Reciprocal Enforcement of Foreign Judgments: Navigating Bilateral Treaties and Common Law

A professional brief on enforcing international judgments, jurisdiction challenges, and asset execution routes.
Enforcing a foreign court judgment requires navigating specific local statutory paths and common law actions. We represent international judgment creditors in identifying and executing against debtor assets within our jurisdictions.
1. Statutory Registration of Foreign Judgments
Under Cap. 10, foreign judgments from recognized treaty states can be registered and enforced similarly to local High Court judgments. This pathway requires proving that the foreign court possessed valid jurisdiction under local conflict-of-law principles, and that the debtor was properly served.
2. Common Law Action on the Judgment
If no bilateral enforcement treaty exists between the issuing state and the local jurisdiction, the creditor must file a fresh common law action, using the foreign judgment as conclusive evidence of debt to obtain a summary judgment, avoiding re-litigating the merits.
3. Asset Freezing and Discovery Remedies
To prevent the debtor from hiding assets during the registration phase, we petition courts for domestic freezing orders and disclosure commands, forcing financial institutions to declare debtor accounts and securing enforcement priority.
This briefing is prepared for general informational purposes and does not constitute direct legal advice. Clients are advised to complete independent compliance and conflict verification before making capital commitments.
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