--(1) An application to have a judgment within the meaning of the Act and to which the Act applies registered in the High Court may be made without notice but must be supported by evidence-
----(a) exhibiting the judgment or a verified or certified or otherwise duly authenticated copy thereof and, where the judgment is not in the English language, a translation thereof in that language certified by a notary public or authenticated by affidavit;
----(b) stating the name, trade or business and the usual or last known place of abode or business of the judgment creditor and the judgment debtor respectively, so far as known to the deponent;
----(c) stating to the best of the information or belief of the deponent-
--------(i) that the judgment creditor is entitled to enforce the judgment; and either
--------(ii) that at the date of the application the judgment has not been satisfied; or
--------(iii) the amount in respect of which it remains unsatisfied,
----and, in either case;
--------(iv) that the judgment does not fall within any of the cases in which a judgment may not be ordered to be registered under section 4 of the Act; and
--------(v) that the registration would not be, or be liable to be, set aside; and
----(d) specifying the amount of the interest, if any, which under the law of the country of the original court has become due under the judgment up to the time of registration.
Notes
Amended by Legal Notice 233 of 2005.
Back to Part (78. Reciprocal Enforcement of Judgments)