Assets acquired during marriage are presumptively community property, subject to equal division under Family Code 2550.
Assets owned before marriage, inheritances, and gifts remain separate property, not subject to division.
Mandatory equal division with limited statutory exceptions requiring precise valuation and characterization
California courts must divide community property equally unless parties agree otherwise. This 50/50 split applies to both assets and debts.
Determining fair market value as close to trial as possible, accounting for market fluctuations and economic conditions.
Cash or asset transfers to achieve 50/50 split when literal division is impractical or would diminish value.
Misappropriation, personal injury awards, and certain retirement benefits may justify unequal division.
Family residences, investment properties, and vacation homes require careful analysis of equity and encumbrances.
Professional practices, closely-held corporations, and partnership interests need expert valuation.
The critical cutoff point that determines when the community estate stops growing and separate property begins
California requires spouses to live "separate and apart" with no present intention of resuming the marital relationship. Physical separation alone is not sufficient.
The precise date when the marriage ended determines which assets are community versus separate property. This affects everything from earnings to acquisitions.
Post-separation earnings and property acquisitions are generally separate property, but complications arise with bonuses, stock options, and deferred compensation.
When spouses disagree on the separation date, courts examine objective evidence of the marriage's end, including public statements and financial conduct.
When separate and community property mix, tracing and apportionment rules determine final characterization
Depositing separate property funds into joint accounts or using community funds to improve separate property creates complex tracing requirements.
Documenting the source of funds through bank records, escrow documents, and financial statements to prove separate property character.
Calculating community interest in separate property residences when mortgage payments were made with community funds during marriage.
Understanding the fundamental distinction in California property division
Presumptively divided equally. Includes earnings during marriage, assets purchased with community funds, and appreciation.
Retained by owning spouse. Includes pre-marital assets, inheritances, gifts, and post-separation earnings.
Family Code 721 & 1100 impose strict duties on spouses regarding management and control of community property
Spouses owe each other the highest duty of good faith and fair dealing. Unauthorized transfers, concealment, or mismanagement of assets can result in severe penalties including 100% reimbursement and attorney fee awards.
Complex characterization and valuation issues require experienced advocacy to ensure fair division of your marital estate.
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