Marriage of Mohler

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 13, 2020
DocketE071314
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Mohler (Marriage of Mohler) 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 Mohler, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 4/13/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION TWO

In re the Marriage of JODIE and GREG MOHLER.

JODIE E. MOHLER, E071314 Respondent, (Super.Ct.No. FAMRS1200248) v. OPINION GREG MOHLER,

Appellant.

APPEAL from the Superior Court of Riverside County. Teresa S. Bennett, Judge.

Vacated and remanded.

Joel S. Seidel for Appellant.

Holstein, Taylor and Unitt and Brian C. Unitt; Howington & Associates and

Joseph W. Howington for Respondent.

When an individual enters a marriage owning a piece of real property, and the

marital community pays the property’s mortgage during the marriage, California law

provides a formula through which to apportion the property’s value upon the marriage’s

end. Known as the Moore/Marsden rule, the formula awards the marital community a

1 growing interest in the otherwise separate property as community funds are used to

increase the property’s equity.

In this dissolution case, the husband entered the marriage owning a home that the

parties lived in as spouses for over 12 years. The parties agree that application of the

Moore/Marsden rule through the date of their separation resulted in the community

beneficially owning 33.66 percent of the property. However, by the time of their

dissolution trial, the husband had lived in the property for more than six years post-

separation, paying the mortgage with his separate income. At the wife’s request, the trial

court found that the community’s interest in the property continued to increase

throughout those years, just as if community funds had been used to pay the mortgage

during that time, resulting in the community obtaining a 64.9 percent interest in the

property.

We hold that this was error. The Moore/Marsden rule applies only insofar as

community funds are used to build equity in an asset, a situation which often terminates,

as it did here, upon separation. If the husband obtained a benefit from the community

through living in the house beyond the parties’ separation date, the trial court may

account for this through so-called Watts charges, a different legal concept than the

Moore/Marsden rule. Watts charges equitably compensate the community for one

spouse’s use of a community-owned home. We hold, as a matter of first impression, that

Watts charges may be levied against a spouse for his or her post-separation occupation of

a property where the property is not entirely community property, but rather is treated as

2 partially community property due to the Moore/Marsden rule. We thus vacate the

judgment and remand to the trial court for the proper application of Moore/Marsden and

calculation of any Watts charges.

I. BACKGROUND

The sole issue in this appeal is how to allocate the value of a Rancho Cucamonga

residential property lived in by plaintiff and respondent Jodie E. Mohler and defendant

and appellant Greg Mohler during their marriage. (Because of their identical last names,

this opinion will use their first names for clarity.) The parties have no factual disputes

that matter here.

Greg bought the home, which the parties refer to as the Lomello property, for

$168,000 in February 1995, before he and Jodie married. His name remained on the title.

The couple wed in September 1998, and they lived at the Lomello property for over 12

years. During that time, they used $56,557 to pay principal on the property’s mortgage.

They separated on July 2, 2011. From then, Greg lived at the Lomello property and paid

its mortgage for over six years until the dissolution trial in late 2017. At the time of the

trial, the Lomello property was valued at $530,000.

II. DISCUSSION

A. The Moore/Marsden Calculation

Under California’s community property laws, property that a spouse acquires

before the marriage, or during the marriage by way of gift or inheritance, is that spouse’s

separate property. (Cal. Const., art. I, § 21; Fam. Code § 770.) On the other hand,

3 property acquired during the marriage due to the time, labor, or skill of a spouse is

community property in which the spouses have an equal interest. (Fam. Code § 760.)

Upon dissolution, community property is divided equally between spouses, and separate

property is awarded to only the owner. (Fam. Code §§ 770, 2550.)

When one spouse enters the marriage owning the home in which the spouses are to

live, it is not self-evident how to characterize the appreciation on that separate real

property during the marriage, when, as is common, the marital community uses its funds

to pay the loan on that separate asset. In In re Marriage of Moore (1980) 28 Cal.3d 366,

371-372 (Moore), our Supreme Court held that where community funds are used to pay

down the principal owed on a loan on property purchased by one spouse before marriage,

the community obtains “‘a pro tanto community property interest in such property in the

ratio that the payments on the purchase price with community funds bear to the payments

made with separate funds.’ [Citations.]” Thus, as the community makes payments during

the marriage that reduce the principal owed on the separate property, the community

acquires a beneficial interest in that property, even if title remains in the name of the

original owner. 1

1 We use the term “beneficial interest” to describe the community’s Moore/Marsden interest in property that is titled in an individual spousal owner, as all we need decide here is that the community gains at least an equitable interest that is recognized at the time, if any, that a family law court engages in equitable division of the spouses’ estates. Moore, however, could be read to indicate that the community interest is in fact a legal one. (Moore, supra, 28 Cal.3d at p. 371, fn. 1 [“Although the trial court designated the community’s interest as an ‘equitable charge on/right,’ it is clear under California law that the interest is properly characterized as a community property interest in the house. [Citations.]”) A consequence of that reading might be that a home with a 4 Moore chose a specific way to determine the community’s increasing interest in

the property. It used the original purchase price as a reference point for a 100 percent

interest in the property. As a marriage begins, Moore attributes the entire purchase-price

value of the property to the separate owner. (Moore, supra, 28 Cal.3d at pp. 373-374.)

After that point, the community’s interest in the property is determined by “dividing the

amount by which community property payments reduced the principal by the purchase

price.” (Id. at p. 374.) Thus, if the original purchase price of a property were $100,000,

the community would obtain a constructive one percent interest in it for each $1,000 in

principal on the loan that community assets paid down. The owning spouse’s separate

ownership share would be reduced accordingly. 2

In re Marriage of Marsden (1982) 130 Cal.App.3d 426, 437 (Marsden)

supplemented Moore’s calculation by establishing that the owner of the separate property

should be awarded the pre-marriage appreciation in the property’s value. Nevertheless,

community interest could not be sold without the consent of the community. By our terminology, we do not mean to address this issue, which is not before us.

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