Marriage of Brandes

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 31, 2015
DocketD062729
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Brandes (Marriage of Brandes) 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
Marriage of Brandes, (Cal. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Filed 8/14/15 Certified for Publication 8/31/15 (order attached)

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re the Marriage of LINDA F. and CHARLES H. BRANDES. D062729 LINDA F. BRANDES,

Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. D485527)

v.

CHARLES H. BRANDES,

Appellant.

APPEALS from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Jeffrey S.

Bostwick, Judge. Affirmed in part; reversed in part with directions.

Sandler, Lasry, Laube, Byer & Valdez, Edward I. Silverman; Karcher Harmes,

Kathryn E. Karcher; Dick & Wagner, Stephen James Wagner; Jones Barnes, Rex L.

Jones, III, Julie R. Barnes and Matthew K. Strauss for Appellant Linda F. Brandes. Law Offices of Marjorie G. Fuller, Marjorie G. Fuller; Wasser, Cooperman &

Carter, Dennis M. Wasser, Bruce E. Cooperman and Amy L. Rice for Appellant Charles

H. Brandes.

In this dissolution action, Linda F. Brandes (Linda) appeals a judgment awarding

Charles H. Brandes (Charles) a business he founded before the marriage, Brandes

Investment Partners (BIP),1 as his separate property, and awarding the community an

equitable allocation—under the Pereira v. Pereira (1909) 156 Cal. 1 (Pereira) approach

for the early period during which the growth was primarily attributable to his personal

efforts, and under the Van Camp v. Van Camp (1921) 53 Cal.App. 17 (Van Camp)

approach for the later period during which the growth was primarily attributable to other

factors. The Pereira approach allocates a fair return to the separate property investment

and the balance of growth to the community, and the Van Camp approach allocates the

reasonable value of the owner spouse's services to the community and the balance of

growth to separate property. (In re Marriage of Dekker (1993) 17 Cal.App.4th 842, 853-

854 (Dekker).)

Under a variety of theories, Linda contends the court erred by not determining the

community owns all or most of BIP. For instance, she asserts BIP became a completely

new business during the marriage, and thus it lost its separate property characterization.

Additionally, Linda contends the court erred by denying her prejudgment interest

on her share of the community's interest in BIP as of the end of the Pereira period, by

1 The business name and form periodically changed, but for simplicity's sake we use BIP throughout this opinion. 2 characterizing profit distributions BIP labeled as W-2 income as Charles's separate

property, and by awarding Charles 10,000 shares of BIP stock he purchased from a third

party in two transactions during the marriage. Linda claims 4,000 of the shares are

community property because Charles used community funds to purchase them. She

asserts the remaining 6,000 shares are presumptively community property under the

lender's intent doctrine, because the purchase was financed under a promissory note

entered into during the marriage, and Charles did not rebut the presumption by showing

the seller relied primarily on his separate property for payment.

Charles also appeals, contending the court erred by awarding Linda $450,000 per

month in spousal support. He asserts that under Family Code section 4322,2 she is not

entitled to any support because, if invested prudently, her share of the community

property is sufficient to cover her actual postseparation expenses of approximately

$100,000 per month. Alternatively, he asserts the support is excessive given her actual

expenses.

We partially agree with Linda on the lender's intent doctrine. The doctrine applies

to the percentage of the 6,000 shares purchased under the promissory note, and the court

erred by not finding in accordance with the community property presumption since

Charles did not rebut it. In all other respects, we disagree with Linda's theories. We

decline to resolve Charles's appeal, because on remand it may become moot. The court

2 Further statutory references are also to the Family Code unless otherwise specified. 3 must revisit the spousal support issue, because an order is based, in part, on a spouse's

separate estate (§ 4320, subd. (e)), and Linda's separate estate will likely increase.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1974, Charles founded BIP to provide investment advisory services in exchange

for fees based on the percentage of clients' assets under management. Charles and Linda

met in 1983, when BIP was only marginally successful. That year, BIP managed assets

of $8.2 million and he had income of $44,148.

Charles and Linda each had two children from prior marriages. After dating for a

few months, Charles began proposing marriage, but Linda refused "unless he could show

some initiative to make enough money to support" a family of six. At Linda's request, he

"changed his appearance, changed his clothes, changed his car and changed his work

hours."

The parties wed in August 1986. At that time, Charles owned 90 percent of BIP.

In 1985, Charles Brown, who was Charles's long-time client, purchased 10 percent of the

business (10,000 shares after stock splits). BIP's managed assets were approximately $20

million on the date of marriage, and by the end of 1986 they rose to $63 million. BIP

continued to grow, and Charles's income eventually afforded the parties "a very opulent

lifestyle."

In June 2004, the parties separated. By then, Charles had purchased Brown's

interest in BIP, and BIP's managed assets were $85 billion. The community estate was

worth approximately $208 million, excluding any interest in BIP.

4 Charles petitioned for dissolution, and in August 2005 the parties stipulated to the

distribution of community bank accounts and real properties. Under the stipulation,

Charles was awarded homes in Rancho Santa Fe and Borrego Springs, and Linda was

awarded six homes, including a penthouse on Park Avenue in New York City, a

beachside home in Del Mar, and a home in Rancho Santa Fe. The unencumbered value

of Linda's real properties was approximately $50 million, and her total separate estate

was approximately $100 million.

In July 2005, the family court entered a judgment of dissolution as to marital

status only. Unresolved financial issues were the subject of two separate trials referred to

as Phase I and Phase II.

Phase I was tried in 2008 and, as is relevant here, the issue was how the

community's interest in BIP should be characterized. Linda argued the community

owned 100 percent of BIP because during the marriage it became a completely different

business. In other words, Charles effectively "started a new business during the

marriage."

Alternatively, Linda argued BIP is "virtually all" community property under either

a pure Pereira approach, or what she called a "fixed-ratio" theory. Under the fixed-ratio

theory, Pereira applied between the date of marriage and the date BIP's growth became

attributable to factors other than Charles's personal efforts, in her view no earlier than

1995, and from that point the community had an ownership interest in BIP commensurate

with its interest in BIP's growth at the close of the Pereira period.

5 Charles argued BIP retained its separate property character throughout the

marriage. He also argued that since the lion's share of its growth was chiefly attributable

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