How to Prepare or Draft a Notice of Garnishment Based on a Compromise Agreement in the Philippines

When a debtor signs a compromise agreement in a Philippine case and later stops paying, the creditor’s next concern is usually practical: “How do I reach the debtor’s bank account, salary, receivables, or other money?” In the Philippines, the answer is not simply to send a private “notice of garnishment” to a bank or employer. A valid notice of garnishment is normally tied to a court-approved compromise agreement, a writ of execution, and service by the sheriff or proper implementing officer. This guide explains when garnishment is proper, what the notice should contain, how it is usually prepared, and the common mistakes that delay enforcement.

What a Notice of Garnishment Does in the Philippines

A notice of garnishment is a written notice served on a third party who holds money, credits, deposits, receivables, commissions, royalties, or similar property belonging to the judgment debtor.

In plain English, it tells the third party:

“You may be holding money or credits belonging to the debtor. Because there is an enforceable judgment, you must hold or report those funds and deal with them only as directed by the court or lawful writ.”

The third party is called the garnishee. Common garnishees include:

Garnishee What may be garnished
Bank Peso deposits, accounts, or financial interests of the debtor
Employer Salary or compensation, subject to legal exemptions
Client or customer Receivables owed to the debtor
Tenant Rent payable to the debtor-landlord
Corporation or partnership Dividends, shares, interests, commissions, or other credits
Online platform or payment processor Payables or account balances, if identifiable and reachable by lawful process

Under Rule 39, Section 9(c) of the 2019 Rules of Civil Procedure, execution may reach debts, credits, bank deposits, financial interests, royalties, commissions, and other personal property not capable of manual delivery by serving notice on the person or entity that controls them. The garnishee must submit a written report within five days from service, and the garnished amount is delivered under the procedure stated in the rule. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

The key point: garnishment is an execution remedy. It usually comes after a judgment, order, or approved compromise has become enforceable.

Can a Compromise Agreement Be Enforced by Garnishment?

Yes, but the answer depends on the kind of compromise agreement.

A compromise agreement is a contract where the parties make reciprocal concessions to avoid a lawsuit or end one already pending. This is the definition under Article 2028 of the Civil Code. When the compromise is approved by the court, it generally has the effect of a judgment and may be enforced by execution. Article 2037 of the Civil Code states that a compromise has the effect and authority of res judicata, and that execution may issue for a judicial compromise. (Lawphil)

In practice, there are three common situations:

Situation Can you immediately prepare a notice of garnishment? Usual next step
The compromise agreement was approved by the court and embodied in a judgment or order Yes, after a writ of execution is issued File a motion for execution, then the sheriff implements the writ through garnishment
The compromise was signed and notarized but never approved by a court No, not directly File the proper court action or enforce the contract through the correct proceeding
The agreement was reached in barangay, labor, small claims, or another forum It depends on the forum’s enforcement rules Follow the specific procedure for that forum

The Supreme Court has explained that once a compromise agreement receives judicial approval, it becomes more than a private contract. It is stamped with judicial authority and may be enforced through a writ of execution. (Supreme Court E-Library)

If one party refuses to comply with a compromise, Article 2041 of the Civil Code also allows the aggrieved party to either enforce the compromise or regard it as rescinded and insist on the original demand, depending on the facts and procedural posture of the case. (Lawphil)

The Legal Basis for Garnishment Based on a Compromise Agreement

The most important legal bases are:

1. Civil Code provisions on compromise agreements

The Civil Code governs the nature and effect of compromise agreements.

Important provisions include:

  • Article 2028 — defines a compromise agreement.
  • Article 2037 — gives a compromise the effect of res judicata and allows execution for a judicial compromise.
  • Article 2041 — gives remedies when a party fails or refuses to comply.

Some matters cannot validly be compromised, such as civil status, validity of marriage or legal separation, future support, court jurisdiction, and future legitime. These limits are listed in Article 2035 of the Civil Code. (Lawphil)

For ordinary collection cases, loan disputes, unpaid invoices, settlement of damages, lease disputes, and similar civil money claims, compromise agreements are commonly used and may be enforceable by execution once judicially approved.

2. Rule 39 of the Rules of Court on execution

Rule 39 governs execution, satisfaction, and effect of judgments.

For money judgments, the sheriff first demands immediate payment. If the judgment debtor does not pay, execution may proceed against property or credits. Rule 39 specifically recognizes garnishment of debts, credits, bank deposits, financial interests, royalties, commissions, and similar property in the hands of third persons. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

A writ of execution must conform to the judgment. This matters because the notice of garnishment cannot demand more than what the judgment, approved compromise, and writ authorize. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that a writ of execution must substantially conform to the judgment it enforces, and a writ that exceeds the judgment may be void to that extent. (Supreme Court E-Library)

3. Five-year period for execution by motion

Under Rule 39, Section 6, a final and executory judgment may be enforced by motion within five years from entry. After that period, and before the judgment is barred by prescription, enforcement generally requires a separate action to revive the judgment. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

This is important when the compromise agreement is old. A creditor should check:

  • the date of the decision or order approving the compromise;
  • whether an entry of judgment was made;
  • whether any previous writs were issued;
  • whether the five-year period for execution by motion has already expired.

4. Exempt property under Rule 39

Not all property or money may be taken. Rule 39, Section 13 lists properties exempt from execution, including certain tools of trade, necessary clothing, limited household items, provisions for family use, professional equipment within the stated value, wages or earnings for four months necessary for family support, legal support, and certain pensions or benefits. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

This is why a notice of garnishment should be carefully worded. It should target reachable money or credits, not funds clearly exempt under the Rules.

Quick Checklist: Is Garnishment Proper?

Before drafting a notice of garnishment, check these points first.

Question Why it matters
Was the compromise agreement approved by the court or tribunal? A private compromise alone is usually not enough for direct garnishment.
Is there already an order or judgment approving the compromise? The writ and notice must be based on an enforceable court or tribunal action.
Has the debtor defaulted? There must be a clear breach, such as missed installments or failure to pay by the due date.
Is the amount already due? Garnishment should usually cover due and demandable amounts, not unmatured future installments unless the judgment or acceleration clause allows it.
Has a writ of execution been issued? The sheriff implements the writ; the notice of garnishment flows from it.
Is the amount correctly computed? Partial payments, interest, costs, and lawful fees must be properly reflected.
Do you know the garnishee? The notice must be served on a specific bank, employer, company, tenant, client, or other third party.
Are there exemption issues? Salaries, support, pensions, foreign currency deposits, or other protected funds may raise objections.
Is the case still within the execution period? Execution by motion is generally available within five years from entry of judgment.
Are foreign documents involved? Special powers of attorney, affidavits, or corporate documents executed abroad may require apostille or consular authentication.

Step-by-Step Process Before the Notice Is Served

1. Review the compromise agreement and the court order

Start with the exact language of the compromise agreement and the order or decision approving it.

Look for:

  • payment schedule;
  • total settlement amount;
  • due dates;
  • grace period, if any;
  • default clause;
  • acceleration clause;
  • interest or penalties;
  • attorney’s fees and costs;
  • where payment should be made;
  • whether the court retained jurisdiction to enforce the compromise.

A common drafting mistake is to garnish the entire settlement amount even though only one installment is overdue. This may be proper only if the compromise agreement or judgment contains an acceleration clause saying the entire balance becomes due upon default.

2. Prepare proof of default

The motion for execution and proposed garnishment documents should be supported by clear proof.

Useful documents include:

  • copy of the compromise agreement;
  • order, decision, or judgment approving the compromise;
  • entry of judgment or certificate of finality, if available or required by the branch;
  • statement of account;
  • payment history;
  • receipts or bank records showing partial payments;
  • demand letter, if sent;
  • emails, messages, or written admissions showing missed payments;
  • computation of the outstanding balance.

A demand letter is often useful, but if the court-approved compromise is already final and the debtor clearly defaulted, the more important step is usually the motion for execution.

3. File a motion for issuance of writ of execution

The creditor, now called the judgment obligee, usually files a motion for execution in the same court that approved the compromise agreement.

The motion typically asks the court to:

  1. recognize the debtor’s default;
  2. issue a writ of execution;
  3. direct the sheriff to enforce the judgment;
  4. authorize garnishment of the debtor’s bank deposits, credits, receivables, salary, or other reachable property;
  5. allow recovery of lawful costs and execution expenses.

If the judgment is already final and executory, execution is generally a matter of right, subject to the terms of the judgment and the Rules. Still, the court must issue the writ, and the writ must match the judgment. (Supreme Court E-Library)

4. Wait for the court’s order and writ of execution

The clerk of court issues the writ after the judge grants the motion.

Under Rule 39, the writ must state the case details, the dispositive portion of the judgment, and the amount due, including interest, costs, damages, rents, or profits as of the date of issuance when applicable. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

This matters because the notice of garnishment should not invent new obligations. It should follow the writ.

5. Coordinate with the sheriff regarding implementation

The sheriff, not the private creditor, implements the writ.

In practice, the creditor or counsel may prepare a proposed notice of garnishment for the sheriff’s review and signature. However, the notice should still be issued and served by the sheriff or proper officer, not simply emailed privately by the creditor to the bank.

For execution expenses, the sheriff should submit an estimate for court approval. The interested party deposits the approved amount with the clerk of court, and the sheriff must liquidate the expenses. Direct informal payments to the sheriff are improper. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

6. Identify the garnishee accurately

A vague notice is less effective. Provide the sheriff with complete details, such as:

  • exact bank name;
  • branch, if known;
  • head office or legal department address;
  • account name, if known;
  • employer’s registered business name;
  • HR, payroll, or legal department address;
  • client or tenant name;
  • contract or invoice details, if receivables are being garnished.

A bank will not usually search based on guesses or nicknames. Use the debtor’s full legal name, aliases used in the case record, business name, tax identification details if available, and other identifiers permitted by the court record.

7. Sheriff serves the notice of garnishment

Once served, the garnishee must respond according to Rule 39.

For garnishment under Rule 39, Section 9(c), the garnishee is required to submit a written report to the court within five days from service stating whether the judgment debtor has sufficient funds or credits to satisfy the amount. If the amount is available, delivery follows the procedure and timing stated in the rule. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

8. Follow through after the garnishee’s report

After service, the creditor should monitor:

  • whether the sheriff filed proof of service;
  • whether the garnishee submitted a report;
  • whether the garnishee admits holding funds or credits;
  • whether the garnishee claims an adverse interest, set-off, lien, or no funds;
  • whether the court needs to issue a further order requiring delivery.

If the garnishee denies holding any property or claims an adverse interest, Rule 39 provides procedures for further examination or action against a person who may owe the judgment debtor or hold property for the debtor. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

How to Draft a Notice of Garnishment Based on a Compromise Agreement

A notice of garnishment should be clear, precise, and limited to what the writ authorizes.

It should not read like a threatening private demand letter. It should read like an official execution document implementing a judgment.

Essential parts of the notice

A properly prepared notice usually contains:

  1. Court caption

    • Republic of the Philippines
    • name of the court
    • branch number
    • city or station
    • case title
    • case number
  2. Name and address of the garnishee

    • bank, employer, corporation, client, tenant, or other third party
  3. Reference to the writ of execution

    • date of writ
    • date of order granting execution
    • decision or order approving the compromise agreement
  4. Identity of the parties

    • judgment obligee or creditor
    • judgment obligor or debtor
  5. Amount to be satisfied

    • principal balance
    • interest, if awarded
    • costs, if awarded
    • lawful execution fees
    • less partial payments
  6. Property or credits covered

    • bank deposits;
    • financial interests;
    • receivables;
    • commissions;
    • royalties;
    • compensation;
    • other personal property not capable of manual delivery.
  7. Limit of garnishment

    • only the amount necessary to satisfy the judgment and lawful fees should be garnished.
  8. Direction to report

    • require a written report to the court within five days from service.
  9. Direction not to release or dispose

    • the garnishee should not release, transfer, or dispose of the garnished funds except by court order or lawful execution process.
  10. Signature block

  • sheriff, deputy sheriff, or proper implementing officer.
  1. Proof of service
  • date, time, place, and person served.

Sample Notice of Garnishment

REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
[NAME OF COURT]
Branch [___]
[City]

[NAME OF PLAINTIFF / JUDGMENT OBLIGEE],
Plaintiff / Judgment Obligee,

-versus-                                      Civil Case No. [___]

[NAME OF DEFENDANT / JUDGMENT OBLIGOR],
Defendant / Judgment Obligor.
x------------------------------------------------x

NOTICE OF GARNISHMENT

TO: [NAME OF BANK / EMPLOYER / COMPANY / GARNISHEE]
    [Complete Address]

GREETINGS:

By virtue of the Writ of Execution dated [date] issued by this Court pursuant to the [Decision / Order] dated [date] approving the Compromise Agreement of the parties, you are hereby notified that the debts, credits, bank deposits, financial interests, receivables, commissions, royalties, compensation, or other personal property not capable of manual delivery belonging to or owing in favor of [name of judgment obligor], and which are in your possession, control, or custody, are hereby GARNISHED to satisfy the judgment obligation in this case.

As of [date], the amount due under the judgment is PHP [amount], broken down as follows:

Principal balance: PHP [amount]
Interest, if any: PHP [amount]
Costs / lawful fees: PHP [amount]
Less partial payments: PHP [amount]
TOTAL AMOUNT DUE: PHP [amount]

This garnishment shall cover only such amount as may be sufficient to satisfy the judgment obligation and lawful fees under the Writ of Execution.

You are directed to submit a written report to this Court within five (5) days from service of this Notice, stating whether you hold funds, credits, deposits, receivables, compensation, or other personal property belonging to or owing in favor of the judgment obligor sufficient to satisfy the judgment.

You are further directed not to release, transfer, dispose of, or otherwise deal with the garnished funds, credits, or property except pursuant to lawful court process, order of this Court, or implementation of the Writ of Execution.

Please be guided accordingly.

Issued this [date] at [city], Philippines.

[NAME OF SHERIFF]
Sheriff IV / Deputy Sheriff
[Name of Court / Branch]

Copy furnished:

[Judgment Obligee / Counsel]
[Address]

[Judgment Obligor / Counsel]
[Address]

This sample should be adjusted to the exact wording of the writ, the court’s order, the compromise agreement, and the type of property being garnished.

Drafting the Amount: Be Exact and Conservative

The amount in the notice is one of the most sensitive parts.

A good computation should show:

Item Example
Total compromise amount PHP 1,000,000
Less payments made PHP 300,000
Due and unpaid installments PHP 200,000
Accelerated balance, if allowed PHP 500,000
Interest awarded by judgment PHP 25,000
Costs and lawful fees PHP 10,000
Total amount sought to be garnished PHP 535,000

Avoid these errors:

  • claiming the full original complaint amount when the compromise reduced it;
  • ignoring partial payments;
  • adding interest not awarded or not provided in the compromise;
  • garnishing future installments that are not yet due;
  • including attorney’s fees not stated in the judgment, compromise, or writ;
  • adding sheriff expenses not approved or not lawful.

If the compromise agreement says that default in one installment makes the entire remaining balance immediately due, quote that clause in the motion for execution and make sure the writ reflects it.

Practical Notes When Garnishing Bank Accounts

Banks are common garnishees, but they follow strict internal and legal procedures.

A notice should identify the judgment debtor as accurately as possible. If the debtor is an individual, use the full name stated in the judgment. If the debtor is a corporation, use the exact registered corporate name.

For Philippine peso deposits, Rule 39 expressly includes bank deposits among property that may be reached by garnishment. However, creditors should not treat this as permission to conduct private fishing expeditions into bank records. The bank responds to lawful court process, not private curiosity. Bank secrecy rules under Republic Act No. 1405 still matter in practice, especially when the request goes beyond what is necessary to implement a writ. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Foreign currency deposits require extra caution. Republic Act No. 6426, the Foreign Currency Deposit Act, gives special protection to foreign currency deposits, and case law has treated them differently from ordinary peso deposits. The Supreme Court’s ruling in Salvacion v. Central Bank is often discussed because it involved exceptional facts and the Court addressed the statutory protection of foreign currency deposits. (Supreme Court E-Library)

Because of this, a notice targeting bank funds should be drafted carefully and should not casually assume that every type of account is equally reachable.

Practical Notes When Garnishing Salary or Compensation

Salary garnishment is possible in some cases, but it is not unlimited.

Rule 39 exempts salaries, wages, or earnings for personal services within four months preceding the levy when they are necessary for the support of the debtor’s family. Article 1708 of the Civil Code also protects the laborer’s wages from execution or attachment except for debts incurred for food, shelter, clothing, and medical attendance. The Supreme Court has also discussed the difference between ordinary public officials and “laborers” for purposes of wage garnishment. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

In practical terms, if the garnishee is an employer, expect possible issues such as:

  • whether the debtor is a rank-and-file employee, officer, consultant, or public official;
  • how much of the compensation is necessary for family support;
  • whether the money is salary, commission, allowance, separation pay, or another benefit;
  • whether there are existing deductions, loans, or prior garnishments.

The notice should avoid overbroad language that appears to seize all salary without regard to exemptions.

Garnishing Receivables, Rent, Commissions, or Business Income

Sometimes a bank account is unknown or empty, but the debtor has income from customers, tenants, or business clients.

Examples:

  • a contractor has unpaid billings from a project owner;
  • a landlord receives monthly rent from tenants;
  • a broker is due commissions;
  • a supplier has receivables from a corporation;
  • a professional has collectible fees from a client.

These may be reached by garnishment if they are debts or credits owed to the judgment debtor and are properly identified.

The notice should state:

  • who the debtor is;
  • what kind of credit is being garnished;
  • the amount covered;
  • that the garnishee should report whether it owes money to the debtor;
  • that payment should not be made directly to the debtor while the garnishment is in effect.

This type of garnishment is often more fact-intensive than bank garnishment. The garnishee may dispute the debt, claim set-off, say the invoice is not yet due, or state that payment is subject to completion of work.

Special Situations: Small Claims, Barangay Settlements, and Labor Cases

Small claims cases

If the compromise agreement was reached in a small claims case, the Supreme Court provides standard small claims forms, including forms for execution and writs involving compromise agreements. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Small claims procedure is designed to be simpler, but enforcement still goes through the court and the sheriff. A creditor should use the proper small claims form and comply with the branch’s instructions.

Barangay compromise agreements

An amicable settlement before the barangay has a special enforcement mechanism under the Katarungang Pambarangay system.

Under Section 417 of the Local Government Code, an unrepudiated barangay settlement may be enforced by execution through the lupon within six months. After that period, enforcement is generally through action in the proper city or municipal court. The Supreme Court has described this as a two-tiered mode of enforcement. (Supreme Court E-Library)

This means a barangay settlement is not usually something you can take straight to a bank for garnishment. It must be enforced through the proper barangay or court process.

Labor compromise agreements

Labor cases have their own rules before the Labor Arbiter or National Labor Relations Commission. A compromise approved in a labor case may be treated as enforceable within that system, but execution is implemented under labor procedure, not ordinary civil court practice. NLRC rules include procedures for writs of execution and garnishment of deposits, credits, and receivables. (NLRC)

For example, if an employer agrees before the Labor Arbiter to pay separation pay or back wages and then defaults, the worker normally proceeds through NLRC execution, not by filing a regular civil notice of garnishment.

Foreigners, OFWs, and Documents Signed Abroad

Foreign creditors, foreign spouses, overseas Filipinos, and companies abroad often encounter extra document issues.

If a party is outside the Philippines, the court may require proper authority for a representative to act. Common documents include:

  • special power of attorney;
  • board secretary’s certificate for corporations;
  • affidavit of nonpayment;
  • proof of identity;
  • proof of authority to receive payment.

Documents executed abroad may need an apostille if executed in a country that is part of the Apostille Convention, or consular authentication if not. The Philippines became a party to the Apostille Convention in 2019, and the DFA provides requirements for apostille and authentication of documents. (Apostille Philippines)

Foreign creditors should also remember that collecting money is different from acquiring land. The 1987 Philippine Constitution restricts transfers of private land to persons or entities qualified to acquire land, subject to limited exceptions such as hereditary succession. This may matter if execution reaches real property, but it generally does not prevent a foreign creditor from enforcing a money judgment against reachable funds or proceeds. (Lawphil)

Required Documents, Fees, and Timelines

Common documents

Document Purpose
Compromise agreement Shows the debtor’s obligations and default terms
Order or decision approving the compromise Shows that the agreement became judicially enforceable
Entry of judgment or certificate of finality, if required Shows that execution may proceed
Motion for execution Asks the court to issue the writ
Computation of amount due Shows principal, interest, costs, and payments
Proof of default Establishes breach of the compromise
Writ of execution Authorizes the sheriff to enforce the judgment
Proposed notice of garnishment Helps the sheriff prepare the document
Garnishee details Allows proper service
Sheriff expense approval and deposit receipt Shows lawful handling of implementation expenses
SPA or corporate authority documents Needed if a representative acts for a party

Typical timeline

Actual timelines vary by court, location, workload, and whether the debtor opposes the motion.

Stage Typical practical timing
Preparing motion and documents A few days, depending on completeness of records
Court action on motion for execution Several days to several weeks
Issuance of writ after order Usually after the court grants execution and the clerk processes the writ
Sheriff coordination and service Depends on addresses, distance, and availability
Garnishee report Within five days from service under Rule 39
Delivery of garnished amount Follows the timing and procedure under Rule 39, including the ten-working-day period from the relevant notice requiring delivery
Entry of satisfaction After full or partial satisfaction is reported and recorded

Fees and expenses

Expect the following:

  • filing or legal fees, if assessed;
  • sheriff’s expenses, based on estimate and court approval;
  • copying, certification, and service costs;
  • possible bank charges or inter-branch processing delays;
  • authentication or apostille costs for documents executed abroad.

Sheriff expenses should be handled through the court process. The interested party generally deposits the approved amount with the clerk of court, and the sheriff liquidates it afterward. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Common Mistakes When Drafting or Using a Notice of Garnishment

Mistake 1: Treating a private compromise as if it were already a judgment

A notarized compromise agreement is strong evidence of a contract, but it is not automatically a writ of execution. If it was not approved by a court or proper tribunal, the creditor usually needs to file the proper enforcement action first.

Mistake 2: Garnishing more than the judgment allows

The writ and notice must follow the judgment. If the compromise reduced the obligation, the notice should not revive the original complaint amount unless the judgment or law allows it.

Mistake 3: Ignoring partial payments

Every partial payment should be credited. An inflated notice creates avoidable objections and may expose the creditor to delay, sanctions, or claims of improper enforcement.

Mistake 4: Garnishing unmatured installments

If the compromise requires monthly payments, only overdue amounts may be immediately demandable unless the agreement has a valid acceleration clause or the court order makes the full balance due upon default.

Mistake 5: Using vague garnishee information

A notice addressed only to “any bank where defendant has money” is usually not practical. Identify the bank, employer, company, tenant, or debtor of the judgment obligor as clearly as possible.

Mistake 6: Forgetting exempt property

Some wages, support, pensions, and benefits may be exempt. A broad notice that ignores exemptions invites objections and delay.

Mistake 7: Paying the sheriff directly without court approval

Execution expenses should follow the Rules and court-approved process. Direct informal payments are a common source of administrative problems.

Mistake 8: Failing to monitor the garnishee’s report

Service of the notice is only the beginning. The creditor should check whether the garnishee replied, what the reply says, and whether further court action is needed.

Mistake 9: Not recording satisfaction after payment

Once the judgment is paid, satisfaction should be acknowledged and entered in the court record. Rule 39 provides mechanisms for acknowledgment or entry of satisfaction. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Practical Drafting Tips

A strong notice of garnishment is usually:

  • specific — it identifies the writ, judgment, debtor, creditor, garnishee, and amount;
  • limited — it covers only the amount necessary to satisfy the judgment and lawful fees;
  • faithful to the writ — it does not add obligations not found in the judgment;
  • procedural — it directs the garnishee to report to the court, not negotiate privately;
  • properly served — it is served by the sheriff or proper officer;
  • supported by documents — it matches the motion, writ, computation, and proof of default.

For banks and corporate garnishees, the notice should be formal and complete because it will likely be reviewed by a legal or compliance department. For employers or smaller businesses, the notice should still be clear enough that the recipient understands what must be reported and what funds should not be released.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I garnish a bank account because the debtor violated our compromise agreement?

Yes, if the compromise agreement was approved by the court or proper tribunal, the debtor defaulted, and a writ of execution has been issued. A private creditor cannot simply send a personal letter to the bank and demand garnishment.

Who prepares the notice of garnishment?

In practice, the creditor or counsel may prepare a proposed notice, but the official notice is usually issued, signed, or served by the sheriff or proper implementing officer under the writ of execution.

What if the compromise agreement was notarized but not filed in court?

A notarized compromise agreement is generally a private contract. It may support a lawsuit or enforcement action, but it is not by itself the same as a court judgment. Direct garnishment usually requires a court judgment or order and a writ of execution.

How long does the bank or garnishee have to answer?

Under Rule 39, Section 9(c), the garnishee must submit a written report to the court within five days from service of the notice. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Can the notice of garnishment cover future installments?

Usually, it should cover only amounts already due. Future installments may be included only if the compromise agreement, judgment, or writ provides that the full balance becomes due upon default.

Can salary be garnished in the Philippines?

Yes, but not always in full. The Rules of Court and Civil Code protect certain wages or earnings, especially amounts necessary for family support and wages of laborers under specific circumstances. Salary garnishment must be handled carefully. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Can foreign currency deposits be garnished?

Foreign currency deposits are subject to special protection under the Foreign Currency Deposit Act, and courts treat them differently from ordinary peso deposits. A notice that attempts to reach foreign currency deposits should be drafted with special care and may face objections. (Supreme Court E-Library)

What if the garnishee says it does not hold any money for the debtor?

The creditor may ask the court for further appropriate proceedings, depending on the garnishee’s report and available evidence. Rule 39 allows examination of persons who may owe the debtor or hold property for the debtor, and further action may be authorized if the garnishee disputes liability or claims an adverse interest. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Is a demand letter required before filing a motion for execution?

Not always. If the compromise was court-approved and the debtor clearly defaulted, the creditor may move for execution according to the judgment and Rules. Still, a demand letter or written notice of default is often useful evidence, especially if the debtor may dispute the breach.

What happens after the garnished amount is paid?

The sheriff reports implementation, the amount is credited against the judgment, and full or partial satisfaction should be reflected in the court record. If the judgment is fully paid, satisfaction should be acknowledged or entered so the case record is clear. (Supreme Court of the Philippines)

Key Takeaways

  • A notice of garnishment based on a compromise agreement usually requires a court-approved compromise, default, and a writ of execution.
  • A private compromise agreement, even if notarized, is not normally enough for direct bank or salary garnishment.
  • The notice must follow the judgment and writ exactly; it should not claim more than what is due.
  • Rule 39 allows garnishment of debts, credits, bank deposits, financial interests, royalties, commissions, and similar property in the hands of third parties.
  • The garnishee must report to the court within five days from service of the notice.
  • Salaries, support, pensions, and certain benefits may be exempt or partly exempt from execution.
  • Foreign currency deposits require special caution because of statutory protections and case law.
  • Sheriff expenses should be court-approved and deposited through the clerk of court, not handled informally.
  • For small claims, barangay settlements, and labor cases, use the specific enforcement procedure for that forum.
  • The safest draft is specific, limited, accurate, and faithful to the compromise agreement, court order, and writ of execution.

Disclaimer: This content is not legal advice and may involve AI assistance. Information may be inaccurate.