P
In the case of a creditor getting a Judgment Mortgage (number 2 in the Opening Post) in the High Court against a debtor, I have a couple of questions please:
1) Can that Judgment Mortgage apply to all assets of the debtor or is it confined to specific lands/houses etc. and
2) Can it also cover assets - property etc. in the U.K. or is it only applicable to assets in Ireland?
Thanks
Does anyone know if a judgement prevents the settlement of the underlying debt for a lesser amount at a later date?
For example, say a person owes a credit card provider €10,000 and the person cannot repay the debt. We all know that the person should ultimately be able to settle with the provider or debt collector for (say) €4,000. But if the provider obtains a judgement for the €10,000, will they still settle for €4,000 or does the judgement effectively take that option off the table?
Thanks.
The media are confused by the whole process to be honest.
Court cases for debts have 2 distinct phases:
1.) Obtaining a judgment and
2.) Enforcement of the judgment.
At stage 1 the court is only concerned that the person owes the money in the first place. ... Attending the case at this stage is pointless as it will not stop a judgment being made.
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It's very foolish not to attend the court - the court can award an instalment order at the same time as they grant the judgement, and they regularly do so, particularly when you don't show up to plead your case. There is also the possibility that the plaintiffs solicitor does not show up (it may be struck out, but can be represented) at which stage you will get an opportunity to accept liability for the debt and put forward your statement of affairs and repayment proposals. It is always in your interest to make an appearance.
Not true. The court has no absolutely jurisdiction to grant an instalment order at the time of the initial judgement. All it can do is grant a judgement and if the creditor wants an instalment order it can do so by issuing the appropriate summons. The instalment order is to enforce the judgement. In any event the High Court and Circuit Court have no legal powers to grant instalment orders at all. That is the District Courts role solely.It's very foolish not to attend the court - the court can award an instalment order at the same time as they grant the judgement, and they regularly do so, particularly when you don't show up to plead your case. There is also the possibility that the plaintiffs solicitor does not show up (it may be struck out, but can be represented) at which stage you will get an opportunity to accept liability for the debt and put forward your statement of affairs and repayment proposals. It is always in your interest to make an appearance.
Only 1 judge in the circuit.This is the circuit court, so there's bound to be more than one judge?
Loads especially if you force the bank to produce witnesses to back up their claims.How much would it increase the costs by?
The judge will allow them their costs. Witness attendances are not cheap.Can the banks solicitors charge what they want or is there a limit?
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