U.S. Litigation Basics – The Writ of Attachment

A key question any person or company contemplating litigation in the United States needs to ask themselves is whether the potential judgment is worth the cost of getting it. Filing and pursuing a lawsuit in the United States is lengthy and expensive. And though the law provides protections against fraudulent transfers, there is always the risk that a potential defendant will try to move assets around as the lawsuit is pending. In such cases, a writ of attachment may be the answer.

Writs of Attachment

A writ of attachment is a prejudgment remedy that allows a creditor (typically the plaintiff) to obtain a lien on the defendant’s assets while the lawsuit is pending. I’ll start off by saying that these writs can be difficult to secure (more on that below) and the process involves compling with extremely strict statutory requirements and technicalities. If obtained though, attachments provide huge leverage and motivation for settlement. They also allow you to become a secured creditor, which means you’ll gain priority over the defendant’s other creditors that might come into existence while the case remains active.

1. Their Statutory Basis

Attachment is a statutory mechanism, and in California for example, Code of Civil Procedure § 483.010, et seq. is the operative section. Subsections (a) and (b) provide:

“(a) Except as otherwise provided by statute, an attachment may be issued only in an action on a claim or claims for money, each of which is based upon a contract, express or implied, where the total amount of the claim or claims is a fixed or readily ascertainable amount not less than five hundred dollars ($500) exclusive of costs, interest, and attorney’s fees.

(b) An attachment may not be issued on a claim which is secured by any interest in real property arising from agreement, statute, or other rule of law (including any mortgage or deed of trust of realty and any statutory, common law, or equitable lien on real property, but excluding any security interest in fixtures subject to Division 9 (commencing with Section 9101) of the Commercial Code). However, an attachment may be issued where the claim was originally so secured but, without any act of the plaintiff or the person to whom the security was given, the security has become valueless or has decreased in value to less than the amount then owing on the claim, in which event the amount to be secured by the attachment shall not exceed the lesser of the amount of the decrease or the difference between the value of the security and the amount then owing on the claim.”

So, in order to qualify for an attachment, the claim must be:

  1. Based on an express or implied contract;
  2. Of a fixed or readily ascertainable amount more than $500 (“readily ascertainable” generally means there needs to be a reasonably certain basis for computing damages);
  3. An unsecured or secured by personal property (not real property!), and
  4. A commercial claim.

The attachment laws in most other states are similar to California’s.

If the conditions above are met, you can move forward with applying for the attachment. Note that you’ll have to establish a prima facie claim, and the court is going to have to make a preliminary determination on the merits of the dispute. Because this requires a mini, preliminary trial of sorts, the process is notoriously time-consuming and expensive, especially if the defendant mounts an aggressive defense. However, that time and money may well prove worth it because if you can obtain an attachment it will provide you the security of knowing there will be something of value to secure your future judgment.

This post is going to kick off a series of posts where we talk judgments and their enforcement. As I mentioned at the top of the post, we always want our foreign (and domestic too) litigation clients to be compensated at the end of any litigation we pursue.