Charging Orders Act 1979

Year1979


Charging Orders Act 1979

1979 CHAPTER 53

An Act to make provision for imposing charges to secure payment of money due, or to become due, under judgments or orders of court; to provide for restraining and prohibiting dealings with, and the making of payments in respect of, certain securities; and for connected purposes.

[6th December 1979]

Be it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:—

Charging orders

Charging orders

S-1 Charging orders.

1 Charging orders.

(1) Where, under a judgment or order of the High Court or a county court, a person (the ‘debtor’) is required to pay a sum of money to another person (the ‘creditor’) then, for the purpose of enforcing that judgment or order, the appropriate court may make an order in accordance with the provisions of this Act imposing on any such property of the debtor as may be specified in the order a charge for securing the payment of any money due or to become due under the judgment or order.

(2) The appropriate court is—

(a ) in a case where the property to be charged is a fund in court, the court in which that fund is lodged;

(b ) in a case where paragraph (a ) above does not apply and the order to be enforced is a maintenance order of the High Court, the High Court or a county court;

(c ) in a case where neither paragraph (a ) nor paragraph (b ) above applies and the judgment or order to be enforced is a judgment or order of the High Court for a sum exceeding 2,000, the High Court; and

(d ) in any other case, a county court.

In this section ‘maintenance order’ has the same meaning as in section 2(a ) of the Attachment of Earnings Act 1971 .

(3) An order under subsection (1) above is referred to in this Act as a ‘charging order’.

(4) Where a person applies to the High Court for a charging order to enforce more than one judgment or order, that court shall be the appropriate court in relation to the application if it would be the appropriate court, apart from this subsection, on an application relating to one or more of the judgments or orders concerned.

(5) In deciding whether to make a charging order the court shall consider all the circumstances of the case and, in particular, any evidence before it as to—

(a ) the personal circumstances of the debtor, and

(b ) whether any other creditor of the debtor would be likely to be unduly prejudiced by the making of the order.

S-2 Property which may be charged.

2 Property which may be charged.

(1) Subject to subsection (3) below, a charge may be imposed by a charging order only on—

(a ) any interest held by the debtor beneficially—

(i) in any asset of a kind mentioned in subsection (2) below, or

(ii) under any trust; or

(b ) any interest held by a person as trustee of a trust (‘the trust’), if the interest is in such an asset or is an interest under another trust and—

(i) the judgment or order in respect of which a charge is to be imposed was made against that person as trustee of the trust, or

(ii) the whole beneficial interest under the trust is held by the debtor unencumbered and for his own benefit, or

(iii) in a case where there are two or more debtors all of whom are liable to the creditor for the same debt, they together hold the whole beneficial interest under the trust unencumbered and for their own benefit.

(2) The assets referred to in subsection (1) above are—

(a ) land,

(b ) securities of any of the following kinds—

(i) government stock,

(ii) stock of any body (other than a building society) incorporated within England and Wales,

(iii) stock of any body incorporated outside England and Wales or of any state or territory outside the United Kingdom, being stock registered in a register kept at any place within England and Wales.

(iv) units of any unit trust in respect of which a register of the unit holders is kept at any place within England and Wales, or

(c ) funds in court.

(3) In any case where a charge is imposed by a charging order on any interest in an asset of a kind mentioned in paragraph (b ) or (c ) of subsection (2) above, the court making the order may provide for the charge to extend to any interest or dividend payable in respect of the asset.

S-3 Provisions supplementing sections 1 and 2.

3 Provisions supplementing sections 1 and 2.

(1) A charging order may be made either absolutely or subject to conditions as to notifying the debtor or as to the time when the charge is to become enforceable, or as to other matters.

(2) The Land Charges Act 1972 and the Land Registration Act 1925 shall apply in relation to charging orders as they apply in relation to other orders or writs issued or made for the purpose of enforcing judgments.

(3) In section 49 of the Land Registration Act 1925 (protection of certain interests by notice) there is inserted at the end of subsection (1) the following paragraph—

‘(g ) charging orders (within the meaning of the Charging Orders Act 1979) which in the case of unregistered land may be protected by registration under the Land Charges Act 1972 and which, notwithstanding section 59 of this Act, it may be deemed expedient to protect by notice instead of by caution.’.

(4) Subject to the provisions of this Act, a charge imposed by a charging order shall have the like effect and shall be enforceable in the same courts and in the same manner as an equitable charge created by the debtor by writing under his hand.

(5) The court by which a charging order was made may at any time, on the application of the debtor or of any person interested in any property to which the order relates, make an order discharging or varying the charging order.

(6) Where a charging order has been protected by an entry registered under the Land Charges Act 1972 or the Land Registration Act 1925, an order under subsection (5) above discharging the charging order may direct that the entry be cancelled.

(7) The Lord Chancellor may by order made by statutory instrument amend section 2(2) of this Act by adding to, or removing from, the kinds of asset for the time being referred to there, any asset of a kind which in his opinion ought to be so added or removed.

(8) Any order under subsection (7) above shall be subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament.

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