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Summary Civil Litigation - Enforcement

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Notes on Enforcement from the Civil Litigation module











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Uploaded on
January 7, 2024
Number of pages
22
Written in
2022/2023
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Summary

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Enforcement of money judgments


SUMMARY, ENFORCEMENT
 A judgment creditor can ask for the court’s assistance in discovering the assets
available for enforcement by applying to obtain information from the judgment
debtor.
 A money judgment can be enforced by:
1. writ/warrant of control against the judgment debtor’s goods;
2. by third party debt order against eg a bank account;
3. by attachment of earnings against the judgment debtor’s salary;
4. secured by obtaining a charging order (normally on land)
 Each type has its own enforcement procedure (land, goods, injunctions etc)
 Most enforcement procedures are dealt with administratively by the court,
EXCEPT, (court orders required for):
o Third party debt orders;
o Charging orders;
o Committal
 (NB: re writ/warrant of control  normally no permission required,
except in the situations listed in r83.2, eg 6+ years since judgment;
one party died since judgment etc)
 (a) Third Party Debt Orders and (b) Charging Orders have a 2-stage process:
o Interim orders are sought without notice;
o Final orders are sought at a final hearing.
 [[so all the 4 types of enforcement mechanism are initially applied for without
notice (but then for 3rd party debt orders and charging orders need orders for second
stage of final orders)]

PD40B (Judgments & Orders), para 4, Correction of errors in judgments & Orders

 Where a judgment/order contains an accidental slip or omission  a party may
apply for it to be corrected.
 The application notice (which may be an informal doc such as a letter) should
describe the error, and set out the correction required .
 An application may be dealt with without a hearing if:
o (1) where the applicant so requests;
o (2) with the consent of the parties; or
o (3) where the court does not consider that a hearing would be appropriate.
 The judge may deal with the application without notice IF: the slip/omission is
obvious; or may direct notice of the application to be given to the party/parties.

,  If the application is opposed  it should, if practicable, be listed for hearing before
the judge who gave the judgment/made the order.
 The court has an inherent power to vary its own orders, to make the meaning &
intention clear.

PD40B, para 8, Orders requiring an act to be done
 (1) An order which requires an act to be done (other than a judgment/order for
the payment of an amount of money)  MUST specify the time within which the
act should be done.
 (2) the consequences of failure to do an act within the specified time may be set
out in the order. The wording of the following examples suitably adapted must be
used:
o (1) Unless the [claimant][defendant] serves his list of documents by 4.00pm
on Friday, January 22, 1999, his [claim][defence] will be struck out and
judgment entered for the [defendant][claimant]; OR
o (2) Unless the [claimant][defendant] serves his list of docs within 14 days of
service of this order his [claimant][defence] will be struck out and judgment
entered for the [defendant][claimant].
o The first example should be used wherever possible (i.e. specifies the date
and time more precisely)


CPR PART 70: general rules about enforcement of judgments & orders

CPR 70.1, Scope of this part & interpretation
 (1) This Part contains general rules about enforcement of judgments and orders
o (Rules about specific methods of enforcement are contained in Parts 71-73,
81, 83, 84, 89)
 (2) In this part and in parts 71-73:
o “judgment creditor” = a person who has obtained or is entitled to enforce a
judgment or order;
o “judgment debtor” = a person against whom a judgment/order was given or
made;
o “judgment or order” includes an award which the court has:
 (i) registered for enforcement;
 (ii) ordered to be enforced; or
 (iii) given permission to enforce
 As if it were a judgement or order of the court; and in relation to
such an award, “the court which made the judgment or order” means
the court which registered the award or made such an order;
o “Judgment or order for the payment of money”:
 includes a judgment/order for the payment of costs;

,  but does NOT include a judgment/order for the payment of money
into court.

CPR 70.2, Methods of enforcing judgments/orders
 (1) PD70 sets out methods of enforcing judgments/orders for the payment of
money.
 (2) a judgment creditor MAY, except where an enactment/rule/PD provides
otherwise:
o (a) use any method of enforcement which is available; and
o (b) use more than one method of enforcement, either at the same time or
one after another (sequentially or sequentially).



PD70, para 1.1, Methods of Enforcing MONEY judgments, r70.2
 1.1, a judgment creditor may enforce a judgment/order for the payment of money,
by any of the following methods:
 1.1, a judgment creditor may enforce a judgment/order for the payment of money,
by any of the following methods:
1) a writ of control (High Court); or warrant of control (County Court) (see
Parts 83-84)
 [for seizure and sale of the debtor’s goods and chattels to satisfy the
judgment debt  see Pt 83 re writs & warrants; Pt 84 re taking
control of goods];
 Advantages: quick; cheap; easy
 Disadvantages: only likely to satisfy a small debt; might not be able
to sell the goods; goods are sold at auction (often get less than an
open market)
2) a third party debt order (see Part 72), eg against a bank account;
 Where a 3rd party owes money to the judgment debtor
 Direct payment from 3rd party to the judgment creditor
 Advantage: reputable 3rd party (bank/building society), likely to pay
money direct to judgment creditor
 Disadvantage: cannot get 3rd party debt orders over joint accounts
3) a charging order, stop order or stop notice (see Part 73)
 [a charging order: imposes on property of the debtor a charge for
securing the payment of money due];
 Advantage: a lot of cash
 Disadvantages: can be hard to get the money; have to order a sale;
could be hard if the property is jointly owned;
 Any prior charges on the land (eg mortgages) will take priority, the
equity on the land might be small
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