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匿名 发表于 2012-7-11 13:38
我自己倒是查到了
Enforcing Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal (CTTT) orders - Step by step guide
This guide will help you enforce an order from the Consumer, Trader and Tenancy Tribunal (CTTT) for the payment of money.
This guide will not help you enforce an order for work be done or an order for possession of property. If you want to enforce an order that work be done or an order for possession of property you can get further information from the CTTT website or get legal advice.
There are three steps you need to take to enforce an order of the CTTT:
Step 1 Get the order of the CTTT certified (confirmed)
Step 2 Register the certified order with the Local Court
Step 3 Enforce judgment through the Local Court
Certifying and registering a CTTT order – Step by step guide
Step 1: Get the order of the CTTT certified (confirmed)
You need to get a document that confirms the order that has been made by the CTTT. This is called a ‘certified copy’ of the order.
You can contact the CTTT to request a certified copy by telephone, email or in person. The CTTT contact details are on the CTTT website.
There is no fee for this service. The CTTT will send a certified copy of the order to you.
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Step 2: Register the certified order with the Local Court
Once you have a certified copy of the order you need to take it to a Local Court. The certified order will be registered as a judgment of the Local Court.
You will need to complete one form:
Form 45: Registration or Filing of (Certificate of) Judgment/Order.
You can get copies of this form from:
your nearest Local Court or
the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules (UCPR) website.
After you complete the form, you will need to attach the certified copy of the CTTT order.
You can file the form at any Local Court. The filing fee is $82.00 for an individual and $164.00 for a corporation (as at July 2012).
Once the order is registered, it will have the same effect as a judgment of the Local Court.
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Step 3: Enforce judgment through the Local Court
Once you have a registered judgment, you can start enforcement action to try to get the money you are owed.
You will be called the ‘judgment creditor’. The respondent will be called the ‘judgment debtor’.
Enforcement action may include:
asking the Sheriff to seize and sell the judgment debtor’s property (called a ‘writ for the levy of property’)
asking the Sheriff to take money from the judgment debtor’s bank account or wages (called a ‘garnishee order’)
getting an order requiring the judgment debtor to answer questions about their finances (called an ‘examination’).
There are fees for taking some of these steps.
For more information on how you can enforce a judgment, see Enforcing a judgment debt. |
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