North Dakota Code § 14-05-24.2

Summary real estate disposition judgment
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1. If real estate is described in a judgment and decree of divorce, the court may direct 
either of the parties or their legal counsel to prepare and submit to the court, in a form 
prescribed by the court, a proposed summary real estate disposition judgment. Upon 
approval by the court and filing of the summary real estate disposition judgment with 
the clerk of court, the clerk of court shall provide to any party upon request certified 
copies of the summary real estate disposition judgment.
2. A summary real estate disposition judgment must contain the following information:
a. The full caption and file number of the case and the title "Summary Real Estate 
Disposition Judgment";
b. The dates of the parties' marriage and of the entry of the judgment and decree of 
divorce;
c. The names of the parties' attorneys or if either or both appeared pro se;
d. The name of the judge and referee, if any, who signed the order for judgment and 
decree;
e. Whether the judgment and decree resulted from a stipulation, a default, or a trial 
and the appearances at the default or trial;
f. If the judgment and decree resulted from a stipulation, whether the real property 
was described by a legal description;
g. If the judgment and decree resulted from a default, whether the petition contained 
the legal description of the property and whether disposition was made in 
accordance with the request for relief;

h. Whether the summons and petition were served personally upon the respondent 
in accordance with the North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure;
i. If the summons and petition were served on the respondent on ly by publication, 
the name of each legal newspaper and county in which the summons and petition 
were published and the dates of publications;
j. Whether either party changed the party's name through the judgment and decree;
k. The legal description of each parcel of real estate;
l. The name or names of the persons awarded an interest in each parcel of real 
estate and a description of the interest awarded;
m. Liens, mortgages, encumbrances, or other interests in the real estate described 
in the judgment and decree; and
n. Triggering or contingent events set forth in the judgment and decree affecting the 
disposition of each parcel of real estate.
3. a. On the court's own motion or on application by an interested person, the court 
shall issue an order authorizing the clerk of court to issue an amended summary 
real estate disposition judgment to correct an erroneous legal description of real 
estate contained in the judgment and decree of divorce.
b. An application to correct a legal description under this subdivision must contain:
(1) The erroneous legal description contained in the judgment and decree;
(2) The correct legal description of the real estate;
(3) Written evidence satisfactory to the court to show the correct legal 
description, or a request for an evidentiary hearing to produce evidence of 
the correct legal description; and
(4) A proposed amended summary real estate disposition judgment.
c. The court shall consider an application under this subsection on an expedited 
basis. The court's order must be based on the evidence provided in the 
application, the evidence produced at an evidentiary hearing, or the evidence 
already in the record of the proceeding. If the court is satisfied that an erroneous 
legal description should be corrected under this subsection, the court may issue 
its order without a hearing or notice to any person. A filing fee is not required for 
an application under this subsection. The court's order must be treated as an 
amendment of the court's findings of fact regarding the legal description of the 
property in question, without the need to amend the original judgment and 
decree. The court shall issue the order if the court specifically finds that the court 
had jurisdiction over the respondent in the divorce proceeding and that the 
property was sufficiently identified in the original proceedings to prevent prejudice 
to the rights of either party to the divorce and that the amendment will not 
prejudice their rights. The court's order is effective retroactive to the date of entry 
of the original judgment and decree of divorce.
d. An amended summary real estate disposition judgment must be treated the same 
as the prior summary real estate disposition judgment for all purposes.
e. On request by any interested person, the clerk of court shall provide a certified 
copy of an amended summary real estate disposition judgment showing the 
correct legal description of the real property affected by the judgment and decree.
f. This subsection may not be used to add omitted property to a judgment and 
decree of divorce, unless the court determines that the omitted property is an 
integral or appurtenant part of real property already properly included in the 
judgment and decree.
4. An order or provision in a judgment and decree that provides that the judgment and 
decree must be recorded in the office of the county recorder means, if a summary real 
estate disposition judgment has been approved by the court, that the summary real 
estate disposition judgment, rather than the judgment and decree, must be recorded in 
the office of the county recorder.
5. The summary real estate disposition judgment operates as a conveyance and transfer 
of each interest in the real estate in the manner and to the extent described in the 
summary real estate disposition judgment. A summary real estate disposition 

judgment, or an amended summary real estate disposition judgment that supersedes 
an earlier judgment, is prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the summary real 
estate disposition judgment. A purchaser for value without notice of any defect in the 
divorce proceedings may rely on a summary real estate disposition judgment or a later 
amended summary real estate disposition judgment to establish the facts stated in the 
judgment.
6. If a conflict exists between the judgment and decree and the summary real estate 
disposition judgment, the summary real estate disposition judgment recorded in the 
office of the county recorder controls as to the interest acquired in real estate by any 
subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration, who is in 
possession of the interest or whose interest is recorded with the county recorder, 
before the recording of the judgment and decree in the office of the county recorder.

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