Practitioners from leading firms in over 90 countries provide practical information about procedural and substantive issues regarding attachment of assets.
Because the availability of attachments in advance of judgments can
make the difference between success and failure in a lawsuit for money
damages, and because attachments may often be obtained in places far
removed from the venues of proceedings on the merits, it is important
for litigation counsel to be aware of the potential for
multi-jurisdictional assaults on the assets of their clients or of their
clients’ adversaries.
Attachment of Assets is designed to give practical
information and guidance to lawyers and businessmen who are interested
in securing expected future judgments and in making strategic decisions
concerning the deployment of moveable assets in the face of possible
attachments of them. The chapters, each discussing the requirements of a
separate country, are written by lawyers with practical expertise in
this field.
The procedure by which attachments are obtained vary, ranging from
court orders authorizing a court official to take custody of a
defendant’s assets to orders restraining the defendant from transferring
his assets. The effects of such orders differ as well: some create a
lien superior to those of other creditors and others do no more than
immobilize the debtor’s assets, leaving them open to being levied upon
by later-arriving judgment creditors.
Countries vary in the ways in which they permit attachments to be
carried out -- whether, for example, all of the banks in a given city
may be served with attachment notices or orders. They vary as well with
respect to the information that is imparted to the attaching creditor
after attachment orders have been served. Some rules make available to
creditor information concerning the value of assets on which they have
successfully levied, while others leave creditors in the dark, or
dependent on informal hints from garnishees as to whether or not pay
dirt has been struck.
Most importantly, jurisdictional requirements for the issuance of
attachment orders are not similar. Some countries permit attachments
only if the defendant is subject to the jurisdiction of their courts
with respect to the merits of the case. Others are less demanding,
permitting attachments solely on the basis and to the extent of the
presence of the assets successfully attached.
It is probably fair to say that, in many foreign jurisdictions, the
protection of creditors through fraudulent conveyance laws and the like
is inadequate, or even, as a practical matter, unavailable. The
enforcement of judgments is therefore often dependent on a creditor’s
ability to obtain -- early, even prior to the commencement of a lawsuit
-- a prejudgment attachment (or the equivalent) of his debtor’s assets.
The extent to which attachments are obtainable in various countries of
the world and the basis under which they may be obtained under local law
are the focus of Attachment of Assets.
Format of Publication:
Organized in a uniform question and answer format that
addresses the receptiveness of each country toward the attachment of
assets; the procedural requirements for filing for attachment;
reciprocity; treaty provisions; and defenses.
Every Chapter is organized with the same special three part
arrangement - allowing you to quickly and easily locate the information
you need for each country.
Part I contains a survey of the current attitude of
each country’s courts and government toward the attachment of assets,
including anticipated changes and recent cases.
Part II discusses procedure the judgment creditor
must follow to file for the attachment of assets in the other country,
including translation of the judgment, currency conversion, attorneys’
fees and recovery of interest.
Part III summarizes the requirements the judgment
creditor must meet for attachment, and the defense the judgment, and the
defenses the judgment debtor must establish to prevent attachment.