Business Interests are Property in North Carolina Divorces
North Carolina law says that anything you and your spouse earned, purchased, or gathered while you are married can be equitably divided in divorce. That includes a business you started after you got married. Even if only one spouse was actively involved in the business, North Carolina law assumes that the other spouse’s income, support, and efforts at home made it possible for you to launch and grow your company. Because of this, each spouse is entitled to an equitable (but not always equal) share of the value of the family-owned business in divorce. However, who takes actual possession of a family business in divorce depends on negotiation. If you and your spouse agree, you can protect your business assets in how you structure your settlement agreement. Depending on the nature of your business and the roles each spouse played, you might agree to:- Award one spouse the business and the other spouse other assets, such as the home or retirement accounts
- Buy out the spouse’s interest in a shared business in one lump sum or monthly payments over time
- Dividing up the business into portions each spouse controls, while cooperating as shareholders
- Dissolving the business and entering into agreements over who takes specific clients or accounts
- Selling the business to a third party and dividing the net proceeds
How Do North Carolina Courts Put a Value on Family-Owned Businesses in Divorce?
In order to give each spouse their equitable share of business assets, you or the court must put a value on those assets. Often, this requires a business valuation. Your divorce attorney can help you hire an expert to estimate the value of your business based on:- Market value: What an outside buyer would pay for it,
- Book value: Its current assets and liabilities adjusted by various market factors