How can heirs force sale of inherited North Carolina real estate when a co-owner refuses to cooperate?
Detailed Answer
When real estate passes to heirs under a will or by intestacy in North Carolina, each heir takes an undivided interest as tenants in common. If one co-owner refuses to cooperate in selling the property, the other heirs can file a partition action in Superior Court under Chapter 46A of the North Carolina General Statutes.
Under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 46A-27, any tenant in common may bring an action for partition in kind (physical division of the property) or, if that proves impractical or unfair, a partition by sale. The court evaluates whether it can divide the land equitably. If not, it orders a sale pursuant to Chapter 46A. A court-appointed commissioner conducts the sale and distributes net proceeds in proportion to each heir’s share.
Key points in a partition action:
- Tenants in common each hold a discrete percentage of ownership.
- The court prefers division in kind, but orders a sale when physical division proves inequitable.
- Co-owners can agree on a buy-out to avoid sale costs.
- Court costs, commissioner fees, and appraisal expenses apply and reduce net proceeds.
- Typical timeline runs six to twelve months, depending on court schedules.
Filing a partition action forces resolution even when one co-owner resists. The process ensures a sale and distributes proceeds according to each heir’s legal share.
Key Steps to Force a Sale of Inherited Property
- Confirm heirship and obtain certified copies of the will or intestacy docket.
- Verify each heir’s ownership percentage through title search.
- Retain an attorney experienced in North Carolina probate and real estate matters.
- File a complaint for partition in the county Superior Court where the property lies.
- Serve all co-owners and any other interested parties with the complaint and summons.
- Attend initial court hearing; the judge may order mediation or appointment of a commissioner.
- Present evidence of property value and attempt a negotiated buy-out if possible.
- Proceed to sale under court supervision if co-owners cannot agree.
- Receive and divide net proceeds according to shares.