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Information On Collecting Money From Small Claims Judgment Form. This is a Michigan form and can be use in Small Claims Statewide.
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Tags: Information On Collecting Money From Small Claims Judgment, DCI 84, Michigan Statewide, Small Claims
If the defendant is not present at the
trial, the court will send a copy of the small
claims judgment to the defendant. The
judgment will order the defendant to pay
you in full within 21 days or tell you and the
court where s/he works and the location of
his/her bank accounts on form DC 87,
Affidavit of Judgment Debtor.
3. If the defendant doesn't pay the
judgment as ordered, you will have to
collect your money through a seizure of
property or a garnishment.
COLLECTING MONEY FROM A
SMALL CLAIMS JUDGMENT
If you sued someone for money and
received a judgment against that person, you
have the right to collect the money.
How Much Can I Collect?
You can collect the amount stated in your
small claims judgment (form DC 85) plus any
interest that accumulates during the time the
other party pays off the judgment.
How Can I Collect My Money?
There are several ways you can collect
your money.
1. If the other party (defendant) has the
money and is present at the trial, s/he can pay
you right then.
2. If s/he does not have the money at that
time and you both agree at the trial, the judge
can set up a payment schedule.
What Is Seizure of Property?
Seizure of Property is a court procedure
allowing a court officer to seize property
belonging to the defendant which can be sold
to pay for your judgment. If you want to file a
request to seize property, you may use form
MC 19, Request and Order to Seize Property.
What Is Garnishment?
Garnishment is a court procedure allowing
you to collect your judgment directly from the
defendant’s wages, bank account, or other
source such as income tax refunds. If you want
to file a garnishment, see the court clerk for the
proper forms. Instructions are included with
the forms.
How Do I Get An Order to Seize Property
Or A Garnishment?
To get an order to seize property or for
garnishment, you will first need to know
where the defendant lives and works, what
assets s/he has and where these assets are
located, and any other information which
identifies the defendant and his/her property.
• If you have the information described
above, you can start the process for an
order to seize property or for garnishment.
• If you don't have the information
described above, you will need to order the
defendant to appear in court for questioning
through a process called discovery. You can
start this process by filing a discovery
subpoena.
Filing a Discovery Subpoena
You must wait 21 days after your small
claims judgment was signed before you can
file a discovery subpoena. Form MC 11,
Subpoena (Order to Appear) can be used.
Contact the court for an appearance date
before putting the date and location on the
form. Complete both the front of the
Subpoena and the Affidavit for Judgment
Debtor Examination on the back. The judge
must sign the Subpoena before it's effective.
Once the Subpoena is signed you must serve
it on the defendant.
The fee for filing the Subpoena with the
court varies. The cost of serving it also varies.
You may include a copy of form
DC 87, Affidavit of Judgment Debtor, with
the Subpoena for the defendant to fill out.
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Filing a Request to Seize Property
You must wait 21 days after your small
claims judgment was signed before you can
get an order for seizure of property. Form
MC 19, Request and Order to Seize Property,
is used to start the process. Complete the
Request portion of form MC 19 and file it
with the court. The filing fee varies.
The court will issue the order by signing the
form, and it will be executed by a sheriff or
court officer.
When do I get my money from a seizure
of property? Any property that is seized will
be sold and the money given to you. The
sheriff or court officer is entitled to fees which
will be deducted from the sale of the property.
Filing a Request for Garnishment
You must wait 21 days after your small
claims judgment was signed before you can
get a garnishment. Form MC 12, MC 13, or
MC 52, Request and Writ of Garnishment,
is used to start the garnishment process.
There are three types of garnishment: 1)
periodic, 2) non-periodic, and 3) income tax
intercept.
A periodic writ of garnishment (MC 12)
is used to garnish the defendant's wages,
rent payments, land contract payments, or
other debt which is paid to the defendant on
a periodic basis. A periodic garnishment is
valid for up to 91 days or until the judgment,
interest, and costs are paid off, whichever
occurs first.
A non-periodic writ of garnishment
(MC 13) is used to garnish the defendant's
bank account or other property. Once
money has been garnished under the nonperiodic writ, the writ is no longer valid.
If there is a remaining balance on the
judgment, you must get another writ to
collect more money.
An income tax writ of garnishment (MC
52) is used to intercept the defendant's income
tax refund. Once the tax refund has been
intercepted by the Department of Treasury,
the writ is no longer valid. If there is a
remaining balance on the judgment, you must
get another writ to collect more money.
Fill in the names and addresses of both
the defendant and the garnishee on the
Request part of the form. The garnishee is
the person or business who has control or
possession of the defendant's money. Once
you complete the Request, you must file it
with the district court that entered your
small claims judgment. The filing fee is
$15.00.
The court will issue the Writ (order) by
signing the form. The Request and Writ
must be served on the garnishee along with
the Disclosure, form MC 14. There is a $6.00
disclosure fee with a garnishment for periodic
payments and income tax refund. The
cost of serving the Writ varies.
When do I get my money from the
garnishment? The garnishee has 14 days
after the Writ is served to let you, the court,
and the defendant know if any money is
available for garnishment. This information
will be provided on form MC 14, Garnishee
Disclosure. If you are trying to garnish
wages, you will only receive part of the
wages based on a federal formula.
If money is available, it will be withheld
from the defendant right away. However,
this money will be held for 28 days to allow
the defendant time for objections. If there
are no objections, the withheld money will
be automatically sent to you after 28 days.
If the garnishment is for periodic payments,
money will continue to be sent to you as
payments become due to the defendant until
the writ expires.
What Else Can I Do?
If your case against the defendant
involved a traffic accident, you can ask the
court for an abstract of judgment which
suspends the defendant's Michigan driver
license until s/he pays the judgment. You
must wait 30 days after the judgment date
before you can get an abstract of judgment.
You need to provide the defendant's full name,
date of birth, and Michigan driver license
number. There is no filing fee. The court
clerk should have the necessary forms.
MCL 600.8409(2)
DCI 84 (6/05)
Approved, SCAO
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