California is a community property state. That means anything acquired during the marriage, other than that acquired by gift, bequest or devise by one of the partners, is a part of the community. For real property to be a part of the community it must be put in the name of the community. If it is not in the name of the community, the community has no right to it. The only exception could be if the community was paying all the costs, payments, expenses, upkeep, and THEN the community MIGHT have a claim against the person who owns the real property for unjust enrichment. That would be a hard case to prove.
Answered on Mar 06th, 2014 at 6:04 PM