Marriage of Wozniak

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 29, 2020
DocketD074813
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

Filed 12/29/20 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

In re the Marriage of ANNA and GRZEGORZ WOZNIAK. D074813 ANNA WOZNIAK,

Appellant, (Super. Ct. No. ED88158)

v.

GRZEGORZ WOZNIAK,

Respondent.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Jeffrey B. Barton, Judge. Affirmed. A. Stephen Rocha for Appellant. Richard G. Prantil for Respondent. I. INTRODUCTION This is an appeal from a judgment in a marital dissolution action between Anna and Grzegorz Wozniak.1 Anna challenges the trial court’s

1 We will refer to the parties by their first names for purposes of clarity. characterization of a particular residence as the parties’ community property. The record demonstrates that the property was originally owned by Anna as her separate property, but that at some point prior to 2006, Anna transmuted this property into community property. In 2006, Grzegorz prepared and executed an interspousal transfer deed, which, if effective, would have passed his community property interest in the residence to Anna. At trial, the parties disputed Anna’s response to Grzegorz’s attempted delivery of the interspousal transfer deed; Grzegorz testified that Anna rejected the deed, and Anna testified that she was surprised when Grzegorz presented the executed deed to her but that she ultimately took possession of it. Over the next six years, the deed was not recorded and both parties appear to agree that it remained in the martial residence. In 2012, after an incident in which a protective order was granted in favor of Grzegorz and against Anna, Anna took possession of the deed and recorded it. At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court stated in its findings that it found Grzegorz’s testimony about the deed to be credible and concluded that Anna had rejected the deed in 2006, and that as a result, no transmutation had been consummated between the parties at that time. The court further found that when Anna recorded the deed in 2012, Grzegorz no longer had the intent to transmute his community property interest to Anna. The trial court ultimately concluded that the property at issue was community property. On appeal, Anna contends that the trial court erred in concluding that this residence was community property. We conclude that the trial court did not err in its analysis of the law regarding the transmutation of property between spouses and that the court’s findings are supported by substantial evidence. We therefore affirm the judgment.

2 II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND Anna and Grzegorz were married for just under 16 years prior to their separation and the dissolution of the marriage. Because the parties were unable to reach a settlement as to the division of their assets during their dissolution proceedings, they proceeded to trial on multiple issues pertaining to the division of their property. The trial took place over two days in June 2018. The issues on appeal involve the trial court’s characterization of real property located in La Mesa, California (the La Mesa property) as community property at the time of the parties’ separation.2 Evidence presented at trial demonstrated that the La Mesa property had been Anna’s separate property prior to the parties’ marriage. However, at some point during the marriage, Anna converted title in the property to a joint tenancy with Grzegorz. According to Anna’s trial testimony, she put Grzegorz on the title to the La Mesa property only for the purpose of refinancing a mortgage on that property. At trial, there was a conflict in the testimony regarding what occurred after Grzegorz was placed on the title to the La Mesa property. According to Grzegorz, in 2006, he executed an interspousal transfer deed that would have transferred his community property interest in the La Mesa property to Anna, such that the La Mesa property would again be her separate property. According to Grzegorz, he prepared and executed the deed “in an attempt to put an end to the arguments and conflicts” between the parties. Grzegorz

2 Although this appeal involves questions related solely to the La Mesa property, the trial court ultimately determined the characterization and division of four parcels of real property. 3 further testified that when he attempted to give the interspousal transfer deed to Anna, she “was surprised and questioned the deed,” and “outright and immediately rejected the deed.” Grzegorz also testified that “he was convinced that [Anna] did not want the inter-spousal transfer deed and was not going to record it” because, in part, “a few months after he offered [Anna] the inter-spousal transfer deed [she] told him that she wanted everything to be community property.” According to Grzegorz, as a result of this conversation, he executed a deed in May 2007 adding Anna to the title of a property that had previously been his separate property. Anna testified that she had been given a deed by Grzegorz in 2006 in which he “relinquish[ed] back all of [his] interest to [Anna] to the [La Mesa property] without her involvement [ ]or knowledge beforehand of his actions as to this deed.” Grzegorz’s presentation of the deed “surprised” her. Anna understood that Grzegorz had prepared the deed and presented it to her in order to “maintain the parties’ pre-marital real properties as separate properties of the respective parties who acquired them originally.” According to Anna, she “accepted and took possession of the deed in 2006 and maintained it in her belongings . . . .” Both parties agree that it was not until 2012 that Anna recorded the interspousal transfer deed. Grzegorz testified that in April 2012, Anna perpetrated domestic violence against him, and he obtained a protective order against her. According to Grzegorz, during the time that this protective order was in place, Anna entered the family residence in violation of the protective order and took the deed. At some point in 2012, Anna recorded the deed. Anna conceded at trial that she did not record the deed until 2012, after she and Grzegorz had separated.

4 In setting forth its “Decision After Trial,” the trial court made the following statements, findings and conclusions regarding the La Mesa property: “The [La Mesa] property was owned by petitioner[3] prior to marriage. During marriage it was converted to a joint tenancy and refinanced and respondent was placed on the deed. Thus, under Family Code Section 2581, the home is presumed community property unless petitioner can meet the rebuttal burden. See, Rutter: California Practice Guide at Section 8:316. The court finds the petitioner did not sustain her burden of proof to rebut the presumption during the trial. Petitioner did not submit evidence sufficient to sustain her burden of proof to show a traceable Family Code Section 2640 reimbursement for the separate property contribution to this community asset.

“Respondent testified the community benefited from this refinance as the rate was lower. The best evidence of the value of the property is the Devlin appraisal of $570,000 from 2017. The property currently has a loan against it in the amount of $224,000 and a second in the amount of $52,178.

“Considerable time during the trial was spent on the issue of respondent’s re-conveyance of the property to petitioner. In 2006, respondent executed an inter-spousal transfer deed to petitioner. He testified she refused the deed at that time. She did not record it upon receipt. Six years later, petitioner was the perpetrator of domestic violence against respondent. She was arrested and a restraining order was issued. She thereafter recorded the deed from 2006.

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Marriage of Wozniak, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-wozniak-calctapp-2020.