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HB 866

Frederick County - Alcoholic Beverages - Class C (Theater) Beer, Wine, and Liquor License

2025 Regular Session

The bill creates an automatic, court-issued order at filing to preserve marital assets by prohibiting transfers, new debts, and changes to accounts or coverage.

Approved by the Governor - Chapter 822
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Bill Summary · HB 866

Summary — HB 866: Automatic Order for Equitable Distribution Claims (North Carolina)

Status: Committee substitute passed House; bill establishes a new statutory automatic order for equitable distribution claims. Effective date (per bill text): October 1, 2025 (applies to actions/claims filed on or after that date). Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC) must publish required form by October 1, 2025.

Main purpose

To require courts to enter, at the time a claim for equitable distribution is filed, a standardized “automatic order” that immediately prohibits spouses from wasting, converting, secreting, or otherwise disposing of marital or related assets (and from incurring unreasonable debts), thereby preserving property for distribution and reducing post‑filing asset dissipation or fraud.

Key provisions / what the bill would do

  • Adds new G.S. § 50‑23 establishing an “automatic order” that the court must enter using a form created by the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC).
  • Required substantive prohibitions in the automatic order include:
    1. No sale, transfer, encumbrance, concealment, assignment, removal, withdrawal or other disposition of property (real or personal, cash, bank accounts, stocks, loyalty points/miles, vehicles, boats, etc.) except in the usual course of business, for customary household expenses, or for reasonable attorneys’ fees related to the claim.
    2. Prohibition on disposition or withdrawal from tax‑deferred retirement accounts and refraining from applying for retirement/annuity payments (except continuing payments to a party already in pay status) without written consent or court order.
    3. Protection of property held for benefit of children (e.g., 529 accounts), allowing only customary child‑related expenditures.
    4. Prohibition on incurring unreasonable new debt (including further borrowing against the family residence or misuse of credit).
    5. Prohibition on removing/adding beneficiaries, co‑owners, cosigners, or authorized users on protected accounts without consent or court order.
    6. Prohibition on removing parties or children from existing medical/dental insurance coverage; requirement to maintain existing coverage until agreement or court order.
    7. Prohibition on changing life insurance beneficiaries; requirement to maintain life, auto, homeowner/renter insurance until agreement or court order.
    8. Statement that the order is entered without prejudice to either party.
  • Service and timing:
    • For newly filed equitable distribution claims, the plaintiff must serve the automatic order with the summons and complaint per Rule 4, N.C. Rules of Civil Procedure.
    • If the equitable distribution claim is filed in an existing action, the order must be served per Rule 5.
  • Binding effect and duration:
    • Immediately binding on the filing party when filed; binding on the other party upon service.
    • Remains in effect until a final order on equitable distribution is entered, unless terminated, modified, or amended by court motion or by consent order.
  • Interaction with other remedies:
    • Entry of the automatic order does not replace or limit other available remedies (explicitly preserves remedies such as filing a lis pendens or seeking an injunction under Rule 65).
  • AOC responsibilities:
    • Draft a standardized form order that includes case caption, finding that an equitable distribution claim has been filed, and the decretal provisions above; make form available on its website by October 1, 2025.

Who is affected

  • Parties in North Carolina family law cases involving equitable distribution (married spouses seeking division of marital/divisible property).
  • Family law attorneys, judges, court clerks, and the AOC (which must produce the form).
  • Third parties who might receive or handle marital assets (banks, employers, retirement plan administrators) may be impacted when served with an order.

Practical impact / implications

  • Establishes an automatic, uniform protective mechanism at the outset of equitable distribution litigation to reduce asset dissipation, concealment, or improper transfers.
  • May reduce the need for emergency motions to preserve assets but will require plaintiffs and counsel to serve the order with pleadings and may prompt motions to modify for legitimate transactions.
  • Enforcement mechanisms (e.g., contempt, motions for sanctions) are not newly specified in the statute; existing court enforcement procedures and other remedies remain available.
  • Administrative effect: AOC must prepare and publish a model form; courts and attorneys will incorporate the new service procedure into filing practice.

Effective date / timeline

  • AOC form to be finalized and posted by October 1, 2025.
  • G.S. § 50‑23 becomes effective October 1, 2025 and applies to actions/claims filed on or after that date.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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