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Probate Q&A Series

What steps can I take to recover the funds withdrawn when the decedent’s bank accounts were closed?: Practical steps under North Carolina probate

What steps can I take to recover the funds withdrawn when the decedent’s bank accounts were closed? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, you can ask the Clerk of Superior Court to order the former power-of-attorney agent to provide a full accounting and to restore money wrongfully taken. The estate’s personal representative (or…

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Partition Action Q&A Series

What steps do I need to take to get a title search and resolve defects before selling?: Practical steps under North Carolina heir property and partition law

What steps do I need to take to get a title search and resolve defects before selling? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, start with a full title search by a North Carolina real estate attorney or title company, then cure the specific defects the search finds. For heir property, you typically must…

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Partition Action Q&A Series

How do I confirm legal ownership when multiple heirs are involved in a property?: Clear title steps for an heirs’ property sale in Southern Pines

How do I confirm legal ownership when multiple heirs are involved in a property? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, title to non-survivorship real estate passes to the heirs or devisees at death. To confirm ownership when several heirs are involved, you identify all current owners, resolve any unknown or missing heirs through…

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Partition Action Q&A Series

Can I sell a property if I only hold title through a quitclaim deed for heir property?: Clear your options under North Carolina heir-property and partition rules

Can I sell a property if I only hold title through a quitclaim deed for heir property? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, a quitclaim deed only transfers whatever interest the grantor owned. You may sell your undivided interest, but you cannot pass full, marketable title to the entire property unless all co-owners…

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Probate Q&A Series

How can I properly close the estate checking account and transfer the remaining funds to myself as sole heir?: Answered under North Carolina probate law

How can I properly close the estate checking account and transfer the remaining funds to myself as sole heir? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, the personal representative may distribute remaining estate cash to the heir only after paying valid claims, expenses, and required taxes, and after the creditor claim period has run.…

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Probate Q&A Series

How do I obtain and validate satisfaction of creditor claims for paid credit accounts?

How do I obtain and validate satisfaction of creditor claims for paid credit accounts? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, the personal representative gathers written claims, pays valid claims in statutory priority, and proves satisfaction with vouchers such as paid-in-full letters, final account statements showing a zero balance, and canceled checks. The Clerk…

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Probate Q&A Series

What income tax filings does the estate need to complete once business asset information is collected?: North Carolina

What income tax filings does the estate need to complete once business asset information is collected? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, an estate is a separate taxpayer. After you gather business asset and income details, you generally file: (1) the decedent’s final individual returns (IRS Form 1040 and NC Form D-400) and…

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Probate Q&A Series

How can I transfer the decedent’s business interests, including obtaining asset valuations and changing ownership?

How can I transfer the decedent’s business interests, including obtaining asset valuations and changing ownership? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, the executor inventories the business interests, obtains a fair‑market‑value appraisal as of the date of death, and either sells the interest or distributes it in kind after addressing creditor claims. The executor…

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Probate Q&A Series

What rights do I have as a disinherited surviving spouse when the decedent named someone else executor?: North Carolina Probate

What rights do I have as a disinherited surviving spouse when the decedent named someone else executor? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, a disinherited spouse can claim a statutory “elective share” of the decedent’s estate, even if someone else is the executor. You must file the elective share claim with the Clerk…

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Probate Q&A Series

Can I recover funds spent from my spouse’s IRA or other accounts before probate?: Practical options in North Carolina

Can I recover funds spent from my spouse’s IRA or other accounts before probate? – North Carolina Short Answer In North Carolina, you generally cannot personally claw back pre‑death spending from your spouse’s IRA or bank accounts. However, you can file an elective share claim that pulls both probate and many non‑probate assets (including IRAs…

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Probate Q&A Series

Can I transfer or sell my parent’s vehicle when it’s the only asset in probate?: Yes, but follow North Carolina’s small-estate vehicle transfer rules

Can I transfer or sell my parent’s vehicle when it’s the only asset in probate? – North Carolina Short Answer Yes. In North Carolina, if a motor vehicle is the only probate asset, you can usually transfer title or sell it without opening full probate by using either a DMV affidavit for assignment of title…

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