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Carolina Equitable Distribution Statutes
§ 50-20. Distribution
by court of marital and divisible property
(a) Upon application of
a party, the court shall determine what is the
marital property and divisible property and shall
provide for an equitable distribution of the marital
property and divisible property between the parties
in accordance with the provisions of this section.
(b) For purposes of
this section:
(1) "Marital property"
means all real and personal property acquired by
either spouse or both spouses during the course of
the marriage and before the date of the separation
of the parties, and presently owned, except property
determined to be separate property or divisible
property in accordance with subdivision (2) or (4)
of this subsection. Marital property includes all
vested and nonvested pension, retirement, and other
deferred compensation rights, and vested and
nonvested military pensions eligible under the
federal Uniformed Services Former Spouses'
Protection Act. It is presumed that all property
acquired after the date of marriage and before the
date of separation is marital property except
property which is separate property under
subdivision (2) of this subsection. This presumption
may be rebutted by the greater weight of the
evidence.
(2) "Separate property"
means all real and personal property acquired by a
spouse before marriage or acquired by a spouse by
bequest, devise, descent, or gift during the course
of the marriage. However, property acquired by gift
from the other spouse during the course of the
marriage shall be considered separate property only
if such an intention is stated in the conveyance.
Property acquired in exchange for separate property
shall remain separate property regardless of whether
the title is in the name of the husband or wife or
both and shall not be considered to be marital
property unless a contrary intention is expressly
stated in the conveyance. The increase in value of
separate property and the income derived from
separate property shall be considered separate
property. All professional licenses and business
licenses which would terminate on transfer shall be
considered separate property.
(3) "Distributive
award" means payments that are payable either in a
lump sum or over a period of time in fixed amounts,
but shall not include alimony payments or other
similar payments for support and maintenance which
are treated as ordinary income to the recipient
under the Internal Revenue Code.
(4) "Divisible
property" means all real and personal property as
set forth below:
a. All appreciation and
diminution in value of marital property and
divisible property of the parties occurring after
the date of separation and prior to the date of
distribution, except that appreciation or diminution
in value which is the result of postseparation
actions or activities of a spouse shall not be
treated as divisible property.
b. All property,
property rights, or any portion thereof received
after the date of separation but before the date of
distribution that was acquired as a result of the
efforts of either spouse during the marriage and
before the date of separation, including, but not
limited to, commissions, bonuses, and contractual
rights.
c. Passive income from
marital property received after the date of
separation, including, but not limited to, interest
and dividends.
d. Increases and
decreases in marital debt and financing charges and
interest related to marital debt.
(c) There shall be an
equal division by using net value of marital
property and net value of divisible property unless
the court determines that an equal division is not
equitable. If the court determines that an equal
division is not equitable, the court shall divide
the marital property and divisible property
equitably. The court shall consider all of the
following factors under this subsection:
(1) The income,
property, and liabilities of each party at the time
the division of property is to become effective.
(2) Any obligation for
support arising out of a prior marriage.
(3) The duration of the
marriage and the age and physical and mental health
of both parties.
(4) The need of a
parent with custody of a child or children of the
marriage to occupy or own the marital residence and
to use or own its household effects.
(5) The expectation of
pension, retirement, or other deferred compensation
rights that are not marital property.
(6) Any equitable claim
to, interest in, or direct or indirect contribution
made to the acquisition of such marital property by
the party not having title, including joint efforts
or expenditures and contributions and services, or
lack thereof, as a spouse, parent, wage earner or
homemaker.
(7) Any direct or
indirect contribution made by one spouse to help
educate or develop the career potential of the other
spouse.
(8) Any direct
contribution to an increase in value of separate
property which occurs during the course of the
marriage.
(9) The liquid or
nonliquid character of all marital property and
divisible property.
(10) The difficulty of
evaluating any component asset or any interest in a
business, corporation or profession, and the
economic desirability of retaining such asset or
interest, intact and free from any claim or
interference by the other party.
(11) The tax
consequences to each party.
(11a) Acts of either
party to maintain, preserve, develop, or expand; or
to waste, neglect, devalue or convert the marital
property or divisible property, or both, during the
period after separation of the parties and before
the time of distribution.
(11b) In the event of
the death of either party prior to the entry of any
order for the distribution of property made pursuant
to this subsection:
a. Property passing to
the surviving spouse by will or through intestacy
due to the death of a spouse.
b. Property held as
tenants by the entirety or as joint tenants with
rights of survivorship passing to the surviving
spouse due to the death of a spouse.
c. Property passing to
the surviving spouse from life insurance, individual
retirement accounts, pension or profit-sharing
plans, any private or governmental retirement plan
or annuity of which the decedent controlled the
designation of beneficiary (excluding any benefits
under the federal social security system), or any
other retirement accounts or contracts, due to the
death of a spouse.
d. The surviving
spouse's right to claim an "elective share" pursuant
to G.S. 30-3.1 through G.S. 30-33, unless otherwise
waived.
(12) Any other factor
which the court finds to be just and proper.
(c1) Notwithstanding
any other provision of law, a second or subsequent
spouse acquires no interest in the marital property
and divisible property of his or her spouse from a
former marriage until a final determination of
equitable distribution is made in the marital
property and divisible property of the spouse's
former marriage.
(d) Before, during or
after marriage the parties may by written agreement,
duly executed and acknowledged in accordance with
the provisions of G.S. 52-10 and 52-10.1, or by a
written agreement valid in the jurisdiction where
executed, provide for distribution of the marital
property or divisible property, or both, in a manner
deemed by the parties to be equitable and the
agreement shall be binding on the parties.
(e) Subject to the
presumption of subsection (c) of this section that
an equal division is equitable, it shall be presumed
in every action that an in-kind distribution of
marital or divisible property is equitable. This
presumption may be rebutted by the greater weight of
the evidence, or by evidence that the property is a
closely held business entity or is otherwise not
susceptible of division in-kind. In any action in
which the presumption is rebutted, the court in lieu
of in-kind distribution shall provide for a
distributive award in order to achieve equity
between the parties. The court may provide for a
distributive award to facilitate, effectuate or
supplement a distribution of marital or divisible
property. The court may provide that any
distributive award payable over a period of time be
secured by a lien on specific property.
(f) The court shall
provide for an equitable distribution without regard
to alimony for either party or support of the
children of both parties. After the determination of
an equitable distribution, the court, upon request
of either party, shall consider whether an order for
alimony or child support should be modified or
vacated pursuant to G.S. 50-16.9 or 50-13.7.
(g) If the court orders
the transfer of real or personal property or an
interest therein, the court may also enter an order
which shall transfer title, as provided in G.S.
1A-1, Rule 70 and G.S. 1-228.
(h) If either party
claims that any real property is marital property or
divisible property, that party may cause a notice of
lis pendens to be recorded pursuant to Article 11 of
Chapter 1 of the General Statutes. Any person whose
conveyance or encumbrance is recorded or whose
interest is obtained by descent, prior to the filing
of the lis pendens, shall take the real property
free of any claim resulting from the equitable
distribution proceeding. The court may cancel the
notice of lis pendens upon substitution of a bond
with surety in an amount determined by the court to
be sufficient provided the court finds that the
claim of the spouse against property subject to the
notice of lis pendens can be satisfied by money
damages.
(i) Upon filing an
action or motion in the cause requesting an
equitable distribution or alleging that an equitable
distribution will be requested when it is timely to
do so, a party may seek injunctive relief pursuant
to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 65 and Chapter 1, Article 37, to
prevent the disappearance, waste or conversion of
property alleged to be marital property, divisible
property, or separate property of the party seeking
relief. The court, in lieu of granting an
injunction, may require a bond or other assurance of
sufficient amount to protect the interest of the
other spouse in the property. Upon application by
the owner of separate property which was removed
from the marital home or possession of its owner by
the other spouse, the court may enter an order for
reasonable counsel fees and costs of court incurred
to regain its possession, but such fees shall not
exceed the fair market value of the separate
property at the time it was removed.
(i1) Unless good cause
is shown that there should not be an interim
distribution, the court may, at any time after an
action for equitable distribution has been filed and
prior to the final judgment of equitable
distribution, enter orders declaring what is
separate property and may also enter orders dividing
part of the marital property, divisible property or
debt, or marital debt between the parties. The
partial distribution may provide for a distributive
award and may also provide for a distribution of
marital property, marital debt, divisible property,
or divisible debt. Any such orders entered shall be
taken into consideration at trial and proper credit
given.
Hearings held pursuant
to this subsection may be held at sessions arranged
by the chief district court judge pursuant to G.S.
7A-146 and, if held at such sessions, shall not be
subject to the reporting requirements of G.S.
7A-198.
(j) In any order for
the distribution of property made pursuant to this
section, the court shall make written findings of
fact that support the determination that the marital
property and divisible property has been equitably
divided.
(k) The rights of the
parties to an equitable distribution of marital
property and divisible property are a species of
common ownership, the rights of the respective
parties vesting at the time of the parties'
separation.
( l ) (1) A claim for
equitable distribution, whether an action is filed
or not, survives the death of a spouse so long as
the parties are living separate and apart at the
time of death.
(2) The provisions of
Article 19 of Chapter 28A of the General Statutes
shall be applicable to a claim for equitable
distribution against the estate of the deceased
spouse.
(3) Any claim for
equitable distribution against the surviving spouse
made by the estate of the deceased spouse must be
filed with the district court within one year of the
date of death of the deceased spouse or be forever
barred.
§ 50-20.1. Pension and
retirement benefits
(a) The award of vested
pension, retirement, or other deferred compensation
benefits may be made payable:
(1) As a lump sum by
agreement;
(2) Over a period of
time in fixed amounts by agreement;
(3) By appropriate
domestic relations order as a prorated portion of
the benefits made to the designated recipient at the
time the party against whom the award is made
actually begins to receive the benefits; or
(4) By awarding a
larger portion of other assets to the party not
receiving the benefits and a smaller share of other
assets to the party entitled to receive the
benefits.
(b) The award of
nonvested pension, retirement, or other deferred
compensation benefits may be made payable:
(1) As a lump sum by
agreement;
(2) Over a period of
time in fixed amounts by agreement; or
(3) By appropriate
domestic relations order as a prorated portion of
the benefits made to the designated recipient at the
time the party against whom the award is made
actually begins to receive the benefits.
(c) Notwithstanding the
provisions of subsections (a) and (b) of this
section, the court shall not require the
administrator of the fund or plan involved to make
any payments until the party against whom the award
is made actually begins to receive the benefits
unless the plan permits an earlier distribution.
(d) The award shall be
determined using the proportion of time the marriage
existed (up to the date of separation of the
parties), simultaneously with the employment which
earned the vested and nonvested pension, retirement,
or deferred compensation benefit, to the total
amount of time of employment. The award shall be
based on the vested and nonvested accrued benefit,
as provided by the plan or fund, calculated as of
the date of separation, and shall not include
contributions, years of service, or compensation
which may accrue after the date of separation. The
award shall include gains and losses on the prorated
portion of the benefit vested at the date of
separation.
(e) No award shall
exceed fifty percent (50%) of the benefits the
person against whom the award is made is entitled to
receive as vested and nonvested pension, retirement,
or other deferred compensation benefits, except that
an award may exceed fifty percent (50%) if (i) other
assets subject to equitable distribution are
insufficient; or (ii) there is difficulty in
distributing any asset or any interest in a
business, corporation, or profession; or (iii) it is
economically desirable for one party to retain an
asset or interest that is intact and free from any
claim or interference by the other party; or (iv)
more than one pension or retirement system or
deferred compensation plan or fund is involved, but
the benefits award may not exceed fifty percent
(50%) of the total benefits of all the plans added
together; or (v) both parties consent. In no event
shall an award exceed fifty percent (50%) if a plan
prohibits an award in excess of fifty percent (50%).
(f) In the event the
person receiving the award dies, the unpaid balance,
if any, of the award shall pass to the beneficiaries
of the recipient by will, if any, or by intestate
succession, or by beneficiary designation with the
plan consistent with the terms of the plan unless
the plan prohibits such designation. In the event
the person against whom the award is made dies, the
award to the recipient shall remain payable to the
extent permitted by the pension or retirement system
or deferred compensation plan or fund involved.
(g) The court may
require distribution of the award by means of a
qualified domestic relations order, or as defined in
section 414(p) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
or by other appropriate order. To facilitate the
calculating and payment of distributive awards, the
administrator of the system, plan, or fund may be
ordered to certify the total contributions, years of
service, and pension, retirement, or other deferred
compensation benefits payable.
(h) This section and
G.S. 50-21 shall apply to all pension, retirement,
and other deferred compensation plans and funds,
including vested and nonvested military pensions
eligible under the federal Uniform Services Former
Spouses Protection Act, and including funds
administered by the State pursuant to Articles 84
through 88 of Chapter 58 and Chapters 120, 127A,
128, 135, 143, 143B, and 147 of the General
Statutes, to the extent of a member's accrued
benefit at the date of separation, as determined by
the court.
§ 50-21. Procedures in
actions for equitable distribution of property;
sanctions for purposeful and prejudicial delay
(a) At any time after a
husband and wife begin to live separate and apart
from each other, a claim for equitable distribution
may be filed and adjudicated, either as a separate
civil action, or together with any other action
brought pursuant to Chapter 50 of the General
Statutes, or as a motion in the cause as provided by
G.S. 50-11(e) or (f). Within 90 days after service
of a claim for equitable distribution, the party who
first asserts the claim shall prepare and serve upon
the opposing party an equitable distribution
inventory affidavit listing all property claimed by
the party to be marital property and all property
claimed by the party to be separate property, and
the estimated date-of-separation fair market value
of each item of marital and separate property.
Within 30 days after service of the inventory
affidavit, the party upon whom service is made shall
prepare and serve an inventory affidavit upon the
other party. The inventory affidavits prepared and
served pursuant to this subsection shall be subject
to amendment and shall not be binding at trial as to
completeness or value. The court may extend the time
limits in this subsection for good cause shown. The
affidavits are subject to the requirements of G.S.
1A-1, Rule 11, and are deemed to be in the nature of
answers to interrogatories propounded to the
parties. Any party failing to supply the information
required by this subsection in the affidavit is
subject to G.S. 1A-1, Rules 26, 33, and 37. During
the pendency of the action for equitable
distribution, discovery may proceed, and the court
shall enter temporary orders as appropriate and
necessary for the purpose of preventing the
disappearance, waste, or destruction of marital or
separate property or to secure the possession
thereof.
Real or personal
property located outside of North Carolina is
subject to equitable distribution in accordance with
the provisions of G.S. 50-20, and the court may
include in its order appropriate provisions to
ensure compliance with the order of equitable
distribution.
(b) For purposes of
equitable distribution, marital property shall be
valued as of the date of the separation of the
parties, and evidence of preseparation and
postseparation occurrences or values is competent as
corroborative evidence of the value of marital
property as of the date of the separation of the
parties. Divisible property and divisible debt shall
be valued as of the date of distribution.
(c) Nothing in G.S.
50-20 or this section shall restrict or extend the
right to trial by jury as provided by the
Constitution of North Carolina.
(d) Within 120 days
after the filing of the initial pleading or motion
in the cause for equitable distribution, the party
first serving the pleading or application shall
apply to the court to conduct a scheduling and
discovery conference. If that party fails to make
application, then the other party may do so. At the
conference the court shall determine a schedule of
discovery as well as consider and rule upon any
motions for appointment of expert witnesses, or
other applications, including applications to
determine the date of separation, and shall set a
date for the disclosure of expert witnesses and a
date on or before which an initial pretrial
conference shall be held.
At the initial pretrial
conference the court shall make inquiry as to the
status of the case and shall enter a date for the
completion of discovery, the completion of a
mediated settlement conference, if applicable, and
the filing and service of motions, and shall
determine a date on or after which a final pretrial
conference shall be held and a date on or after
which the case shall proceed to trial.
The final pretrial
conference shall be conducted pursuant to the Rules
of Civil Procedure and the General Rules of Practice
in the applicable district or superior court,
adopted pursuant to G.S. 7A-34. The court shall rule
upon any matters reasonably necessary to effect a
fair and prompt disposition of the case in the
interests of justice.
(e) Upon motion of
either party or upon the court's own initiative, the
court shall impose an appropriate sanction on a
party when the court finds that:
(1) The party has
willfully obstructed or unreasonably delayed, or has
attempted to obstruct or unreasonably delay,
discovery proceedings, including failure to make
discovery pursuant to G.S. 1A-1, Rule 37, or has
willfully obstructed or unreasonably delayed or
attempted to obstruct or unreasonably delay any
pending equitable distribution proceeding, and
(2) The willful
obstruction or unreasonable delay of the proceedings
is or would be prejudicial to the interests of the
opposing party.
Delay consented to by
the parties is not grounds for sanctions. The
sanction may include an order to pay the other party
the amount of the reasonable expenses and damages
incurred because of the willful obstruction or
unreasonable delay, including a reasonable
attorneys' fee, and including appointment by the
court, at the offending party's expense, of an
accountant, appraiser, or other expert whose
services the court finds are necessary to secure in
order for the discovery or other equitable
distribution proceeding to be timely conducted.
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