In North Carolina, your lawyer should not distribute settlement money that is subject to a valid, unresolved lien. If negotiations stall, the disputed amount can be held in the trust account or deposited with the Clerk of Superior Court while a judge decides what each lienholder gets. Undisputed portions (like agreed provider liens and attorney’s fees) can often be paid out first, subject to statutory caps and priorities.
In a North Carolina personal injury case, can your lawyer pay out your settlement if your health insurer won’t agree to reduce its statutory lien yet? Here, one key fact is that your health insurer asserts a statutory lien on any settlement, and negotiations over that lien are still ongoing.
North Carolina recognizes medical provider liens and certain statutory health-plan liens that attach to personal injury settlements. Your attorney must protect those liens and cannot disburse funds that are still in dispute. If the parties cannot agree, a court can determine the proper lien amount and order distribution. For medical provider liens, North Carolina law caps the total provider recovery to a share of the net settlement after attorney’s fees, with pro rata sharing among compliant providers. Statutory health-plan liens (for example, the State Health Plan or Medicaid) have their own rules and formulas that a court can apply if there’s no agreement. The usual forum is Superior Court, and the disputed funds can be deposited with the Clerk of Superior Court pending a court order.
Apply the Rule to the Facts: You have a negotiated chiropractor lien (a medical provider lien). Under North Carolina law, compliant provider liens are limited to a portion of the net settlement after attorney’s fees and must share that portion pro rata. Your health insurer claims a statutory lien and has not agreed to a reduction. Your attorney should hold the disputed amount in trust and, if talks fail, seek a court order allocating funds and may deposit the dispute with the Clerk of Superior Court. Undisputed items can often be paid out first, consistent with the statutory cap and any lien priorities.
If the insurer will not reduce its lien in time, North Carolina law requires you to protect the lien by holding the disputed settlement funds. Medical provider liens are capped to a share of the net after attorney’s fees, and statutory health-plan or Medicaid liens follow their own formulas. The practical next step is to file in Superior Court, deposit the disputed amount with the Clerk of Superior Court, and obtain an order allocating funds before distribution.
If you’re stuck waiting on a health-plan lien to resolve before you can get paid, our firm can help you evaluate your options, including court allocation. Call us today.
Disclaimer: This article provides general information about North Carolina law based on the single question stated above. It is not legal advice for your specific situation and does not create an attorney-client relationship. Laws, procedures, and local practice can change and may vary by county. If you have a deadline, act promptly and speak with a licensed North Carolina attorney.