In this divorce case, we consider a question of first impression in the District of Columbia: whether an inchoate personal injury claim is marital property or the separate property of the injured spouse. The trial court chose the latter alternative. We disagree, and accordingly we reverse that portion of its judgment.
I
After twenty-one years of marriage, Lincoln and Daisy Boyce went their separate ways. The couple had split up and reconciled on previous occasions, but in June 1982 they separated permanently, and in October 1985 they were divorced. During their marriage Mrs. Boyce worked as a registered nurse for various hospitals in the Washington area, and Mr. Boyce drove a taxicab, although he had a bachelor of science degree in zoology from a local university. The Boyces had two children, Cheryl and Leighton. At the time of the divorce, Cheryl was attending a private high school, and Leighton was in his third year of college.
In March 1984 Mrs. Boyce was severely injured in an automobile accident. Her injuries resulted in permanent disability, and she now receives $834 per month in disability retirement payments. When the divorce was granted in this case, however, she had not yet settled her personal injury claim. In fact, she had not yet filed a claim for lost wages with her insurance company, although she fully expected to do so.
In dividing the marital property, 1 the court ruled that Mrs. Boyce’s inchoate personal injury claim was not a marital asset because there was “no way of valuing it.” Furthermore, her pain and suffering from this accident were “intensely personal,” and any recovery for pain and suffering should therefore belong solely to Mrs. Boyce. Finally, the court said, Mr. Boyce could not expect any recovery for loss of consortium resulting from Mrs. Boyce’s injuries since the couple had separated before the accident. 2
II
The major issue presented on this appeal, and the only one we decide, involves Mrs. Boyce’s potential recovery for the injuries she sustained in the March 1984 automobile accident. Mr. Boyce argues that this inchoate claim was marital property, and that the trial court erred in holding that it was Mrs. Boyce’s separate property.
The issue of whether an inchoate personal injury claim is marital property or sepa *616 rate property has never been decided by this court. 3 The appropriate starting point for our analysis is the statute which governs the distribution of property in divorce cases. D.C.Code § 16 — 910 (1981) provides in pertinent part:
Upon the entry of a final decree of annulment or divorce in the absence of a valid antenuptial or post-nuptial agreement or a decree of legal separation disposing the property of the spouses, the court shall:
(a) assign to each party his or her sole and separate property acquired prior to the marriage, and his or her sole and separate property acquired during the marriage by gift, bequest, devise, or descent, and any increase thereof, or property acquired in exchange therefor; and
(b) distribute all other property accumulated during the marriage, regardless of whether title is held individually or by the parties in a form of joint tenancy or tenancy by the entire-ties, in a manner that is equitable, just and reasonable, after considering all relevant factors including, but not limited to [several listed factors].
Under this statute, if a husband and wife have assets which do not fall within the specific definition of “sole and separate property,” those assets are deemed to be marital property and thus subject to distribution by the court in accordance with subsection (b). Our task, then, is to determine the category in which to place Mrs. Boyce's inchoate tort claim. 4
That task is made easier by the language of the statute. Mrs. Boyce’s claim arose during the Boyces’ marriage, but it was not acquired “by gift, bequest, devise, or de-scent_or ... in exchange therefor_” D.C.Code § 16-910(a). Accordingly, since it does not fit within the definition of sole and separate property, we hold that the inchoate claim was marital property, and that the trial court’s ruling to the contrary was erroneous. 5
We find support for our holding in the decisions of other courts which, in applying “equitable distribution” statutes similar to ours, have also ruled that inchoate personal injury claims arising during a marriage are marital property.
E.g., In re Burt,
Di Tolvo
also involved a tort claim that was not resolved until after the divorce. The trial court, faced with distributing a property interest of unknown value, simply allocated a fixed percentage of any future recovery to each spouse. On appeal, the trial court’s distribution scheme was upheld with only minor modifications not relevant here.
In sum, we hold that Mrs. Boyce’s inchoate personal injury claim was marital property, and that the trial court’s decision to the contrary must therefore be reversed. On remand, however, the trial court is not obligated to grant Mr. Boyce a share in the future proceeds from Mrs. Boyce’s claim.
See Barbour v. Barbour,
Ill
We recognize that some courts in other jurisdictions, wrestling with the same issue facing us today, have reached different conclusions. For various reasons, however, we decline to follow their lead.
Some courts apply what is known as the “analytic” approach. This method, which originated in community property states, finds both separate and marital property elements in the inchoate claim.
See Jurek v. Jurek,
We join the majority of courts in equitable distribution states in rejecting the analytic approach, and instead hold that the entire inchoate claim is marital property. As we have noted, most authorities now conclude that a cause of action for personal injury is a chose in action (a form of property), and we decline to follow
Amato’s
holding to the contrary. Furthermore, we cannot hold that an injured spouse’s recovery for pain and suffering would be an exchange for that spouse’s separate property. Our statute defines separate property as property “acquired prior to the marriage” or “acquired during the marriage by gift, bequest, devise, or descent ... [or] in exchange therefor_” D.C.Code § 16-910(a) (1981). A spouse’s healthy body, however, is not generally viewed as acquired property, and we are not inclined to say that it is.
See Platek v. Platek, supra
note 6,
Another line of cases, focusing on the uncertain value of an inchoate claim, holds that the entire claim is the injured spouse’s separate property.
McNevin v. McNevin,
There is no method by which a trial judge can place a monetary value on [an inchoate personal injury] claim without engaging in conjecture and speculation. We do not know whether or not such claim may ever result in any monetary compensation....
Fries, supra,
But courts should not be distracted by the fear of “engaging in conjecture and speculation” when distributing property rights of uncertain value in a divorce action. In
Barbour v. Barbour, supra,
we faced the issue of whether a vested but non-matured right to a pension was marital property. Such pension rights may never ripen into tangible benefits; if the working spouse dies before the pension matures, the benefits may be lost.
See Bloomer v. Bloomer,
There is, of course, some difficulty in dividing a contingent property interest, whether it is a non-matured pension right or an inchoate personal injury claim. In
Barbour
we stressed that a trial court has discretion to choose any “appropriate and fair” method to accomplish this task, and in this case we conclude that the trial court on
*619
remand will have the same measure of discretion. One such method is to calculate the present value of such an interest, taking into account the possibility that it may never materialize. This method, however, can often be uncertain, as the court recognized in
In re Brown, supra,
Furthermore, there are practical reasons for rejecting the position of
Fries, McNevin,
and
Hurley.
Courts in most jurisdictions hold that all, or at least part, of a settled — not inchoate — personal injury claim is marital property; see notes 6 and 9,
supra.
Only two equitable distribution states, Oregon and Utah, seem to have a rule that the entire proceeds of a settled claim are the separate property of the injured spouse.
In re Bull,
Finally, we note that Maryland has recently tangled with the issue of marital rights to an inchoate personal injury claim. In
Unkle v. Unkle,
*620 Mrs. Boyce urges us to follow Unkle, but we decline to do so for at least two reasons. First of all, our statute is different. The statute involved in Unkle specifies that marital property consists of those assets “acquired” during marriage, which generally denotes property “gain[ed] ... by one’s own exertions.” Black’s Law Dictionary 23 (5th ed. 1979). D.C.Code § 16-910(b), however, classifies any property “accumulated” during the marriage as marital property. To “accumulate” has been defined, among other things, as “to accrue; to allow to remain; to amass ... store up, aggregate, hoard.” 1A C.J.S. Accumulate, at 140 (1985) (footnotes omitted). Although the difference between these terms may be a bit elusive, we think it clear that “accumulated” property need not be derived from one’s own gainful efforts, but may be obtained fortuitously, or simply allowed to pile up. 12
We hesitate, however, to rest our decision on such subtle distinctions. More importantly, we find Unkle’s reasoning unpersuasive. An injured spouse may be unable to work and may therefore lose wages. If the injuries had not occurred, the spouse would have “acquired” those wages. The portion of the award representing lost wages, therefore, constitutes funds that the couple would have “acquired” if one spouse had not been injured. Unkle’s characterization of any recovery as “completely fortuitous” is puzzling. Since the injured spouse in that case missed seven and a half months’ work, it seems unlikely that recovery for lost wages would be fortuitous. Furthermore, the couple may well have used marital funds to pay medical expenses, which totaled $1,824.36. Certainly, those funds had been “acquired” by the couple prior to the accident. Yet if one spouse’s injuries cause the couple to deplete their marital assets for medical expenses, Unkle still states that any reimbursement would be “completely fortuitous.” Better reasoning would conclude that such reimbursement simply replenished funds that had already been “acquired,” and that at least this portion of the award would be classified as marital property. In short, we think Unkle is analytically dubious, and we choose not to follow it.
IV
Mr. Boyce also contests the trial court’s rulings that he is not entitled to either alimony or a share in Mrs. Boyce’s retirement, that he must pay $300 per month in child support, and that he be awarded only a twenty-five percent interest in the marital home.
13
Since we reverse the trial court’s ruling on Mrs. Boyce’s inchoate personal injury claim, these additional contentions need not be reviewed. The proper procedure is to affirm those portions of the trial court’s order which granted the divorce and awarded custody of the children (paragraphs 1 and 2 of the judgment filed October 8, 1985), since they are not contested, but to remand the rest of the order for reconsideration in light of our holding in this appeal, thereby enabling the trial court to alter other provisions if the court in its discretion elects to do so.
*621
Wheeler v. Wheeler,
The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and this case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Notes
. The Boyces purchased a home in 1971. Although Mrs. Boyce provided most of the down payment and settlement costs, which totaled approximately $10,000, the trial court found that Mr. Boyce also contributed $2,000. Mrs. Boyce took complete responsibility for the mortgage payments, and by the time of the divorce the mortgage was completely paid. The trial court found, however, that Mr. Boyce contributed $25 or $30 per week to the household expenses, and that he also made various non-financial contributions, such as driving Mrs. Boyce and the children in his taxicab. Considering these facts and other evidence of Mr. Boyce’s income, the court awarded Mrs. Boyce a seventy-five percent share and Mr. Boyce a twenty-five percent share of the marital home.
. Mrs. Boyce was also not required to share her disability retirement benefits with Mr. Boyce, nor was she ordered to pay him alimony, which he requested.
. Both parties rely almost exclusively on cases from other jurisdictions. The one District of Columbia case which Mrs. Boyce cites on this point,
Lansburgh & Bro., Inc. v. Clark,
. Preliminarily, we conclude that Mrs. Boyce’s inchoate claim is property, and thus subject to distribution under section 16-910. Most authorities state that a right to sue someone for personal injuries is a “chose in action" — a type of intangible personal property. “The term ‘chose in action’.... applies generally to rights of action arising out of tort as well as contract, whether such right of action is for an injury to the person or to property.’’ 73 C.J.S.
Property
§ 22 (1983) (footnotes omitted);
see also Galarza v. Union Bus Lines, Inc.,
. Nothing in our decision today alters the well-settled rule that "unenforceable expectations” are not marital assets. An expectation of inheritance, for example, is unenforceable and thus cannot be marital property.
Gassaway v. Gassaway,
. When the classification of a personal injury award
received by the injured spouse prior to the divorce
is at issue, most courts applying equitable distribution statutes have ruled that the entire award is marital property.
E.g., Liles v. Liles,
. An inchoate tort claim is not assignable.
Lamont
v.
Washington & G.R.R.,
. Mrs. Boyce contends that Heilman is distinguishable here because both the husband and wife in that case were parties to the product liability action, whereas Mr. Boyce is not a co-party to Mrs. Boyce’s personal injury claim. This distinction is meaningless. The classification of a cause of action as separate or marital property does not hinge on whether the spouses are joint plaintiffs, but on whether the claim arose during the marriage and falls outside the statutory definition of separate property. See 2 Valuation & Distribution of Martial Property § 23.07[l][a] (J. McCahey ed. 1987).
. With respect to settled personal injury claims, several courts in equitable distribution states have adopted the analytic approach.
E.g., Gloria B.S. v. Richard G.S.,
. Mrs. Boyce argues that since a trial court is required by section 16-910 to distribute marital property upon divorce, there can be no distribution of assets in the future. This argument must be rejected in light of
Barbour, supra,
. This is the current situation in Pennsylvania. Platek v. Platek, supra note 6, holds that a settled claim is entirely marital property, but Hurley v. Hurley, supra, holds that an inchoate claim is not.
. Mrs. Boyce relies on
Turner v. Taylor,
. Mrs. Boyce asserts that Mr. Boyce has already sold her his twenty-five percent interest in the home, and that he is therefore estopped from contesting this part of the order. It is settled in the District of Columbia that a party who has accepted benefits under a divorce decree is estopped from attacking the validity of the divorce on appeal.
Stein v. Stein,
