766.62
766.62
Classification of deferred employment benefits. 766.62(1)(a)(a) Except as provided in
par. (b), a deferred employment benefit attributable to employment of a spouse occurring after the determination date is marital property.
766.62(1)(b)
(b) A deferred employment benefit attributable to employment of a spouse occurring after the determination date is mixed property if, after the determination date and during the period of employment giving rise to the benefit, the employed spouse or his or her spouse are at any time not domiciled in this state. The marital property component of that mixed property is the amount which results from multiplying the entire benefit by a fraction, the numerator of which is the period of employment giving rise to the benefit that occurred after the determination date and during marriage and the denominator of which is the total period of employment giving rise to the benefit.
766.62(2)
(2) A deferred employment benefit attributable to employment of a spouse occurring while the spouse is married and partly before and partly after the determination date is mixed property. The marital property component of that mixed property is the amount which results from multiplying the entire benefit by a fraction, the numerator of which is the period of employment giving rise to the benefit that occurred after the determination date and during marriage and the denominator of which is the total period of employment giving rise to the benefit.
766.62(2m)
(2m) Unless provided otherwise in a decree or marital property agreement, a mixed property deferred employment benefit shall be valued as of a dissolution or an employe spouse's death.
766.62(3)
(3) Ownership or disposition provisions of a deferred employment benefit plan which conflict with
sub. (1) or
(2) are ineffective between spouses or former spouses or between a surviving spouse and a person claiming under a deceased spouse's disposition at death.
766.62(4)
(4) If a deferred employment benefit plan administrator makes payments or takes actions in accordance with the plan and the administrator's records, the administrator is not liable because of those payments or actions.
766.62(5)
(5) If the nonemploye spouse predeceases the employe spouse, the marital property interest of the nonemploye spouse in all of the following terminates at the death of the nonemploye spouse:
766.62(5)(b)
(b) Assets in an individual retirement account that are traceable to the rollover of a deferred employment benefit plan.
766.62 Note
NOTE: 1991 Wis. Act 301, which affected this section, contains extensive legislative council notes.
766.63(1)(1) Except as provided otherwise in
ss. 766.61 and
766.62, mixing marital property with property other than marital property reclassifies the other property to marital property unless the component of the mixed property which is not marital property can be traced.
766.63(2)
(2) Application by one spouse of substantial labor, effort, inventiveness, physical or intellectual skill, creativity or managerial activity to either spouse's property other than marital property creates marital property attributable to that application if both of the following apply:
766.63(2)(a)
(a) Reasonable compensation is not received for the application.
766.63(2)(b)
(b) Substantial appreciation of the property results from the application.
766.63 Annotation
Marital property presumptions and tracing principals applied. In Matter of Estate of Lloyd, 170 W (2d) 240, 487 NW (2d) 644 (Ct. App. 1992).
766.63 Annotation
Where tracing of the marital component of a mixed asset is established under sub. (1), reclassification does not occur. Instead, a claim for reimbursement exists in favor of the marital estate measured by the enhanced value of the asset and not the marital amounts expended. Estate of Kobylski, 178 W (2d) 158, 503 NW (2d) 369 (Ct. App. 1993).
766.63 Annotation
Under sub. (2), a party who applies substantial uncompensated labor to property may not recover if there is no resulting substantial appreciation. Estate of Kobylski, 178 W (2d) 158, 503 NW (2d) 369 (Ct. App. 1993).
766.63 Annotation
Expenditures that result in the mere maintenance of property, including the payment of property taxes, do not result in marital property being created through mixing. Krueger v. Rodenberg, 190 W (2d) 367, 527 NW (2d) 381 (Ct. App. 1994).
766.63 Annotation
If a nonmarital asset is mixed with marital property, tracing the nonmarital property to its nonmarital source preserves the traced component's nonmarital status. There is no requirement that the party tracing the nonmarital component also trace the mixing of the marital component. That the marital property was used to satisfy a nonmarital debt against the property does not change the nonmarital character of the traceable property. Bille v. Zuraff, 198 W (2d) 867, 543 NW (2d) 568 (Ct. App. 1995).
766.63 Annotation
Enhanced value of a closely held corporation at the time of divorce: What role will Wisconsin's marital property act play? Podell, 69 MLR 82 (1985).
766.70(1)(1) A spouse has a claim against the other spouse for breach of the duty of good faith imposed by
s. 766.15 resulting in damage to the claimant spouse's property. Except as otherwise provided in
sub. (6), no spouse may commence an action under this subsection later than 6 years after acquiring actual knowledge of the facts giving rise to the claim.
766.70(2)
(2) Upon request of a spouse, a court may order an accounting of the spouses' property and obligations and may determine rights of ownership in, beneficial enjoyment of or access to marital property and the classification of all property of the spouses.
766.70(3)
(3) Upon request of a spouse, a court may order the name of the spouse added to marital property or to a document evidencing ownership of marital property held in the name of the other spouse alone except with respect to any of the following:
766.70(3)(a)
(a) An interest in a partnership or joint venture held by the other spouse as a general partner or as a participant.
766.70(3)(aL)
(aL) An interest in a limited liability company held by the other spouse as a member.
766.70(3)(b)
(b) An interest in a professional corporation, professional association or similar entity held by the other spouse as a stockholder or member.
766.70(3)(c)
(c) An asset of an unincorporated business if the other spouse is the only one of the spouses involved in operating or managing the business.
766.70(3)(d)
(d) A corporation, the stock of which is not publicly traded. Under this paragraph, stock of a corporation is publicly traded if both of the following apply:
766.70(3)(d)1.
1. The stock is traded on a national stock exchange or quoted on the national association of securities dealers automated quotations system.
766.70(3)(d)2.
2. The employes, officers and directors of the corporation own, in the aggregate, less than 10% in value of the outstanding shares of the stock in the corporation.
766.70(3)(e)
(e) Any other property if the addition would adversely affect the rights of a 3rd person.
766.70(4)(a)(a) If marital property has been or is likely to be substantially injured by the other spouse's gross mismanagement, waste or absence, upon request of a spouse a court may order any of the following:
766.70(4)(a)1.
1. A temporary or permanent limitation or termination of any of the other spouse's management and control rights in marital property.
766.70(4)(a)3.
3. A division of the obligations of the spouses existing on the date of the request, after considering the classification of the obligation under
s. 766.55 and the factors specified under
ss. 767.255 and
767.26.
766.70(4)(a)4.
4. That all obligations incurred after the court order are the obligations of the incurring spouse and that the other spouse is not liable for, and his or her property is not available to satisfy, the obligations.
766.70(4)(a)5.
5. That any property acquired by either spouse after the court order is the individual property of the acquiring spouse.
766.70(4)(b)
(b) The court may make any order under this subsection subject to any equitable condition.
766.70(5)
(5) When marital property is used to satisfy an obligation other than an obligation under
s. 766.55 (2) (a) or
(b), the nonobligated spouse may request the court to order that he or she receive as individual property marital property equal in value to the marital property used to satisfy the obligations of the obligated spouse, subject to the rights of any 3rd party who relied upon the availability of the marital property to satisfy any obligation under
s. 766.55 (2) (a) or
(b) and subject to equitable considerations. No person may bring an action under this subsection later than one year after the obligation is satisfied.
766.70(6)(a)(a) Except as provided in
pars. (b) and
(c), if a gift of marital property during marriage by a spouse does not comply with
s. 766.53, the other spouse may bring an action to recover the property or a compensatory judgment equal to the amount by which the gift exceeded the limit under
s. 766.53. The other spouse may bring the action against the donating spouse, the gift recipient or both. The other spouse must commence the action within the earliest of one year after he or she has notice of the gift, one year after a dissolution or on or before the deadline for filing a claim under
s. 859.01 after the death of either spouse. If the recovery occurs during marriage, it is marital property. If the recovery occurs after a dissolution or the death of either spouse, the recovery is limited to 50% of the recovery that would have been available if the recovery had occurred during marriage.
766.70(6)(b)1.1. If a transfer of marital property to a 3rd person during marriage by a spouse acting alone becomes a completed gift upon the death of the spouse or if an arrangement during marriage involving marital property by a spouse acting alone is intended to be and becomes a gift to a 3rd person upon the death of the spouse, the surviving spouse may bring an action against the gift recipient to recover one-half of the gift of marital property. The surviving spouse may not commence an action under this paragraph later than one year after the death of the decedent spouse.
766.70(6)(b)2.
2. If the spouse entitled to a remedy under
subd. 1. predeceases the donor spouse, no action may be commenced later than one year after the decedent's death. Except as provided in
s. 766.61 (7), recovery in such an action is the same as if the donor spouse had predeceased the spouse entitled to recover, but is valued at the date of death of the spouse entitled to recover.
766.70(6)(c)1.1. If a spouse acting alone makes a gift of marital property to a 3rd person during marriage in the form of a joint tenancy and the spouse and the 3rd person are joint tenants with respect to that property, the other spouse has a right of reimbursement against the donor spouse or the gift recipient or both with respect to that portion of the gift representing the quotient resulting from dividing the number of joint tenants other than the donor spouse by the total number of joint tenants, including the donor spouse. The other spouse must commence the action within the earliest of one year after he or she has notice of the gift, one year after a dissolution or one year after the death of either spouse.
766.70(6)(c)2.
2. If the gift of marital property under
subd. 1. remains in the form of a joint tenancy, at the death of the tenant spouse the surviving spouse has a right of reimbursement against the decedent spouse's estate or the gift recipient or both with respect to one-half of that portion of the joint tenancy representing the quotient resulting from dividing one by the total number of joint tenants immediately before the death of the tenant spouse, valued at the date of death. The surviving spouse may not commence the action later than one year after the death of the decedent spouse. If the spouse entitled to a right of reimbursement under this subdivision predeceases the tenant spouse, the action may not be commenced later than one year after the decedent's death. The portion subject to the right of reimbursement in such an action is the same as if the tenant spouse had predeceased the spouse with the right of reimbursement, but is valued at the date of death of the spouse with the right of reimbursement.
766.70(7)
(7) After the date of death within 90 days after the earlier of either the receipt of the inventory listing any life insurance policy or deferred employment benefit plan covered by
s. 766.61 or
766.62, or the discovery of the existence of such a policy or plan, the surviving spouse may purchase the decedent's interest in the policy or plan from the decedent's estate at the interest's fair market value at the date of death, if all or part of the policy or plan is included in the decedent spouse's estate.
766.70 Annotation
Intentional misrepresentation is a breach of the duty of good faith for which the exclusive pre-divorce remedy is s. 766.70 (1). Commencement of divorce bars action under this section. Gardner v. Gardner, 175 W (2d) 420, 499 NW (2d) 266 (Ct. App. 1993).
766.73
766.73
Invalid marriages. If a marriage is invalidated by a decree, a court may apply so much of this chapter to the property of the parties to the invalid marriage as is necessary to avoid an inequitable result. This section does not apply if
s. 767.255 applies to the action to invalidate the marriage.
766.73 History
History: 1983 a. 186;
1985 a. 37.
766.75
766.75
Treatment of certain property at dissolution. After a dissolution each former spouse owns an undivided one-half interest in the former marital property as a tenant in common, except as provided otherwise in a decree or an agreement entered into by the former spouses after dissolution.
766.75 History
History: 1983 a. 186;
1985 a. 37.
766.95
766.95
Rules of construction. Unless displaced by this chapter, the principles of law and equity supplement its provisions.
766.95 History
History: 1983 a. 186.
766.96
766.96
Uniformity of application and construction. This chapter shall be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the law with respect to the subject of this chapter among states enacting it.
766.96 History
History: 1983 a. 186.
766.97
766.97
Equal rights; common law disabilities. 766.97(1)(1) Women and men have the same rights and privileges under the law in the exercise of suffrage, freedom of contract, choice of residence, jury service, holding office, holding and conveying property, care and custody of children and in all other respects. The various courts and executive and administrative officers shall construe the statutes so that words importing one gender extend and may be applied to either gender consistent with the manifest intent of the legislature. The courts and executive and administrative officers shall make all necessary rules and provisions to carry out the intent and purpose of this subsection.
766.97(2)
(2) Nothing in this chapter revives the common law disabilities on a woman's right to own, manage, inherit, transfer or receive gifts of property in her own name, to enter into contracts in her own name or to institute civil actions in her own name. Except as otherwise provided in this chapter and in other sections of the statutes controlling marital property or property of spouses that is not marital property, either spouse has the right to own and exclusively manage his or her property that is not marital property, enter into contracts with 3rd parties or with his or her spouse, institute and defend civil actions in his or her name and maintain an action against his or her spouse for damages resulting from that spouse's intentional act or negligence.
766.97(3)
(3) The common law rights of a spouse to compel the domestic and sexual services of the other spouse are abolished. Nothing in this subsection affects a spouse's common law right to consortium or society and companionship.
766.97 History
History: 1983 a. 186 ss.
47,
48; Stats. 1983 s. 766.97;
1985 a. 37.