Opinion
In this mаrital dissolution case, the parties dispute the proper characterization of disability benefits. Prior to the marriage, the wife had purchased a private disability policy, paid all the premiums, and started collecting benefits. The trial court nevertheless treated the benefits received by the wife during marriage as community property, reasoning that they were a substitute for wages.
*730 As a matter of first impression, we conclude that the private disability benefits paid to the wife during marriage are her separate property, because she acquired the right to those benefits before marriage without any contribution from the community. We therefore reverse.
BACKGROUND
The parties to this appeal are appellant Belita Rossin (the wife), and respondent Richard Rossin (the husband). The parties were married in July 2000 and separated in March 2005.
In June 1991, some nine years prior to the marriage, the wife purchased a private disability insurance policy, to provide income in the event that she was disabled from working as a pediatrician. In January 1997, the wife left the practice of medicine for mental health reasons. In April 1997, she began receiving benefits under the policy in the form of monthly payments from the insurer, which continued throughout the parties’ marriage. Under the terms of the policy, the wife was not obliged to pay premiums during disability. Although disabled from working as a pediatrician, the wife was self-employed during the marriage as a music teacher. According to the husband, “the parties commingled their assets and contributed their respective incomes to maintain the community home and their life style.”
In July 2005, the wife brought this proceeding for dissolution of the marriage. In connection with the property division, the wife claimed the disability benefits as her separate property and sought reimbursement. The husband disputed that claim, asserting that the disability benefits received during the marriage were community property.
In September 2006, by stipulation, the dispute was submitted for decision by written briefs. In October 2006, the trial court filed a statement of decision, finding that the disability benefits received during marriage were community property. In the court’s view, because they “were intended to replace or substitute for salary/wages, it nеcessarily follows that the disability benefits received during marriage were community property.” In September 2007, the court entered its dissolution judgment and property division order, which includes the challenged characterization of the disability benefits as community property.
This timely appeal by the wife followed. The sole issue on appeal is the character of the disability benefits as separate or community property.
*731 DISCUSSION
As a framework for our discussion, we first describe the general principles of marital property law that inform our analysis.
I. General Principles
A. Overview
“California community property law is a complex amalgam of principles derived initially from Spanish law extant during early statehood.” (1 Raye et al., Cal. Civil Practice: Family Law Litigation (2002) Character and Valuation of Property, § 5:4, p. 9; see also
In re Marriage of Haines
(1995) 33 Cal.App.4th
277,
288-290 [
Community property and separate property are defined in the Family Code. (Further unspecified statutory references are to that code.)
1. Community Property
Section 760 states: “Except as otherwise provided by statute, all prоperty, real or personal, wherever situated, acquired by a married person during the marriage while domiciled in this state is community property.” Under this section, “there is a general presumption that property acquired during marriage by either spouse other than by gift or inheritance is community property unless traceable to a separate property source.”
(In re Marriage of Haines, supra,
33 Cal.App.4th at pp. 289-290; see also, e.g.,
In re Marriage of Mix
(1975)
2. Separate Property
Section 770 states: “Separate property of a mаrried person includes all of the following: [][] (1) All property owned by the person before marriage, [f] (2) All property acquired by the person after marriage by gift, *732 bequest, devise, or descent. [][] (3) The rents, issues, and profits of the property described in this section.” (§ 770, subd. (a).) Our state Constitution similarly provides: “Property owned before marriage or acquired during marriage by gift, will, or inheritance is separate property.” (Cal. Const., art. I, §21.) In addition, by statute, the spоuses’ postseparation “earnings and accumulations” are separate property. (§ 771, subd. (a).)
B. Characterization
“Characterization of property, for the purpose of community property law, refers to the process of classifying property as separate, community, or quasi-community. Characterization must take place in order to determine the rights and liabilities of the parties with respect to a particular asset or obligation and is an integral part of the division of property on marital dissolution.”
(In re Marriage of Haines, supra,
1. Time of Acquisition
“Perhaps the most basic characterization factor is the time when property is acquired in relation to the parties’ marital status.”
(In re Marriage of Haines, supra,
a. Property character generally is fixed at acquisition.
As well-settled case law recognizes: “The character of the property as separate or community is fixed as of the time it is acquired; and the character so fixed continues until it is changed in some manner recognized by law, as by agreement of the parties.”
(Mears
v.
Mears
(1960)
*733
“Whether property held by a [spouse] during coverture is separate is determined by the time of its acquisition. If it was separate then, it continues to remain so with the exception of such increase thereof аs may have been due to the contributions of the community by virtue of capital or industry.”
(Kenney
v.
Kenney
(1950)
The same is true of community property. Property acquired during marriage as the result of a spouse’s employment thus is “stamped a community asset from then on.”
(In re Marriage of Lehman, supra,
b. Apportionment is distinct from characterization.
In some cases, a property right is earned partly during marriage. For example, the right to enhanced retirement benefits may derive partly from employment during marriage and partly from the employee-spouse’s post-separation efforts, as was the case in
In re Marriage of Lehman, supra,
18 Cal.4th at pages 179-180. In such cases, “the question what extent such an enhancement belongs to the community and seрarate estates is one of apportionment and not characterization.”
(Id.
at p. 180; see also
In re Marriage of Frahm
(1996)
2. Presumptions
Although time of acquisition generally is the pivotal element in characterization of property, - other factors may affect the analysis in some cases, including presumptions. “Where property status cannot otherwise be proved, characterization is determined by applicable presumptions.”
(In re Marriage of Haines, supra,
3. Transmutation
“Both before and during marriage, spouses may agree to change the status of any or all of their property through a property transmutation.
*734
(§ 850.) A transmutation is an interspousal transаction or agreement that works a change in the character of the property.”
(In re Marriage of Campbell
(1999)
Because an agreement is required to transmute the character of property, the use of separate property during marriage—without more—does not convert it into community property.
(Patterson v. Patterson
(1966)
C. Appellate Review
As a general rule, factual findings that underpin the characterization determination are reviewed for substantial evidence. “Appellate review of a trial court’s finding that a particular item is separate or community property is limited to a determination of whether any substantial evidence supports the finding.”
(In re Marriage of Dekker
(1993)
But de novo
review
is appropriate where resolution оf “the issue of the characterization to be given (as separate or community property) . . . requires a critical consideration, in a factual context, of legal principles and their underlying values, the determination in question amounts to the resolution of a mixed question of law and fact that is predominantly one of law.”
(In re Marriage of Davis
(2004)
II. Application
With the foregoing principles in mind, we turn to the single question presented in this appeal: whether the private disability benefits received by the wife during the marriage are separate or community property.
*735 A. Introduction
The disability policy at issue here was purchased entirely before marriage, using only separate property funds; the payment of benefits under the policy also began prior to the marriage. Because these essential facts are undisputed, our review is de novo.
(In re Marriage of Lehman, supra,
It appears that the exact issue before us is a question оf first impression. So far as we are aware, no case has addressed the nature of
disability
benefits as a
disputed
question where the right to benefits accrued
prior
to marriage. California courts have addressed the nature of other types of benefits acquired prior to marriage.
(Fredericks v. Fredericks
(1991)
B. Analysis
As we explain, in this case, the circumstances surrounding acquisition of the disability policy compel its characterization as separate property. The pivotal factor is the time of acquisition of the right to the benefits; a secondary consideration here is the source of funds for acquisition. In our case, the right to benefits was acquired by the wife prior to marriage with separate property funds. That being so, the benefits must be characterized as separate property. Under these circumstances, it is unnecessary to сonsider the function or purpose of the disability payments as either wage replacement or a pension substitute.
1. Time of Acquisition
a. The wife acquired the right to the disability benefits prior to marriage.
As stated above: “Perhaps the most basic characterization factor is the time when property is acquired in relation to the parties’ marital status.”
(In re
*736
Marriage of Haines, supra,
Here, the wife acquired the right to the disability benefits prior to marriage by purchasing the disability insurance policy. The fact that the right to benefits was acquired prior to marriage fixes the character of that property as the wife’s separate property.
Our conclusion is bolstered by decisiоns from the opposite end of the temporal spectrum involving postseparation acquisition of benefits. (See, e.g.,
Elfmont, supra,
b. The fact that the wife received the benefits during marriage is irrelevant.
Here, the property in question is the “right to 'draw[] from [a] stream of income that. . . begins to flow’ on” disability.
(In re Marriage of Lehman, supra,
18 Cal.4th at p.
177
[pension benefits].) For property characterization purposes, the critical question is when the right to that stream of income
accrued.
(See
id.
at pp. 177, 179, 180, 182, 183, 185, 186 [referring to the accrual of the right to pension benefits].) The timing of
receipt
of the benefits themselves is irrelevant.
(In re Marriage of Shea, supra,
Our conclusion finds support in the three nondisability cases cited earlier:
Estate of Updegraph, supra,
In the
Updegraph
case, for example, “all of the events precedent to a vesting of the [deceased husband’s] rights to a monthly [police] pension occurred prior to marriage. . . . The decedent’s pension rights were earned during his employment [while single] . . . and are not related to any incident occurring during his marriage to appellant.”
(Estate of Updegraph, supra,
2. Source of Funds for Acquisition
Under the circumstances of this case, time of acquisition is determinative. Because the right to disability benefits accrued prior to marriage, it is separate property. Our analysis properly ends there. But given the stated basis for the trial court’s decision, and the husband’s defense of that rationale here, we feel constrained to extend our discussion of the issue. As noted above, the trial court concluded that the disability benefits were community property because they functioned as a substitute for wages. In reaching that conclusion, the court relied on
In re Marriage of Saslow
(1985)
a. The wife paid for the disability policy with separate property funds.
In its 1995 decision in
Elfmont,
the California Supreme Court discussed how the source of funds used in acquiring or renewing a disability policy affects the character of the benefits received under the policy.
(Elfmont, supra, 9
Cal.4th at pp. 1033-1035.) As stated in
Elfmont,
disability benefits “may be treated as community property only to the extent they were ‘purchased during marriage with community funds’ [citation].”
(Id.
at p. 1033, quoting
Saslow, supra,
The source test enunciated in Elfmont is not met here. In this case, the policy was purchased solely with the wife’s premarital separate property; no community funds went into its acquisition. Applying the holding of Elfmont, the wife “became entitled to draw the benefits” because she had previously paid the “premiums . . . out of [her] separate property .... Accordingly, all the benefits are [her] separate property.” (Elfmont, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 1035.)
b. Because no community property funds were used to procure the disability benefits, their function as wage replacement is irrelevant.
The
Saslow
court applied a functional analysis in apportioning disability benefits.
(Saslow, supra, 40
Cal.3d at pp. 860-861.) Under
Saslow,
courts are directed to treat disability benefits “as separate property insofar as they are intended to replace postdissolution earnings that would have been the separate-property incоme of the disabled spouse, and treat the benefits as community property insofar as they are intended to provide retirement income.”
(Ibid.)
In a similar vein, some commentators have proposed using an analytical rather than a mechanical approach in dividing disability or similar benefits. (See, e.g., Blumberg,
Marital Property Treatment of Pensions, Disability Pay, Workers’ Compensation, and Other Wage Substitutes: An Insurance, or Replacement, Analysis
(1986) 33 UCLA L.Rev. 1250, 1289 [urging a functional “replacement analysis” for “wage replacement benefits such as disability pay, workers’ compensation, and severance pay”]; cf. Annot., Divorce and Separation: Workers’ Compensation Benefits as Marital Property Subject to Distribution (1995)
*739
The
Elfmont
court also adverted to function, noting: “The purpose of term disability insurance ... is to replace lost earnings. If during the marriage an insured spouse becomes disabled, the benefits received are community property because they replace community earnings.”
(Elfmont,
supra,
In Elfmont, however, the renewal premiums were not “paid ‘during the marriage with community funds’ and with the intent of providing community retirement income [citation].” (Elfmont, supra, 9 Cal.4th at p. 1035, quoting Saslow, supra, 40 Cal.3d at pp. 854, 861.) Instead, the husband paid renewal premiums after separation, “out of his separate property, thereby keeping the insurance in force until he qualified for disability benefits 32 months later.” (Elfmont, at p. 1033.) Thus, Elfmont presented no basis for apportioning the disability benefits between separate and community interests; those benefits were wholly the husband’s separate property.
For similar reasons, there is no basis for apportionment in this case and a functional approach thus is unwarranted. With no community contribution, the premarital source of the premium payments compels characterization of the policy benefits as the wife’s separate property, regardless of their function or the parties’ intent.
3. Conclusion
The issue before us is one of characterization, not apportionment. Since no community funds were used to pay the disability policy premiums, no question of apportionment arises. This case thus presents no basis for examining the parties’ intent or for analyzing the function of the disability benefits as wage replacemеnt.
Under the circumstances presented here, characterization of the disability benefits turns on “the single concrete fact of time.”
(In re Marriage of Lehman, supra,
*740 DISPOSITION
Insofar as it determines that the disability benefits are community property, the judgment is reversed. The cause is remanded to the trial court, with instructions to award the disability benefits received during marriage to the wife as her separate property.
Mihara, Acting P. J., and Duffy, J., concurred.
