Court Opinion

ID: 8907102
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-27 01:57:54.02404+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:08:17.334624
License: Public Domain

WEBB, Judge.
G.S. 50-20 provides for equitable distribution. Subsection (k) of that statute provides:
“The rights of the parties to an equitable distribution of marital property are a species of common ownership, the rights of the respective parties vesting at the time of the filing of the divorce action.”
Chapter 815, section 7 at 1186, of the 1981 Session Laws provides:
“This act shall become effective October 1, 1981, and shall apply only when the action for an absolute divorce is filed on or after that date.”
G.S. 50-19 provides that an action for divorce under the provisions of G.S. 50-5 or G.S. 50-6 may be prosecuted during the pendency of a divorce action pursuant to these two sections.
Under the provisions of Chapter 815 of the 1981 Session Laws, equitable distribution has no application to the action in which the defendant counterclaimed for divorce. This action and the counterclaim were filed before 1 October 1981. The plaintiff could, pursuant to G.S. 50-19, bring an action for divorce under G.S. 50-6 on the ground that the parties had been separated for one year while the defendant’s action for divorce under G.S. 50-5 on the ground of adultery was pending. When the plaintiff filed her action for divorce, her right to equitable distribution of marital property vested pursuant to G.S. 50-20(k) which declares this right to be a “species of common ownership.”
The question posed by this appeal is whether the dismissal of the plaintiffs claim for divorce requires the dismissal of her claim for equitable distribution. We hold that it does not. Although the plaintiffs action for divorce was properly dismissed after a divorce had been granted in another action, it was properly filed under G.S. 50-19 and could not have been dismissed before the divorce decree was made. G.S. 50-20(k) provides that plaintiffs right to equitable distribution is a “species of ownership” in the marital property which was vested at the time she filed her action for divorce on 4 November 1981. The statute does not say whether this property right is divested by the dismissal of her ac*562tion for divorce. In the absence of an express direction in the statute, we do not believe we should hold it is divested.
We can find no cases in this or other jurisdictions on the precise question presented by this appeal. See Myers v. Myers, 62 N.C. App. 291, 302 S.E. 2d 476 (1983) for a case which holds an action for divorce need not be stayed by the filing of an action for divorce and equitable distribution in another county.
We reverse the order of the district court and remand for further proceedings.
Reversed and remanded.
Judge Phillips concurs.
Judge JOHNSON concurs in the result only.