Probate Q&A Series

Can I use my parent’s unpaid disability benefits to cover the mortgage payments on the house? – North Carolina

Short Answer

Not without authority. In North Carolina, any unpaid disability benefits that are payable to your parent’s estate must be collected and used by a duly appointed personal representative, and then only to pay valid estate claims in the statutory order. A mortgage is a secured claim against the house, which passes to heirs or devisees subject to that lien. Estate funds are not automatically used for ongoing mortgage payments unless the personal representative determines it is in the estate’s best interest and proceeds through the proper court process.

Understanding the Problem

In North Carolina, can you, as the only surviving child, use your late parent’s unpaid disability benefits to make the mortgage payments on a house titled solely in your parent’s name? This turns on who has legal authority to collect benefits, how estate debts are paid, and whether continuing mortgage payments serves the estate’s administration.

Apply the Law

Under North Carolina law, only a court‑appointed personal representative (or, in limited small‑estate situations, a collector by affidavit or the clerk) may collect money owed to a decedent and apply it to claims. Real property generally passes to heirs or devisees at death, subject to existing liens. The personal representative may take control of real property when doing so benefits the estate, and may seek court approval to lease, mortgage, or sell it if needed to pay claims. Mortgage lenders can enforce their liens despite the estate claims process.

Key Requirements

  • Get authority first: Qualify as personal representative (or use a small‑estate procedure where available) before collecting or spending unpaid benefits.
  • Confirm who is paid: Determine whether the disability benefit is payable to the estate; some programs pay survivors directly instead.
  • Follow claim priority: Use estate funds to pay allowed claims in statutory order; a mortgage is a secured claim against the house.
  • Real property after death: Heirs/devisees take the house subject to the mortgage; ongoing post‑death mortgage, tax, and insurance costs are not automatically estate expenses.
  • Court oversight for the house: If preserving value requires it, the personal representative may seek authority to take possession and to lease, mortgage, or sell the property to pay claims.
  • Mortgage enforcement: A lender may foreclose even if it does not present a claim in the estate process.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Because there is no formal probate yet, you lack authority to collect or spend unpaid disability benefits. If those benefits are payable to the estate, the personal representative must collect them and then pay allowed claims in order. The home, titled solely in your parent’s name, passes subject to the mortgage; unless the personal representative obtains authority and finds it benefits the estate, estate funds generally should not be used for ongoing mortgage payments. If the relative stops paying, the lender can foreclose; the personal representative may instead petition to lease, mortgage, or sell the property if needed to satisfy claims.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: The named executor in the will or you (if no executor is acting). Where: Clerk of Superior Court, Estates Division, in the county where your parent was domiciled. What: Application for Probate and Letters (AOC‑E‑201) or Application for Letters of Administration (AOC‑E‑202), then publish a general notice to creditors. When: File promptly to collect benefits and set the creditor deadline.
  2. Collect unpaid disability benefits payable to the estate and place them in the estate account. If the amount owed is small (for example, not more than $5,000) and no personal representative has been appointed, the payer may be able to pay the Clerk directly; otherwise, the personal representative collects.
  3. Evaluate the house: if preserving or creating value for creditors and beneficiaries, the personal representative may (a) seek an order to take possession, (b) temporarily pay essential expenses, (c) lease the property, (d) petition to mortgage or sell it to pay claims, or (e) allow heirs to keep paying and take title subject to the lien. Final outcome is reflected in the estate’s final account and any deed or court order.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • Some disability programs pay survivors directly, not the estate; those funds cannot be used for estate debts.
  • Do not collect or spend benefits before you are appointed; unauthorized use can create personal liability.
  • Heirs/devisees typically bear post‑death costs tied to the house; paying ongoing mortgage from estate funds without court authority may be disallowed.
  • Small‑estate affidavits cannot sell real estate; if real property must be used to pay claims, a personal representative and court process are required.
  • An occupant (like a friend living in the home) may be removed only through the proper procedure; the personal representative must use the authorized estate or landlord‑tenant process.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, you may use unpaid disability benefits to address the house only if those funds are payable to the estate and you act through a duly appointed personal representative who follows the statutory claim‑priority rules. The house passes subject to the mortgage, and ongoing payments come from heirs unless the personal representative obtains authority and determines payment benefits the estate. Next step: file an Application for Probate and Letters with the Clerk of Superior Court to collect any benefits and decide whether to pay, lease, mortgage, or sell the property.

Talk to a Probate Attorney

If you’re dealing with unpaid benefits and a mortgaged home after a parent’s death, 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.