The house. The retirement account. The debt you co-signed when you thought you’d be together forever. North Carolina divides marital property through a legal process called equitable distribution, and courts don’t hand it out based on who’s more deserving. They follow the law, weigh the evidence, and issue an order. After that, you live with it.
The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V handles equitable distribution cases in Hickory, Taylorsville, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point. We know the courthouses. We know what judges look at. We know how to build a property case that holds.

Dividing a marriage takes longer than most people expect. Assets you've spent years building get put on a table, argued over, appraised, and assigned. Debts follow the same process. In North Carolina, "equitable" doesn't mean equal split. It means a judge decides what's fair based on specific statutory factors. If you walk into that process without a lawyer who knows how the Catawba County courthouse handles these cases, you're already at a disadvantage. Ed Hedrick Law Firm is based in Taylorsville and works equitable distribution cases across Alexander and Catawba counties. You can get a real answer today, not next week.
Most people don't realize how much ground they can lose before a case even gets to a courtroom.
Your spouse hired someone. Maybe they've already moved funds. Maybe they're arguing the house is separate property because they put the down payment in before the marriage. Maybe the business you both built is suddenly "theirs."
The clock runs on you in a different way too. North Carolina requires that an equitable distribution claim be filed before the divorce decree is entered. Miss that window and you lose your right to the claim entirely. That's not a technicality. That's your equity, your retirement, your stake in a marriage that lasted years, gone because of a deadline.
Then there's the practical problem. You're probably still working, maybe still living in the same house, managing kids, managing finances you now have to track and document separately. You don't have time to figure out the law. But the law doesn't care about your schedule.
A Charlotte or Raleigh firm will bill you $400 an hour and hand your file to an associate who's never set foot in the Alexander County courthouse. That's a real thing that happens to people here.
You need someone local. Someone who shows up.
We handle every phase of the equitable distribution process, from the initial inventory of marital assets and debts through negotiated settlement or, if necessary, a full evidentiary hearing before a judge.
That means identifying what counts as marital property, what’s separate, and how to document the difference. It means working with appraisers on real estate, business valuations, and retirement account calculations. It means building your position before the other side sets the narrative.
Ed Hedrick is the attorney handling your case. He’s been practicing in this area for years and knows the local docket, the local judges, and how cases like yours typically move through the system. When you call, you talk to him.
If your situation needs to move fast, we can file quickly. If there’s a negotiated settlement that serves your interests, we can get there without unnecessary litigation costs. If the other side won’t move, we try the case.
Either way, we’re ready.
You reach Ed Hedrick directly. Describe what you're dealing with: what assets are in play, whether your spouse has retained counsel, and what the urgency is. We tell you what the process looks like in plain terms.
We sit down and go through the full financial picture of the marriage. What's marital, what's separate, what's contested. We identify the claims worth fighting for and map out a realistic strategy.
We build the formal inventory of marital property and debts. We document your contributions. We assess the other side's position and decide whether settlement is achievable or litigation is necessary.
We file the claim before the divorce decree enters. If the other side is negotiating in good faith, we push for a fair settlement. If they're not, we prepare for the hearing and take it to a judge.
The equitable distribution order gets entered. You know exactly what you're walking away with. That's the finish line we're building toward from day one.
Ed Hedrick has been practicing in this part of North Carolina long enough to know what local courts care about and what they don’t. He’s a member of the NC State Bar. He built this firm in Taylorsville because this is where he practices, not as a satellite office.
People come to him when the stakes are real. When a 22-year marriage is ending and neither side is being reasonable about the house. When one spouse hid income for years and the other one is just now finding out. When someone tried to handle it themselves and the paperwork is already a mess.
He doesn’t oversell outcomes. He tells you what the law says, what the facts support, and where you have leverage. That’s what you need from a lawyer, not promises.
The address is 22 West Main Avenue, Taylorsville, NC. That’s not a satellite office or a rented conference room. It’s where Ed Hedrick works.
You hire a big-city firm from Charlotte or Raleigh. You’re billed by the tenth of an hour. Your case goes to a junior associate. That associate researches Alexander County cases by looking them up online, same as you could. Your calls get returned in 48 hours, maybe. Your hearing happens in Newton, in a courthouse the associate drove to once.
You try to negotiate directly with your spouse. Without a lawyer, you don’t know which assets you’re entitled to by law, which debts follow you, or what you’re giving up by agreeing to terms before the decree. Once you sign off, it’s very hard to go back.
You hire an attorney who handles a little of everything and isn’t fluent in NC equitable distribution law. The paperwork moves slowly. Critical deadlines get treated as suggestions.
Here’s what happens with The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V:
You call. He answers or calls back the same day. He tells you what the process looks like. You meet, review the financials, and build a real position. He files on time. He shows up to the courthouse. He fights for the number that reflects what you actually put into that marriage.
That’s it.
| How The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V Compares | ||
|---|---|---|
| Option | The Problem | The Law Offices of Edward L. Hedrick, V |
| Big-city firm (Charlotte, Raleigh) | High hourly rates, associates handle your file, unfamiliar with local courts | Flat or clear fee structure, Ed handles the case, works the Alexander and Catawba County courthouses regularly |
| Online legal services / DIY | No legal strategy, easy to miss the filing deadline before your divorce decree, no representation at hearing | Full representation, deadline tracking, courtroom advocacy when needed |
| General practice attorney with limited family law experience | Unfamiliar with NC equitable distribution statutes, slower timelines, weaker negotiating position | Family law is the firm’s primary focus; Ed knows the statute and how local judges apply it |
| No attorney / self-represented | You don’t know what you’re entitled to, the other side’s lawyer takes advantage of that | Levels the field; protects your stake in the marital estate |
It means the court divides marital property in a way it considers fair, which starts with a presumption of equal division but can shift based on statutory factors. Those factors include each spouse's economic circumstances, contributions to the marriage (financial and non-financial), and how long the marriage lasted, among others. It does not automatically mean 50/50.
Marital property is generally anything acquired during the marriage, regardless of whose name is on it. The house you bought together, the retirement account you built at work, the car, the savings. Separate property is what you owned before the marriage or received as a gift or inheritance during it. The tricky cases involve commingling: when separate property gets mixed with marital assets over time.
You lose it. In North Carolina, the claim must be filed before the divorce decree is entered. After that, the court no longer has jurisdiction to divide the property. This is one of the most common and costly mistakes people make when they try to handle divorce without an attorney.
Yes, if you want the agreement to be enforceable. A consent order drafted and filed by an attorney protects you if the other side changes their mind later. Verbal agreements don't hold up. A handshake doesn't survive a dispute over a retirement account two years after the divorce.
Possibly. North Carolina allows the court to deviate from equal division when the equities call for it. If your spouse dissipated marital assets, if you were the primary contributor to the marital estate, or if other factors favor you, a judge can award more than 50%. Building that case requires documentation and legal argument.
It depends on how contested the case is. An uncontested settlement with straightforward assets can resolve in a few months. A contested case with business interests and disputed valuations can take considerably longer. Your attorney should give you a realistic timeline based on what's actually in play.
No. You're already at a disadvantage. The other side is building their position now. The longer you wait, the harder it is to document the asset picture accurately and respond to any claims they've started developing. Call today.

You only get one shot at equitable distribution. After the decree enters, that window closes. If your spouse has already retained an attorney, you’re behind. If you don’t know what you’re entitled to, you can’t negotiate from a real position.
Call Ed Hedrick Law Firm today. He’ll tell you where you stand, what the process looks like, and what it will take to protect your share of the marital estate.
Call: (828) 635-4168
Email: office@edhedrickattorney.com
Address: 22 West Main Avenue, Taylorsville, NC
Judges in Catawba and Alexander counties see these cases constantly. They know which attorneys show up prepared and which ones are still learning the statute. They know who tracked the assets and who brought documentation vs. who brought a story.
Ed Hedrick has been in these courthouses. He knows the work that goes into an equitable distribution case that actually holds up. And he’s here, in Taylorsville, serving Hickory, Newton, Conover, Catawba, Maiden, Hiddenite, and Stony Point.
You’ve spent years building something. The divorce doesn’t have to take it.
Call (828) 635-4168. We don’t blink.
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