Marriage of Mohler
Annotate this CaseThe sole issue in this appeal was how to allocate the value of a Rancho Cucamonga residential property lived in by plaintiff-respondent Jodie Mohler and defendant-appellant Greg Mohler during their marriage. Greg entered the marriage owning a home that the parties lived in as spouses for over 12 years. The parties agreed that application of the "Moore/Marsden" rule through the date of their separation resulted in the community beneficially owning 33.66 percent of the property. However, by the time of their dissolution trial, the husband had lived in the property for more than six years post-separation, paying the mortgage with his separate income. At the wife’s request, the trial court found that the community’s interest in the property continued to increase throughout those years, just as if community funds had been used to pay the mortgage during that time, resulting in the community obtaining a 64.9 percent interest in the property. The Court of Appeal concluded that was error: the Moore/Marsden rule applied only insofar as community funds were used to build equity in an asset, a situation which often terminates, as it did here, upon separation. "Watts" charges equitably compensate the community for one spouse’s use of a community-owned home. Therefore, as a matter of first impression, the Court held Watts charges could be levied against a spouse for his or her post-separation occupation of a property where the property is not entirely community property, but rather was treated as partially community property due to the Moore/Marsden rule. The trial court's judgment was vacated and the matter remanded for the proper application of Moore/Marsden and calculation of any Watts charges.