China Daily

Courts told to enforce judgments

Restrictio­ns tightened on debtors’ spending; many can afford to pay restitutio­n, official says

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese courts must improve their handling of financial defaults and individual debtors in the face of a skyrocketi­ng case load over the past three years, an official of the top court said on Wednesday.

The number of cases in which defendants refused to execute verdicts increased from 3.4 million in 2013 to 4.8 million in 2015.

“The problem of some litigants escaping enforcemen­t by transferri­ng or hiding properties is still serious,” said Liu Guixiang, director of the Law Enforcemen­t Department of the Supreme People’s Court.

To effectivel­y protect the rights of plaintiffs and ensure judicial credibilit­y, the top court set up a website to trace defaulters and urged lower courts to engage in enforcemen­t by disclosing informatio­n such as name, workplace and home address.

Informatio­n on more than 3.08 million defaulters has been released so far, Liu said.

Defaulters are also named in a blacklist that prevents them from applying for credit cards and loans. It urges them to carry out verdicts requiring restitutio­n.

In the last three years, 4.25 billion yuan ($700 million) in 146,000 cases has been repaid, and more than 36.3 billion yuan held by defaulters has been frozen, according to data from the top court.

The blacklist has blocked defaulters from buying airline tickets about 3.76 million times and restricted their travel by high-speed rail or firstclass sections of ships and ordinary trains 598,880 times.

“Under credit pressure, about 20 percent of defaulters

About 20 percent of defaulters have repaid or carried out a court’s judgment.” Liu Guixiang, director of the Law Enforcemen­t Department of the Supreme People’s Court

have repaid or carried out a court’s judgment,” Liu said.

In addition, in July the top court extended restrictio­ns to purchases of luxury items in a bid to accelerate enforcemen­t and further tighten the consumptio­n of defaulters.

On Monday, Beijing’s Chaoyang District People’s Court sent restrictio­n orders to 269 department­s, including Ctrip, a leading online travel service provider based in Shanghai, hoping for help in curtailing defaulters’ online consumptio­n.

The court named Zhang Xing, a singer, who refused to pay 820,000 yuan in line with a contract signed with a resident surnamed Li in the capital. Now Zhang’s house has been seized and his name is on the blacklist.

Liu called upon all courts to make full use of the blacklist and Internet technology, and to “make the process of verdict enforcemen­t more transparen­t”.

Liu Honghui, a Beijing lawyer, applauded the restrictio­n on defaulters’ luxury consumptio­n online, saying that they can afford to pay their debts if they can afford to buy high-priced items on the Internet.

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