Queeneth E. Esq
Divorce decrees are court orders; violating one is contempt of court. Alaska Civil Rule 90(b) (contempt) and the Court’s power to issue coercive or remedial sanctions.
Alaska courts regularly compel a sale when a party can’t or won’t refinance. The Court’s own self-help site tells parties to file “a motion asking the court to order the opposing party to refinance the loan” when a spouse will not cooperate — Alaska Court System Family Law page.
After judgment, the expected follow-up actions the court can compel include “refinancing a loan or mortgage” or “selling an asset like the marital home.” — Alaska ACS “After You Get the Final Order” FAQ.
Yes—you have solid grounds to seek enforcement, contempt sanctions, and (if refinance is impossible) a forced sale or other relief that removes you from the loan and compensates you for provable credit damage.
Enforcement options (in the same Alaska Superior Court that issued the decree):
- Motion to Enforce / Motion to Compel Refinance — reaffirms the decree and orders ex-spouse to complete refinance by a date certain. Deadline is 30–90 days.
- Order to Show Cause re: Contempt — requires ex-spouse to appear and explain non-compliance; court may fine, award fees, or set coercive sanctions. Deadline is immediately after hearing.
- Alternative relief clause — ask the court to automatically convert the order to sale of the home through a realtor; or clerk’s deed giving you power of sale if refinance is not finished by the new deadline. Triggered if deadline missed.
- Partition/Sale Action (AS 09.45.260–.290) — if title is still joint, you may also file a separate civil action for partition forcing a judicial sale; proceeds pay off the mortgage and then are distributed. Court sets schedule.
You can (and usually should) combine the first two into a single filing: “Motion to Enforce Decree and Order to Show Cause (Contempt).” Ask for refinance within X days or automatic listing for sale.
Indemnity and credit-repair damages (e.g., reimbursement of late fees, higher interest, documented credit score drop).
Attorney’s fees and costs (Alaska routinely shifts fees when one party’s non-compliance forces litigation).
Collect proof
- Decree language requiring refinance by Dec 2020.
- Written/text reminders and her October 2023 admission that she “hadn’t really been looking.”
- Credit-denial letters, near-foreclosure notices, FICO reports, mother-in-law bailout records.
You can also send a final demand letter (optional). Give a short, fixed deadline (e.g., 30 days) and attach a draft stipulation she could sign to extend only if she presents a pre-approval or firm loan timeline. State that failure will result in contempt motion and possible forced sale.
- File in Alaska. File electronically or by mail in the same Superior Court (district of original divorce). Because you live in NC, request to appear by Zoom; Alaska judges routinely grant remote appearances.
- Serve ex-spouse in Alaska per Civil Rule 5 (certified mail + e-mail).
- Prepare for remedies. Bring real-time mortgage statements and a current payoff quote so the judge can set an exact refinance/sale amount. Have a realtor’s comparative-market analysis in case the court prefers immediate listing.
Given the 4½-year delay and real credit damage, most judges would view immediate enforcement as reasonable.
If you still want to show extra goodwill, give her a short, written “last chance” (no more than 30 days). Otherwise, move forward.