The Alchemist’s Guide to Post-Judgment Collections

In the hectic world of North Carolina civil litigation, the focused practitioner understandably may lose sight of the forest for the individual trees. Analyzing thousands of pages of poorly-copied document production for that smoking-gun email, determining just the right dollar amount for your client’s twelfth counteroffer to keep the adverse party engaged in settlement efforts, and speed-reading opposing counsel’s summary judgment brief which was hand-delivered to you 30 seconds before the hearing started; such tasks lend themselves to intense focus, not an appreciation for the “bigger picture.” Yet, when the fortunate litigator does succeed in obtaining a civil judgment, whether by settlement, motion, verdict, or sheer luck, she is quickly confronted with the inevitable question from the client: how do we magically turn this paper judgment into gold?

To assist those with less experience in the alchemy of post-judgment collections , we present the following general formula for catalyzing the conversion of your client’s paper judgment into something of tangible value ( debt collection ) .

Preparing Your Laboratory: Debtor’s Exemptions
In order to get to judgment execution, the initial ingredient in the post-judgment collections formula, the judgment creditor must first (1) wait for the time to file a notice of appeal has expired, which is thirty (30) days from entry of judgment (tip: be sure to serve all parties with copies of the entered judgment under NCRCP 58 to get this clock started!), and (2) deal with the issue of exemptions.

A corporate (non-human) judgment debtor has no exemptions. If your debtor is a corporate entity, proceed to Step 2.

An individual (human) judgment debtor who is a North Carolina resident is afforded certain exemptions of her property from collection in satisfaction of a judgment debt by N.C.G.S. Chapter 1C, Article 16, known as the Exemptions Act. The statutory scheme of the Exemptions Act effectively replaced the individual exemptions provided under Article X of the North Carolina Constitution. The general idea is that the State seeks to provide its residents some minimum protections from collection – ensuring that even the most judgment-laden citizen cannot be forced to give up the proverbial “shirt off his back.” The Exemptions Act sets out categories of property and provides specific dollar amounts of which the debtor’s interest in such property is exempt from the enforcement of creditors’ claims. Some of these exemptions include, as of the time of publication of this article: