Legal Question in Real Estate Law in Singapore

Can a Singapore Court enforce a deficiency judgement in CA

Hi --

I have a property in Singapore which is being foreclosed.

I bought it for S$ 700K, now the value is S$ 450K. The loan is S$ 460K.

The Bank intends to auction the property, if the proceeds is less than the loan, they will probably try to collect from me. I am a citizen of USA and not a resident of Singapore.

Would they be able to enforce a judgement from a Singapore court here ? Or alternatively, the loan/mortgage was signed under the laws of Singapore, would the Bank be able to sue me here in California ?

This house was my residence at some point. I believe California law forbids deficiency judgement against borrowers (if it is their own home). Could someone please help me on this issue ?

What should I do ?

Thank you very much,

--name removed--


Asked on 5/11/06, 7:23 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

JOHN GUERRINI THE GUERRINI LAW FIRM - COLLECTION LAWYERS

Re: Can a Singapore Court enforce a deficiency judgement in CA

Assuming a judgment is granted against you in the foreign country, it (the judgment) would then have to be domesticated here in California, before any enforcement activity could be done against you.

To do this, a new lawsuit would have to be filed under the Uniform Foreign Money-Judgments Recognition Act to establish a domestic judgment (here in California). To defend against the case, you would argue, among other things, that the judicial system in Singapore lacks fundamental due process protections afforded the citizens of the United States. The California court will not order that the judgment can be domesticated here unless certain conditions have been established by the creditor, and one of those conditions is that the creditor must establish that the judgment was obtained without violating due process. I am not familiar with Singapore law, but I imagine that you could make a decent argument that due process is lacking.

In addition, though the California antideficiency statutes would not apply directly, you could also argue that the substantive due process protections afforded by them are not available to you in Singapore, and thus, the judgment should not be domesticated.

Good luck. We are judgment enforcement litigators, so if you ever need assistance wtih this in the future, please feel free to call or email.

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Answered on 5/12/06, 10:27 am


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