North Carolina Alimony and Postseparation Support
Statutes
§ 50-16.1A.
Definitions
As used in this Chapter, unless the context clearly
requires otherwise, the following definitions apply:
(1) "Alimony" means an order for payment
for the support and maintenance of a spouse or
former spouse, periodically or in a lump sum, for a
specified or for an indefinite term, ordered in an
action for divorce, whether absolute or from bed and
board, or in an action for alimony without divorce.
(2) "Dependent spouse" means a spouse,
whether husband or wife, who is actually
substantially dependent upon the other spouse for
his or her maintenance and support or is
substantially in need of maintenance and support
from the other spouse.
(3) "Marital misconduct" means any of the
following acts that occur during the marriage and
prior to or on the date of separation:
a. Illicit sexual behavior. For the purpose of this
section, illicit sexual behavior means acts of
sexual or deviate sexual intercourse, deviate sexual
acts, or sexual acts defined in G.S. 14-27.1(4),
voluntarily engaged in by a spouse with someone
other than the other spouse;
b. Involuntary separation of the spouses in
consequence of a criminal act committed prior to the
proceeding in which alimony is sought;
c. Abandonment of the other spouse;
d. Malicious turning out-of-doors of the other
spouse;
e. Cruel or barbarous treatment endangering the life
of the other spouse;
f. Indignities rendering the condition of the other
spouse intolerable and life burdensome;
g. Reckless spending of the income of either party,
or the destruction, waste, diversion, or concealment
of assets;
h. Excessive use of alcohol or drugs so as to render
the condition of the other spouse intolerable and
life burdensome;
i. Willful failure to provide necessary subsistence
according to one's means and condition so as to
render the condition of the other spouse intolerable
and life burdensome.
(3a) through (3d) Reserved for future codification
purposes.
(3e) "Payor" means any payor, including
any federal, State, or local governmental unit, of
disposable income to an obligor. When the payor is
an employer, payor means employer as defined under
20 U.S.C. § 203(d) of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
(4) "Postseparation support" means spousal
support to be paid until the earlier of either the
date specified in the order of postseparation
support, or an order awarding or denying alimony.
Postseparation support may be ordered in an action
for divorce, whether absolute or from bed and board,
for annulment, or for alimony without divorce.
(5) "Supporting spouse" means a spouse,
whether husband or wife, upon whom the other spouse
is actually substantially dependent for maintenance
and support or from whom such spouse is
substantially in need of maintenance and support.
§ 50-16.2A. Postseparation support
(a) In an action brought pursuant to Chapter 50 of
the General Statutes, either party may move for
postseparation support. The verified pleading,
verified motion, or affidavit of the moving party
shall set forth the factual basis for the relief
requested.
(b) In ordering postseparation support, the court
shall base its award on the financial needs of the
parties, considering the parties' accustomed
standard of living, the present employment income
and other recurring earnings of each party from any
source, their income-earning abilities, the separate
and marital debt service obligations, those expenses
reasonably necessary to support each of the parties,
and each party's respective legal obligations to
support any other persons.
(c) Except when subsection (d) of this section
applies, a dependent spouse is entitled to an award
of postseparation support if, based on consideration
of the factors specified in subsection (b) of this
section, the court finds that the resources of the
dependent spouse are not adequate to meet his or her
reasonable needs and the supporting spouse has the
ability to pay.
(d) At a hearing on postseparation support, the
judge shall consider marital misconduct by the
dependent spouse occurring prior to or on the date
of separation in deciding whether to award
postseparation support and in deciding the amount of
postseparation support. When the judge considers
these acts by the dependent spouse, the judge shall
also consider any marital misconduct by the
supporting spouse in deciding whether to award
postseparation support and in deciding the amount of
postseparation support.
(e) Nothing herein shall prevent a court from
considering incidents of post date-of-separation
marital misconduct as corroborating evidence
supporting other evidence that marital misconduct
occurred during the marriage and prior to date of
separation.
§ 50-16.3A. Alimony
(a) Entitlement. -- In an action brought pursuant to
Chapter 50 of the General Statutes, either party may
move for alimony. The court shall award alimony to
the dependent spouse upon a finding that one spouse
is a dependent spouse, that the other spouse is a
supporting spouse, and that an award of alimony is
equitable after considering all relevant factors,
including those set out in subsection (b) of this
section. If the court finds that the dependent
spouse participated in an act of illicit sexual
behavior, as defined in G.S. 50-16.1A(3)a., during
the marriage and prior to or on the date of
separation, the court shall not award alimony. If
the court finds that the supporting spouse
participated in an act of illicit sexual behavior,
as defined in G.S. 50-16.1A(3)a., during the
marriage and prior to or on the date of separation,
then the court shall order that alimony be paid to a
dependent spouse. If the court finds that the
dependent and the supporting spouse each
participated in an act of illicit sexual behavior
during the marriage and prior to or on the date of
separation, then alimony shall be denied or awarded
in the discretion of the court after consideration
of all of the circumstances. Any act of illicit
sexual behavior by either party that has been
condoned by the other party shall not be considered
by the court.
The claim for alimony may be heard on the merits
prior to the entry of a judgment for equitable
distribution, and if awarded, the issues of amount
and of whether a spouse is a dependent or supporting
spouse may be reviewed by the court after the
conclusion of the equitable distribution claim.
(b) Amount and Duration. -- The court shall exercise
its discretion in determining the amount, duration,
and manner of payment of alimony. The duration of
the award may be for a specified or for an
indefinite term. In determining the amount,
duration, and manner of payment of alimony, the
court shall consider all relevant factors,
including:
(1) The marital misconduct of either of the spouses.
Nothing herein shall prevent a court from
considering incidents of post date-of-separation
marital misconduct as corroborating evidence
supporting other evidence that marital misconduct
occurred during the marriage and prior to date of
separation;
(2) The relative earnings and earning capacities of
the spouses;
(3) The ages and the physical, mental, and emotional
conditions of the spouses;
(4) The amount and sources of earned and unearned
income of both spouses, including, but not limited
to, earnings, dividends, and benefits such as
medical, retirement, insurance, social security, or
others;
(5) The duration of the marriage;
(6) The contribution by one spouse to the education,
training, or increased earning power of the other
spouse;
(7) The extent to which the earning power, expenses,
or financial obligations of a spouse will be
affected by reason of serving as the custodian of a
minor child;
(8) The standard of living of the spouses
established during the marriage;
(9) The relative education of the spouses and the
time necessary to acquire sufficient education or
training to enable the spouse seeking alimony to
find employment to meet his or her reasonable
economic needs;
(10) The relative assets and liabilities of the
spouses and the relative debt service requirements
of the spouses, including legal obligations of
support;
(11) The property brought to the marriage by either
spouse;
(12) The contribution of a spouse as homemaker;
(13) The relative needs of the spouses;
(14) The federal, State, and local tax ramifications
of the alimony award;
(15) Any other factor relating to the economic
circumstances of the parties that the court finds to
be just and proper.
(16) The fact that income received by either party
was previously considered by the court in
determining the value of a marital or divisible
asset in an equitable distribution of the parties'
marital or divisible property.
(c) Findings of Fact. -- The court shall set forth
the reasons for its award or denial of alimony and,
if making an award, the reasons for its amount,
duration, and manner of payment. Except where there
is a motion before the court for summary judgment,
judgment on the pleadings, or other motion for which
the Rules of Civil Procedure do not require special
findings of fact, the court shall make a specific
finding of fact on each of the factors in subsection
(b) of this section if evidence is offered on that
factor.
(d) In the claim for alimony, either spouse may
request a jury trial on the issue of marital
misconduct as defined in G.S. 50-16.1A. If a jury
trial is requested, the jury will decide whether
either spouse or both have established marital
misconduct.
§ 50-16.4. Counsel fees in actions for alimony,
postseparation support
At any time that a dependent spouse would be
entitled to alimony pursuant to G.S. 50-16.3A, or
postseparation support pursuant to G.S. 50-16.2A,
the court may, upon application of such spouse,
enter an order for reasonable counsel fees for the
benefit of such spouse, to be paid and secured by
the supporting spouse in the same manner as alimony.
§ 50-16.6. When alimony, postseparation support,
counsel fees not payable
(a) Repealed by Session Laws 1995, c. 319, s. 4.
(b) Alimony, postseparation support, and counsel
fees may be barred by an express provision of a
valid separation agreement or premarital agreement
so long as the agreement is performed.
§ 50-16.7. How alimony and postseparation support
paid; enforcement of decree
(a) Alimony or postseparation support shall be paid
by lump sum payment, periodic payments, income
withholding, or by transfer of title or possession
of personal property or any interest therein, or a
security interest in or possession of real property,
as the court may order. The court may order the
transfer of title to real property solely owned by
the obligor in payment of lump-sum payments of
alimony or postseparation support or in payment of
arrearages of alimony or postseparation support so
long as the net value of the interest in the
property being transferred does not exceed the
amount of the arrearage being satisfied. In every
case in which either alimony or postseparation
support is allowed and provision is also made for
support of minor children, the order shall
separately state and identify each allowance.
(b) The court may require the supporting spouse to
secure the payment of alimony or postseparation
support so ordered by means of a bond, mortgage, or
deed of trust, or any other means ordinarily used to
secure an obligation to pay money or transfer
property, or by requiring the supporting spouse to
execute an assignment of wages, salary, or other
income due or to become due.
(c) If the court requires the transfer of real or
personal property or an interest therein as a part
of an order for alimony or postseparation support as
provided in subsection (a) or for the securing
thereof, the court may also enter an order which
shall transfer title, as provided in G.S. 1A-1, Rule
70 and G.S. 1-228.
(d) The remedy of arrest and bail, as provided in
Article 34 of Chapter 1 of the General Statutes,
shall be available in actions for alimony or
postseparation support as in other cases.
(e) The remedies of attachment and garnishment, as
provided in Article 35 of Chapter 1 and Article 9 of
Chapter 110 of the General Statutes, shall be
available in actions for alimony or postseparation
support as in other cases, and for such purposes the
dependent spouse shall be deemed a creditor of the
supporting spouse.
(f) The remedy of injunction, as provided in Article
37 of Chapter 1 of the General Statutes and G.S.
1A-1, Rule 65, shall be available in actions for
alimony or postseparation support as in other cases.
(g) Receivers, as provided in Article 38 of Chapter
1 of the General Statutes, may be appointed in
actions for alimony or postseparation support as in
other cases.
(h) A dependent spouse for whose benefit an order
for the payment of alimony or postseparation support
has been entered shall be a creditor within the
meaning of Article 3A of Chapter 39 of the General
Statutes pertaining to fraudulent conveyances.
(i) A judgment for alimony or postseparation support
obtained in an action therefor shall not be a lien
against real property unless the judgment expressly
so provides, sets out the amount of the lien in a
sum certain, and adequately describes the real
property affected; but past-due periodic payments
may by motion in the cause or by a separate action
be reduced to judgment which shall be a lien as
other judgments.
(j) Any order for the payment of alimony or
postseparation support is enforceable by proceedings
for civil contempt, and its disobedience may be
punished by proceedings for criminal contempt, as
provided in Chapter 5A of the General Statutes.
Notwithstanding the provisions of G.S. 1-294 or G.S.
1-289, an order for the periodic payment of alimony
that has been appealed to the appellate division is
enforceable in the trial court by proceedings for
civil contempt during the pendency of the appeal.
Upon motion of an aggrieved party, the court of the
appellate division in which the appeal is pending
may stay any order for civil contempt entered for
alimony until the appeal is decided if justice
requires.
(k) The remedies provided by Chapter 1 of the
General Statutes Article 28, Execution; Article 29B,
Execution Sales; and Article 31, Supplemental
Proceedings, shall be available for the enforcement
of judgments for alimony and postseparation support
as in other cases, but amounts so payable shall not
constitute a debt as to which property is exempt
from execution as provided in Article 16 of Chapter
1C of the General Statutes.
( l ) The specific enumeration of remedies in this
section shall not constitute a bar to remedies
otherwise available.
( l 1) The dependent spouse may apply to the court
for an order of income withholding for current or
delinquent payments of alimony or postseparation
support or for any portion of the payments. If the
court orders income withholding, a notice of
obligation to withhold shall be served on the payor
as required by G.S. 1A-1, Rule 4, Rules of Civil
Procedure. Copies of the notice shall be filed with
the clerk of court and served upon the supporting
spouse by first-class mail.
§ 50-16.8. Procedure in actions for postseparation
support
When an application is made for postseparation
support, the court may base its award on a verified
pleading, affidavit, or other competent evidence.
The court shall set forth the reasons for its award
or denial of postseparation support, and if making
an award, the reasons for its amount, duration, and
manner of payment.
§ 50-16.9. Modification of order
(a) An order of a court of this State for alimony or
postseparation support, whether contested or entered
by consent, may be modified or vacated at any time,
upon motion in the cause and a showing of changed
circumstances by either party or anyone interested.
This section shall not apply to orders entered by
consent before October 1, 1967.
Any motion to modify or terminate alimony or
postseparation support based on a resumption of
marital relations between parties who remain married
to each other shall be determined pursuant to G.S.
52-10.2.
(b) If a dependent spouse who is receiving
postseparation support or alimony from a supporting
spouse under a judgment or order of a court of this
State remarries or engages in cohabitation, the
postseparation support or alimony shall terminate.
Postseparation support or alimony shall terminate
upon the death of either the supporting or the
dependent spouse.
As used in this subsection, cohabitation means the
act of two adults dwelling together continuously and
habitually in a private heterosexual relationship,
even if this relationship is not solemnized by
marriage, or a private homosexual relationship.
Cohabitation is evidenced by the voluntary mutual
assumption of those marital rights, duties, and
obligations which are usually manifested by married
people, and which include, but are not necessarily
dependent on, sexual relations. Nothing in this
section shall be construed to make lawful conduct
which is made unlawful by other statutes.
(c) When an order for alimony has been entered by a
court of another jurisdiction, a court of this State
may, upon gaining jurisdiction over the person of
both parties in a civil action instituted for that
purpose, and upon a showing of changed
circumstances, enter a new order for alimony which
modifies or supersedes such order for alimony to the
extent that it could have been so modified in the
jurisdiction where granted.
§ 50-16.10. Alimony without action
Alimony without action may be allowed by confession
of judgment under G.S. 1A-1, Rule 68.1.
§ 50-17. Alimony in real estate, writ of possession
issued
In all cases in which the court grants alimony by
the assignment of real estate, the court has power
to issue a writ of possession when necessary in the
judgment of the court to do so.
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