How is the sale money divided when two people co-own a home but contributed different amounts to the mortgage or upkeep? – North Carolina

Short Answer

In North Carolina, sale proceeds in a partition case usually start with each co-owner’s ownership share (often 50/50 if the deed is equal). Then the court can adjust what each person receives by giving credits or ordering contribution for certain payments that preserved the property—like mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, and necessary repairs—and, in limited ways, for improvements. The final split often depends on what can be proven with records and whether any offsets apply (such as exclusive possession or rent collected).

Understanding the Problem

In a North Carolina co-ownership situation where two unmarried people own a home together, the question is how the money gets divided if the home is sold but one person paid more toward the mortgage or upkeep. The decision point is whether those extra payments change the final distribution of sale proceeds in a partition case, even when the deed shows equal ownership. This issue commonly comes up when one co-owner wants to liquidate the property and the other co-owner will not cooperate with a voluntary sale.

Apply the Law

North Carolina partition law generally treats co-owners as entitled to sale proceeds based on their ownership interests, but it also allows financial adjustments so the result is fair when one co-owner paid more than their share of certain property-related costs. In a partition sale, a co-owner can ask the court for contribution (reimbursement/credit) for “carrying costs” and for qualifying improvements, and the court can account for those amounts when dividing proceeds. The partition case is filed in the county where the property is located, typically in the Clerk of Superior Court as a special proceeding.

Key Requirements

  • Start with the ownership interests: The baseline split usually follows the deeded interests (for many two-person deeds, that means equal shares unless the deed says otherwise).
  • Identify reimbursable “carrying costs” and qualifying improvements: North Carolina allows contribution claims for costs that preserve the property (including mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and repairs) and, for improvements, generally the lesser of cost or value added as of the case filing date.
  • Account for offsets (rents/profits and certain possession issues): If a co-owner received more than their share of rents/profits, the other co-owner may seek an accounting; and some reimbursement rules can change when one co-owner had exclusive possession during the period at issue.

What the Statutes Say

Analysis

Apply the Rule to the Facts: Here, two unmarried co-owners hold title together and one co-owner wants to sell but expects disagreement about fairness because the co-owners contributed different amounts to the mortgage or upkeep. In a North Carolina partition sale, the court typically begins with each co-owner’s deeded ownership share, then considers documented claims for contribution for carrying costs (such as mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and repairs) and qualifying improvements. If one co-owner also had benefits like rent collected from third parties, or circumstances like exclusive possession that affects reimbursement rules, those facts can change the final math.

Process & Timing

  1. Who files: Any co-owner. Where: Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the property is located (special proceeding). What: A partition petition requesting partition by sale if an in-kind division is not practical, and requesting an accounting/contribution determination as part of the case. When: A contribution request for a partition sale can be raised during the partition proceeding; property tax contribution has a 10-year lookback for taxes paid before the petition is filed.
  2. Financial claims get presented and supported: The co-owner seeking credits typically gathers proof (closing documents, mortgage statements, canceled checks, tax bills/receipts, insurance invoices, repair invoices, and before/after information for improvements). Disputes often focus on whether an item was a “carrying cost,” whether a repair was necessary, and whether an improvement actually added value.
  3. Sale and distribution: After the property is sold, the court applies the ownership shares and then applies any credits, contribution orders, and offsets to determine each co-owner’s net distribution from the sale proceeds.

Exceptions & Pitfalls

  • “I paid more” is not enough without proof: Courts usually need clear documentation tying payments to the property and showing amounts and dates (especially for mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and repairs).
  • Improvements are treated differently than carrying costs: A remodel or upgrade may not be reimbursed dollar-for-dollar; in partition, the claim is commonly limited to the lesser of cost or value added as of the filing date, and valuation disputes are common.
  • Exclusive possession and rent issues can create offsets: If one co-owner had exclusive possession for a period, certain reimbursement claims (such as interest on an encumbrance) may be limited under North Carolina law, and rent/profit issues can require an accounting that changes the net split.
  • Mixing personal expenses with property expenses: Payments that are not tied to preserving the property’s value (or that are really personal living expenses) can be challenged and excluded from contribution.
  • Deed language still matters: If the deed sets unequal ownership percentages, the baseline split follows those percentages before credits and offsets are applied.

For more on initiating a case when a co-owner will not cooperate, see force the sale of a house co-owned when the other owner refuses to sign and what happens if one co-owner files for partition and the others don’t agree.

Conclusion

In North Carolina, sale proceeds for a co-owned home usually follow the deeded ownership shares, but a partition case can adjust the final payout through contribution credits for carrying costs (including mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and repairs) and limited credits for improvements, with possible offsets for rents/profits and certain possession-related limits. A key threshold is whether the payments qualify as carrying costs or improvements and can be proven with records. The next step is to file a partition petition with the Clerk of Superior Court in the county where the property sits, and raise any contribution request during the case (noting the 10-year lookback for property taxes).

Talk to a Partition Action Attorney

If you’re dealing with a co-owner dispute about selling a home and dividing the proceeds fairly, our firm has experienced attorneys who can help explain the partition process, what credits may apply, and what deadlines can affect reimbursement. Call us today at [CONTACT NUMBER].

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.