How to enforce the joint ownership of property between the debtor and non parties involved in the case?
Question raising
After the civil dispute between Company A and Party B was resolved by an arbitration institution, Company A applied to the People's Court (hereinafter referred to as the "Enforcement Court") for enforcement due to Party B's failure to comply with the arbitration award. After the execution court filed the case, the jointly owned property of Party B and his spouse Party C was lawfully sealed. But the executing court believes that the property is jointly owned by Mr. and Mrs. B and cannot be directly auctioned off. Therefore, Company A filed a creditor's subrogation lawsuit for property division. It took more than two years to finally enter the auction process.
Lawyer Interpretation
In judicial practice, it is common to encounter situations where the person being executed and an outsider jointly own property, with the situation of jointly owning property with spouse, parents, and children being particularly common. In order to evade debt, the debtor will not divide or sell the jointly owned property for debt repayment. On the contrary, they will also jointly raise objections to the execution with the co owners on the grounds that the jointly owned property is the only residential property of the family or the debtor only has a small share. In this case, if the applicant for enforcement wants to execute the property jointly owned by the executed person and an outsider, they need to take two proactive actions.
The first step is to file a creditor's subrogation lawsuit with the people's court. According to Article 12 of the "Provisions of the Supreme People's Court on the Seizure, Seizure, and Freezing of Property in Civil Enforcement by People's Courts (Revised in 2020)", the applicant for enforcement has the right to file a creditor's subrogation lawsuit in accordance with the law, request the court to make a judgment to divide the jointly owned property between the debtor and the third party in accordance with the law, and confirm the share enjoyed by the debtor.