Durham County Courthouse
Durham County Courthouse | |
Address: | Attn: Family Court, 6th Floor
510 South Dillard St. Durham, NC 27701 |
Divorce by Clerk? | No; requires a hearing before a judge |
Local Rules | Durham County Local Rules and Forms |
The Durham County Courthouse may be where your divorce disputes are litigated if at least one of the spouses live in Durham County.[1] It has a parking structure attached to it. On floor 3 of the parking structure is a ramp that leads directly to the courthouse. Once you enter the courthouse and go through security, turn left and find the elevators on the right-hand side. The family court is located on the sixth floor. The clerk's office as at the end of the hallway on that floor.
Like most North Carolina courts, the Durham courthouse has a lot of rules, deadlines, forms, and procedures that are specific to that courthouse. This courthouse's local rules and forms can be found here. However, most spouses will not end up using all 37 forms or need to read all 30 pages of the family court rules. This wiki will summarize the rules and forms that are specific to the Durham County Courthouse and are applicable to a large number of cases.
Local Forms
The following are the most commonly-used forms specific to the Durham County Courthouse you should know about before filing a lawsuit in this court:
- Custody: When filing a new custody claim, a "Notice To Attend Orientation & Parenting Apart Class" (DUR-DOM-06) is required. Also, there is a blue notebook in the clerk's office to sign up for orientation.
- Alimony: When completing service of process for a new alimony claim, a completed Financial Affidavit (Form DUR-DOM-08) must served, along with a blank copy for the other spouse to complete. The other spouse's Financial Affidavit is due at the status conference, pre-trial conference, or 5 days before a temporary hearing, whichever comes first. The last two years of tax returns should also be provided.[2]
- Alimony: An Employer Wage Affidavit (Form DUR-DOM-09) is also required by both spouses. This is a document the spouses provide to their employer to verify their wages, The employer wage affidavits from each spouse are due at a status conference, pre-trial conference, or 5 days before a temporary hearing, whichever comes first.
- Equitable Distribution: Financial disclosures using the Inventory Affidavit (Form DUR-DOM 10) and Certification of Initial Disclosures (Form DUR-DOM 12) are due before the status conference,[3] within 90 days of filing a lawsuit, or within 30 days of receiving your spouse's affidavit.[4]
- Equitable Distribution: The inventory affidavit is later updated with a Form DUR-DOM-11 Inventory Affidavit that is due within 30 days of a failed mediation or settlement conference. Unlike the initial DUR-DOM 12 affidavit, the allegations made in DUR-DOM-11 are binding on the spouse making the affidavit at trial.[5]
Equitable Distribution Disclosures
Each courthouse has slightly different rules about what financial records must be shared automatically in an equitable distribution case and provided with the Inventory Affidavit. Generally, each line item on the affidavit should have some kind of evidence attached as to the item's value as of the date of separation. However, the documents specifically required by the Durham court include the following:[6]
- Real Estate: Any appraisals or any deed documents related to a mortgage.
- Vehicles: A copy of the title and any applicable loan documents
- Accounts: Statements covering three months before the date of separation up to the date of the status conference. This includes 401ks, brokerage accounts, pensions, IRAs, debt, etc.
- A Credit Report: This can be obtained through www.annualcreditreport.com or through your bank.
Status Conference
At a status conference
- Discovery Conference Order: Form DUR-DOM 15 for Equitable Distribution and Form DUR-DOM 14 for other claims.
- Designation of a Mediator (Form AOC-CV-825) or Form AOC-CV-826 for using a different settlement procedure.
At a pre-trial conference:
- Form DUR-DOM-16 for custody, DUR-DOM-17 for alimony, child support, and equitable distribution.
- Upon request the court will address discovery issues and set a date for trial
Continuances
- Form DUR-DOM-05 at least five days prior to hearing.
Divorce
The Durham County Courthouse does not comply with the divorce by clerk statute.[7] All divorce decrees require a hearing before a judge. As a result, an Affidavit of Judicial Assignment (DUR-DOM-01) is required even in simple, uncontested divorces.[8]
Hearings
Scheduling a hearing requires (a) a motion, (b) Calendar Request and Notice of Hearing (Form DUR-DOM-02), (c) a Certificate of Service, and (d) an attempt to collaborate on the hearing date. Interim hearings are restricted to one hour per issue.[9] Up to five affidavits, which must be served one week before the hearing.[9]
- A1 Calendar = Priority
- A2 Calendar = Brief matters
- B Calendar = Backup to an A1 hearing
Orders: served on opposing spouse within 15 days of hearing and 7 days to respond Form DUR-DOM-21 cover sheet
Contact an Attorney
This wiki is provided by North Carolina divorce lawyer David King and his firm King @ Law. You can learn more about King @ Law at www.kinglawnc.com. If you are looking to hire an attorney, have questions, or would like to contribute to this wiki, you can contact attorney King using any of the following methods:
- Schedule a Consultation
- Start a Facebook Chat
- Email: david@kinglawnc.com
- Voicemail: 919 706 5322
References
- ↑ § 50-3
- ↑ Local Rule 12.2
- ↑ Local Rule 11.2
- ↑ Local Rule 13.1
- ↑ Local Rule 13.3
- ↑ Local Rule 13.2
- ↑ See §50-10(e)
- ↑ Local Rule 6.1
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 Local Rule 5.2