In Re Marriage of Warren

28 Cal. App. 3d 777, 104 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 793
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 17, 1972
DocketCiv. 39183
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 28 Cal. App. 3d 777 (In Re Marriage of Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Warren, 28 Cal. App. 3d 777, 104 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 793 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion

ASHBY, J.

This appeal is taken by the appellant-husband (hereinafter, appellant) from an interlocutory judgment of dissolution of marriage granted to the respondent-wife (hereinafter, respondent). Appellant does not contest the divorce. He objects to determinations of the trial court relating to: the amount of reimbursement to the community for improvement of the respondent’s separate real property, assignment to him of a certain community asset, the existence of a certain community debt and reimbursement due to the community for income tax obligations paid from the community and incurred from respondent’s separate property income.

The parties have no minor children and respondent waived her right to spousal support. In dividing the extensive assets of the parties accumulated during this 3 3-year marriage, the court awarded stock in the family business to appellant, the residences to respondent and made adjustments for reimbursements due to each party’s separate property and to the community. In order to provide for an equal division of the community property after *780 the assets were distributed, the court ordered appellant to execute a promissory note in favor of respondent in the amount of $90,339.63.

Appellant’s contentions that there exists additional community reimbursement due from respondent’s separate property, and that there exists a community asset not found by the court, if meritorious, would operate to reduce the amount of his indebtedness to respondent.

I.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is that a finding of fact is in conflict with a stipulation made by the parties. The finding in question concerns the amount of reimbursement due the community for funds expended by appellant to construct a building on respondent’s separate real property.

The par-ties entered into a stipulation that $38,000 of community funds were used to improve respondent’s separate real property located at 8313-17 Firestone Boulevard in Downey, California. During the trial, appellant testified that the building was worth $33,952. The trial court found as a fact: “That 8313-17 Firestone Boulevard, Downey, California, was improved during the course of the marriage by the construction of a building thereon in connection with which building, community funds in the sum of $33,952 were used. That neither of the parties intended that said community funds be a gift to the petitioner.”

This finding is in conflict with the evidence as well as with the stipulation. The sum of $33,952 represents evidence of the value of the property at the time of the trial. The only evidence on amount expended was consistent with the $38,000 stipulation.

Respondent concedes that $38,000 was the amount expended, but argues as follows that the sum of $33,952 was the correct amount for community reimbursement: “Again, the issue before the court was not the community contribution in the early 1950’s but what benefit was derived as measured at the time of trial.”

It is only by the light of the distinction to be drawn between improvement of the separate property of the wife as opposed to that of the husband that the issue of amount of reimbursement can be made clear. Where the husband improves his own real property a form of the doctrine of tracing applies in order to prevent him from profiting from a constructive breach of his fiduciary duty to his wife. However, where the husband improves the wife’s separate property, there is no tracing and any reimbursement is made solely on the basis of the agreement to reimburse. Whereas tracing *781 results in an equity interest in the property obtained, an agreement to reimburse results in a debt interest for a specific amount expended.

When the manager of community personal property uses it to improve separate real property and a claim to the property is made on behalf of the community, there occurs an apparent conflict resulting from the tracing requirement of community property law and the merger doctrine of the law of real property fixtures. Where the husband uses community funds to improve the wife’s separate real property, in the absence of any specific agreement, the law gives no right to reimbursement. (Shaw v. Bernal, 163 Cal. 262, 267-268 [124 P. 1012]; Peck v. Brummagim, 31 Cal. 440, 448-449; Carlson v. Carlson, 10 Cal.App. 300, 303 [101 P. 923].)

The rationale is that since the husband is the manager of the community, his use of it to improve the wife’s separate property, in the absence of an agreement to reimburse, constitutes a presumed gift. Although this rationale made the fixtures rule of merger unnecessary, that rule is nevertheless cited in support of the decision not to trace to the source. 1

In Provost v. Provost, 102 Cal.App. 775, 781 [283 P. 842], the husband used the community to improve his own separate real property. The court realized that where the husband improved his own separate land “consent cannot be presumed from the wife’s mere silence, for the law has given her no right to say ‘no’.” With regard to the other rationale in support of not tracing—the fixture rule—the court noted that the merger doctrine would result in at least a constructive fraud and “permit the authority of the husband in controlling the community property, given him in the interest of greater freedom in its use and for its transfer for the benefit of both himself and his wife, to become a weapon to be used by him to rob her of every vestige of interest in the community property with which the law has expressly invested her.”

Provost, supra, then-harmonized the tracing—fixtures conflict. It concluded that, although the doctrine of fixtures precluded any title to the *782 real property from being in the marital community, nevertheless, the doctrine of tracing as well as the husband’s fiduciary duty required that the marital community be reimbursed.

Fields V. Michael, 91 Cal.App.2d 443, 447 [205 P.2d 402], explains the fiduciary position that the husband occupies toward the wife in his management of community property. “It is clear that, being a party to the confidential relationship of marriage, the husband must, for some purposes at least, be deemed a trustee for his wife in respect to their common property.”

Dunn v. Mullan, 211 Cal. 583, 590 [296 P. 604, 77 A.L.R. 1015], refers to the constructive fraud rationale in support of tracing. “In California a distinction is made between the case where, as here, the husband has improved his wife’s lands with community funds and where he has improved his own lands with community funds, In the former case he is presumed to have intended a gift. In the latter case a right of reimbursement is granted to the wife upon the theory that to permit a husband to appropriate the community property under his management to his own separate use operates as a constructive fraud upon his wife.”

Wheeland v. Rodgers,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 Cal. App. 3d 777, 104 Cal. Rptr. 860, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-warren-calctapp-1972.