Opinion
From an interlocutory judgment decreeing a dissolution of marriage, Francis J. Karlin appeals; Cathryn M. Karlin also cross-appeals from the same judgment. Both the appeal and the cross-appeal concern only the trial court’s division of property. Appellant contends the trial court improperly concluded a portion of his military pension was community property; he also contends the trial court erred in concluding the Karlin family residence was a community asset. Finally, he asserts the trial court erred in awarding Cathryn one-half of $16,000 in U.S. government bonds and one-half of a $30,000 note receivable. Cross-appellant, on the other hand, concludes the court inadvertently failed to' include within the divided community assets the amount within a savings plan and 131 shares of McDonnell-Douglas common stock.
As we shall explain below, we confirm the trial court’s determination appellant’s retired military pay is, in part, a community asset. As we shall also explain, the court did not err in concluding the family residence was community property, since respondent’s petition had alleged and appellant’s answer had admitted its community property nature. Moreover, we are *29 persuaded the court’s determination the bonds and note receivable were community property was not erroneous since appellant’s attempt to trace the funds responsible therefor to separate property assets was insufficient to overcome the presumption of a community property nature adhering to assets purchased during a marriage. Finally, as we shall discuss, the court inadvertently failed to include certain definite community assets within those divided by the interlocutory decree. Accordingly, we modify the judgment to include the omitted assets, and, as modified, affirm the judgment.
The court awarded respondent a 25 percent interest in appellant’s military retirement pay, and ordered appellant to pay her 25 percent of the payments as he received them. The 25 percent figure was calculated on the basis of a 50 percent community interest in the pension since the parties had been married for 11 years of appellant’s 22 years of active duty.
While the parties were still married, appellant was retired under the authority of 10 United States Code, section 8911, as an active duty Air Force officer after 22 years of service; he then became entitled to retirement pay under 10 United States Code, section 8889. His pension is computed by the provisions of 10 United States Code, section 8991, and involved no contributions to a retirement or pension fund from his active duty pay.
The rights to retirement pay or to a pension become community property, subject to division in a dissolution proceeding, only when and to the extent a party becomes certain, during the course of the marriage, to receive some payment. To the extent that payment is, at the time of the dissolution of the marriage, subject to conditions which may or may not occur, retirement pay or a pension is an expectancy, not subject to division as community property.
(Phillipson
v.
Board of Administration,
Appellant asserts his right to a military pension is a mere gratuity and, as such, is a conditional right and thus separate property. Accordingly, appellant contends, he has no vested rights, only an expectancy of future payments and not a property interest which could properly be divided by the trial court. Appellant’s position finds support in the language of federal
*30
cases. “Pensions, compensation allowances and privileges are gratuities. They involve ... no vested right. The benefits conferred by gratuities, may be redistributed or withdrawn at any time in the discretion of Congress.”
(Lynch
v.
United States,
To so conclude in the case at bench, however, would be simply to exalt nomenclature over substance. Under 10 United States Code, sections 8911, 8889 and 8991 appellant is entitled to, and is receiving a pension based upon his 22 years of military service; he is entitled to the pension because of services rendered, in part, during the marriage. As our high court pointed out, albeit in the context of the California Judge’s Retirement Law, appellant’s retirement pay flows, in part, from services rendered during the marriage. “[T]he basic point remains that the pension payment serves as a remuneration for services rendered by the employee; if these services were discharged during the marriage, that remuneration must compose a community asset.”
(Waite
v.
Waite, supra, 6
Cal.3d 461, 471.) The fact the federal government may increase, diminish, or completely abolish appellant’s retirement payments does not change the nature of those payments from community to separate property. Appellant became entitled to the retirement payments during the marriage (10 U.S.C. § 8889); the manner of the expression of the pension cannot alter its community property characteristics.
(Waite
v.
Waite, supra.) A
similar result has been reached by the courts of several other community property jurisdictions.
(Morris
v.
Morris,
Appellant contends, however,
Wissner
v.
Wissner,
Our conclusion the trial court properly determined appellant’s Air Force retirement pay is, in part, community property is supported by the treatment of armed forces retirement pay under the federal tax laws. In
Wilkerson
v.
Commissioner,
Francis also contends the trial court erred in including the family residence in the division of community property assets. He asserts no evidence was introduced showing the residence was community property, and the only evidence before the court demonstrated as a matter of law the property was held as joint tenancy. Accordingly, he concludes, the court was without power to dispose of the residence, and, even assuming it was, he should have been credited with a $4,000 down payment made from his separate property.
The question whether the family residence was community property was not, however, before the court. Cathryn’s petition for divorce alleged the residence was community property; Francis’ answer admitted the allegation. Since the allegations of the petition .were admitted by the answer, the parties were bound thereby (Code Civ. Proc., § 462); evidence was unnecessary in their support, and evidence was inadmissible to prove their untruth since the facts admitted were outside the issues to be tried.
Francis further asserts the court erred in awarding Cathryn one-half of $16,000 in government bonds and $30,000 in a note receivable acquired during the marriage. His argument is predicated upon respondent’s Exhibit A which purports to trace the particular funds involved with the items to separate property sources.
Property acquired during the existence of a marriage is presumed to be community property. (Civ. Code, § 5110.) Where property has been acquired with commingled funds, the presumption controls in the absence of evidence successfully tracing the sources of the commingled
*33
funds.
(Mason
v.
Mason,
The court determined the bonds and the note receivable were community property. We cannot conclude that decision was incorrect. Although appellant’s records may show the general movement of his separate property funds during the marriage, considerable commingling and multiple deposits and withdrawals of funds resulted in his inability to- convincingly demonstrate the claimed separate property aspects of the divided property.
Appellant also contends, however, the government bonds were separate property under the authority of
Free
v.
Bland, supra,
At trial, the court orally determined the amount within a McDonnell-Douglas savings plan and 131 shares of McDonnell-Douglas common stock were community property. The disposition of these assets was not however included in the memorandum opinion of the court. Counsel for respondent and cross-appellant similarly failed to include the disposition of these items in the proposed findings, and, ultimately, in the interlocutory judgment. Respondent now contends the interlocutory judgment should be modified by including the omitted assets within the community property division. We agree.
Under Code of Civil Procedure, section 909, a reviewing court may make findings in addition to those of the trial court. Section 909 is to be liberally construed so that where feasible a cause may be disposed of by a single appeal “. . . and without further proceedings in the trial court. . . .” Although the rights of the parties in the savings plan and the stock have not yet been adjudicated and may be litigated in further proceedings
(Estate of Williams,
The judgment is modified to include within the assets -to be divided equally between the parties the 131 shares of McDonnell-Douglas common stock and the contents of the McDonnell-Douglas savings plan. As so modified, the judgment is affirmed.
Gardner, P. J., and Tamura, J., concurred.
Notes
We invited the filing of amicus briefs on this specific issue by various federal agencies as well as civilian retired officers’ associations. None were presented.
We do not here face a problem of allocation of the retirement pay. Appellant’s retirement pay was only an expectancy until his retirement; he became entitled to and acquired the right to receive retirement pay while domiciled in California, and at the time the rights to the retirement pay first became subject to division as community property in a dissolution proceeding. Although a portion of the retirement payments is technically attributable to services rendered outside California, the nature of the payments became fixed both as property and as community property, only when appellant became entitled to receive them, and the payments thus were properly divided without any allocation other than that reflecting the number of years of marriage. (Civ. Code, § 5110;
See
v.
See,
