Probate Q&A Series

Can I challenge the payment of taxes on unclaimed property funds that may not be taxable? – North Carolina

Short Answer

Yes. In North Carolina, an heir may challenge tax payments a personal representative made by using the estate accounting process before the Clerk of Superior Court. You can compel a full accounting with vouchers, inspect the returns and 1099s, and ask the Clerk to disallow improper tax entries, order corrections or refunds, and surcharge the personal representative if needed. If you were served with a proposed final account, you generally have 30 days to object.

Understanding the Problem

You want to know whether, in North Carolina probate, you can ask the Clerk of Superior Court to review and correct taxes the personal representative paid on after-discovered unclaimed property. Here, the estate was reopened after unclaimed property funds from another state were added.

Apply the Law

North Carolina law requires personal representatives to file annual and final accounts and to support each receipt and disbursement with vouchers or verified proof. The Clerk of Superior Court audits those accounts, can compel production of records, and can disallow improper entries. Heirs may object to the accounting and seek relief, including orders to provide returns and 1099s, corrected accounts, amended tax filings or refunds, and, if appropriate, a surcharge. If a proposed final account was served with proper notice, objections must be filed within 30 days of service; otherwise, you can move to compel a satisfactory account or to reopen/correct the administration.

Key Requirements

  • Standing: You must be an “interested person” (such as an heir) to seek an accounting, object to entries, or request relief.
  • Accounting & records: The personal representative must file annual/final accounts and provide supporting vouchers; you may seek production of tax returns and 1099s through the Clerk.
  • Timeliness: If served with a proposed final account, object within 30 days; otherwise, move to compel a full satisfactory account before approval.
  • Substance of the challenge: Identify why the tax wasn’t owed or was misapplied (for example, NC estate tax no longer applies to decedents dying on/after 1/1/2013, or the payment was an estate-level expense that should have been distributed as income).
  • Available remedies: Orders compelling production, audit of entries, amended or corrected accounts, direction to file for tax refunds or amend returns, surcharge for losses, and adjusted distributions.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because unclaimed property was added and the estate reopened, the personal representative must account for those funds and support any tax payments with vouchers and related tax documents. If you were not served with a proposed final account, you can petition the Clerk to compel a full satisfactory account and production of returns and 1099s, then object to any improper tax entries. If you were served with a proposed final account, file written objections within 30 days to preserve your challenge.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: An interested heir. Where: Clerk of Superior Court (Estates Division) in the North Carolina county where the estate is pending. What: A verified petition or motion to compel a full satisfactory account, to produce tax returns/1099s, and to disallow improper tax entries; file exceptions to any pending account. The Clerk issues an Estates Proceedings Summons (AOC-E-102). When: File promptly; if you were served with a proposed final account, object within 30 days of service.
  2. The Clerk may order the personal representative to render a full satisfactory account within 20 days and set a hearing. Expect several weeks for the audit/hearing; timeframes vary by county.
  3. After the hearing, the Clerk will enter a written order: requiring a corrected account with vouchers, directing amended tax filings or refund claims if appropriate, and, when warranted, approving a surcharge. The estate proceeds to a corrected final account and closing.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • If properly served with a proposed final account and you do not object within 30 days, you may be deemed to accept those entries.
  • North Carolina estate tax does not apply to decedents dying on or after 1/1/2013; do not confuse estate tax with fiduciary income tax. Some unclaimed property includes taxable interest; challenge only amounts not legally owed.
  • Missing vouchers or incomplete entries are grounds to compel production and audit; if necessary, ask the Clerk to allow civil discovery tools.

Conclusion

Under North Carolina law, you can challenge taxes paid on after-discovered unclaimed property by invoking the Clerk of Superior Court’s accounting and audit process. As an interested heir, petition to compel a full satisfactory account with vouchers, inspect the returns and 1099s, and seek disallowance of improper tax entries, corrections or refunds, and surcharge if warranted. Next step: file a verified petition with the Clerk and, if served with a proposed final account, object within 30 days.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If you’re dealing with questionable tax payments on after-discovered unclaimed property and incomplete estate accountings, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help you understand your options and timelines. Call us today at 919-341-7055.

Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.