial court to recalculate the division. Our decision is without prejudice as to the precise rate of “Pereira return” to apply. The judgment requiring transfer of the Lexus by the corporation to Jeanne is also reversed with directions that the judgment
not
require the transfer. Obviously if the corporation wants to sell the car to Jeanne for fair market value that is between the parties.
No Sanctions
In light of the reversal, Jeanne’s request for sanctions for a frivolous appeal is obviously untenable. For his part, Frederick has intimated that Jeanne should be sanctioned for a frivolous sanction request, though he doesn’t quite have the temerity to formally request sanctions.
Let us merely say that we heartily disapprove of knee-jerk requests for sanctions brought by any litigant, and leave it at that. Life at the bar is already too filled with litigious horrors to add to them a self-feeding spiral of sanction requests based on allegedly frivolous appeals and, reciprocally, allegedly frivolous sanction requests. As our Supreme Court stressed in
In re Marriage of Flaherty
(1982) 31 Cal.3d 637, 650-651 [183 Cal.Rptr. 508, 646 P.2d 179], the power to punish attorneys for bringing frivolous appeals “should be used most sparingly to deter only the most egregious conduct.” When an incorrect call made by the trial judge — one of the most respected in the state when it comes to family law — on an issue of almost first impression is combined with the peculiar problems presented by the stipulation, it should be fairly obvious that neither side should be calling the other’s position frivolous.
Crosby, J., and Rylaarsdam, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 10, 1999.