Krispen Culbertson, Greensboro property division lawyer, practicing in Guilford County District Court for 20+ years. Focus on equitable distribution, home and real estate splits, retirement/QDRO coordination, stock awards and RSUs, small business valuation, and distributive awards for marital waste.
Memberships: North Carolina State Bar; local family law section. Courts: Greensboro and High Point District Court calendars.
Fast answers
Marital vs separate vs divisible property: the court classifies assets and debts before it values and distributes them.
Date of separation: locks the marital estate for most items and sets the snapshot for many statements.
The house: equity can be traded for cash, debt, or retirement shares with a refinance timeline.
Retirement plans: divided with plan-approved QDROs or similar orders.
Stock options and RSUs: use grant and vest schedules to define the marital portion.
Small businesses: need a practical valuation file, not a paper dump.
Debts: are allocated along with assets.
Marital waste or dissipation: can be fixed with findings and a distributive award.
Equitable Distribution claims from filing to final order
Homes and real estate: appraisals, buyouts, sale language, and refinance timing
Retirement division: 401(k), 403(b), pensions, and governmental plans with QDROs
Stock options, RSUs, and bonuses: clear formulas and tax handling
Small business and professional practices: workable valuation and buyout terms
Bank, brokerage, crypto, and cash accounts
Vehicles, personal property, and collections
Debt allocation: mortgages, HELOCs, cards, taxes, and personal loans
Interim distribution and asset restraints where needed
Marital waste findings and distributive awards
Settlement drafting and consent orders the clerk can enter
The North Carolina framework in plain terms
Property division in North Carolina follows Equitable Distribution under state law.
Classification Every asset and debt is labeled marital, separate, or divisible. Marital generally covers what was acquired from the wedding date to the date of separation. Separate is what you owned before marriage or received by gift or inheritance to one spouse. Divisible can capture certain post-separation changes tied to marital efforts or values.
Valuation Courts look for reliable numbers. For homes that can be an appraisal or a market analysis. For accounts, statements near the date of separation and current. For a business, tax returns, P&Ls, and a short set of normalizing adjustments.
Distribution Once items are classified and valued, the judge aims for a fair split using the statutory factors. Cash offsets and distributive awards help balance uneven assets such as a house or pension. Property division is a separate track from child support or alimony, but cash flow and tax impact matter when shaping practical terms.
Numbers that matter: current appraisal or CMA, mortgage payoff, HELOC balance, taxes, HOA, insurance.
Buyout vs sale: if one spouse keeps the home, set a refinance deadline and a clean equity figure with closing-cost rules. If you plan to sell, write who selects the agent, list date, price changes, repair credits, and possession after closing.
Temporary possession: a short order can set who lives there, who pays, and how to handle repairs until the final split.
Tax points: mortgage interest deductions, property tax proration, and capital gains when a sale makes sense.
CTA: Call 336-272-4299 or send a message to map a house plan that lenders and closing attorneys can follow.
Retirement division and QDROs
Plans covered: 401(k), 403(b), governmental plans, and pensions.
Time slice: define marital contributions and growth before and after the date of separation.
Form of order:QDRO for ERISA plans or plan-specific orders for government systems.
Steps for a clean transfer: draft, pre-approve with the plan, enter the order, and submit for processing.
Survivor and form-of-payment: for pensions, set survivor benefits and a separate-interest or shared-payment approach.
Taxes: transfers under a proper order can avoid early distribution penalties; payments are still taxable to the recipient per plan rules.
Stock options, RSUs, and bonuses
Grant vs vest: use a formula that covers the marital portion only, tied to grant date, vest date, and the separation date.
Unvested awards: define how to handle performance conditions, clawbacks, and employer plan changes.
Payout timing: set a practical schedule so withholding and taxes are handled correctly, with statements shared when shares vest or units release.
Businesses and professional practices
What the court expects: tax returns, balance sheets, P&L, payroll summaries, and a short memo on industry norms.
Normalization: show add-backs for one-time items and owner perks, and identify reasonable compensation.
Goodwill: distinguish personal goodwill from enterprise goodwill.
Buyout terms: set payment schedule, interest, and security so dollars arrive on time.
Cost control: focus the valuation so it is accurate without running up fees.
Debt allocation: mortgages, HELOCs, credit cards, medical bills, taxes, and personal loans are divided with assets.
Enforcement: if one spouse keeps a debt, add hold-harmless and indemnity language and a refinance deadline where possible.
Taxes: address basis for sales, retirement transfers, stock withholding, and estimated taxes.
Temporary cash flow: a short order can cover minimum payments and essential bills until the final split.
Interims, restraints, and marital waste
Interim distribution: move cash or specific items now so life can keep going while the case is pending.
Asset restraints: simple language can stop transfers, cash-outs, or loans against retirement.
Marital waste: if one spouse spent down assets for a non-marital purpose, the court can fix it with findings and a distributive award or by shifting other assets.
Settlement, mediation, and trial
Document exchange: early statements and appraisals drive faster deals.
Mediation checklist: target values, division percentages, refinance terms, sale rules, and QDRO steps.
Consent orders: when both sides agree, draft terms the clerk can enter without repeat hearings.
Trial plan: if you need findings, present tight exhibits on classification, value, and a fair split.
Orders that work: write directions banks, payroll, and plan administrators can follow on day one.
Your first 72 hours with our team
Call and case map Confirm the date of separation, urgent bills, and any standing orders for Guilford County District Court.
Document pull Home statements, mortgage and HELOC, retirement and brokerage, bank and card accounts, stock plan docs, business records, and any prior orders.
Numbers on one page We build a clean property spreadsheet with values, liens, and proposed splits.
Early moves If needed, file for interim distribution or asset restraints. If settlement looks close, set mediation.
Drafts that stick We prepare a consent order with refinance dates, sale rules, QDRO language, and deadlines everyone can follow.
Most property division cases in this area are heard in Guilford County District Court with courtrooms in Greensboro and High Point. Calendars fill quickly. Many cases resolve by consent once appraisals and statements are on the table. When a hearing is required, we present classification, values, and a clear path to a fair split.
Visit Our Greensboro Office
Culbertson & Associates
315 Spring Garden St Ste #300, Greensboro, NC 27401
Phone: (336) 272-4299
Hours: Mon–Fri 8:30 AM–5:00 PM
Evidence checklist
Deed, mortgage, HELOC statements, tax and insurance
Appraisal or recent market analysis
Retirement statements and plan rules for QDROs
Brokerage, bank, and crypto statements near the date of separation and current
Stock plan grant documents and vest schedules
Vehicle titles and loan statements
Business tax returns, P&L, balance sheet, payroll summaries
Credit card, medical, and tax debt statements
Proof tied to marital waste claims
Any prior orders or agreements
FAQs
What is marital vs separate property in North Carolina?
Marital generally covers what was acquired from the wedding to the date of separation. Separate includes what you owned before marriage or received by gift or inheritance to one spouse. Some post-separation changes can be divisible.
Who gets the house in a Greensboro divorce?
Courts look at equity, affordability, refinance ability, and the overall split. One spouse may keep the home with a buyout, or the house may be sold with proceeds divided under agreed rules.
Do we have to split everything 50-50?
The law looks for a fair split. That can be an equal division or an unequal one when the factors support it.
How is the date of separation used in property division?
It sets the snapshot for most valuations and helps mark what is marital, separate, or divisible.
How are retirement plans divided and what is a QDRO?
Qualified plans are split with a QDRO or plan-specific order. The order directs the plan to transfer the marital share without creating an early distribution for the participant.
What happens to stock options and RSUs?
Grants are divided using a time-based formula tied to grant date, vest date, and the separation date. The non-employee spouse receives the marital portion when the award vests.
How are debts divided between spouses?
Debts are allocated along with assets. Orders can require refinance or include hold-harmless terms and deadlines to protect credit.
Can I get an interim distribution before the case ends?
Yes. Courts can move cash or specific items now to cover living costs or reduce risk while the case is pending.
Do gifts and inheritances stay separate?
Often yes, if kept separate and traceable. If mixed or improved with marital funds, there can be a marital component.
How is a small business valued for divorce?
The court reviews tax returns, financials, and reasonable adjustments. A buyout schedule with security terms helps make payments reliable.
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