Calculation Of Judgment Interest
I am not an attorney, I am a Judgment Broker. If one enforces, collects, or is paid on a judgment in one lump sum, and there are no recoverable enforcement expenses, the total sum owed (including interest) is easy to determine.
In the case of California, having a simple non-compounded 10% interest rate, the amount owed is what the original judgment listed, plus 10% interest per year (and is adjusted for payments and costs).
In California, the daily interest owed is approximately the (principal judgment amount and the costs - payments) divided by 3,650. (The 3,650 is 365 days times 10% interest.) For example, a judgment for $10,000.00 gets about $2.734 interest earned per day. Judgment interest is not compounded, except for each time you renew a judgment.
When the debtor makes irregular payments and/or you have substantial recoverable costs, for example, the cost of getting a writ, paying the sheriff, paying a process server, and/or performing debtor-related exams and document productions, it's not so simple to determine the precise amount owed.
If you are expecting to get paid in full, you must make sure not to collect more than is owed. You can figure out what is due by reading laws, doing your research, and carefully tallying what is owed.
If you are recovering more than a few judgments, it's a good idea to buy a software program. One good choice is Tvalue from www.TimeValue.com. Tvalue is a general amortization schedule/calculator program, that can be configured to calculate judgment interest. Another specific good choice, is the Excel spreadsheet product available from www.JudgmentProgram.com. In California, costs become part of the judgment (statutorily) after both a memorandum of costs has been filed, and the time limit for objection (by the debtor) has passed. In California, you must claim costs within 2 years of incurring them.
Unlike interest, costs are added to the judgment. Once costs are added, they increase the interest accrual rate that is itemized on writs. You must truncate interest rates, not round them up. (0.7039 becomes 0.703.) In California, the time limit for the debtor to object to your memorandum of costs, which must be served on the debtor (by first class mail is ok) are 10 days if personally served, and fifteen days if you have the debtor served by first class mail. You must fill out page 2 of the memorandum of costs, and have someone else sign and date it, and deposit the sealed and stamped envelope addressed to the debtor, in the mailbox.
Take for example, a judgment of $1,000 awarded two years ago. The judgment earned $100 a year - 10% of $1,000. As example, you spent $300 on process servers, lien recording fees, court fees, levy fees, and writs, during that time period.
If you file and serves a memorandum of costs for the judgment, then fifteen days later, the debtor will owe $1,000 for the base judgment, $200 interest for two years, and $300 for costs.
The debtor now owes $1,500 - but of that amount, only $1,300 will earn 10% interest, so interest now accrues in this example, at $130 per year - starting fifteen days after the memorandum of costs was served. Payments must be applied to the interest first. After this, the payment is added to the principal owed. When one uses a sheriff to garnish the debtor's assets, the sheriff is paid first. When a sheriff recovers money from a debtor with a court writ, payments are applied as follow: First to the Sheriff, Second to cover the cost of getting a writ, Third to earned interest, Lastly to the principal amount of the judgment including previous court-approved costs. Here is the California Code Civil Procedure section 685.050, showing how amounts collected by the levying officer, are applied to the satisfaction of the judgment, when a writ of execution has been issued:
685.050. (a) If a writ is issued pursuant to this title to enforce a judgment, the costs and interest to be satisfied in a levy under the writ are the following:
(1) The statutory fee for issuance of the writ.
(2) The amount of interest that has accrued from the date of entry or renewal of the judgment to the date of issuance of the writ, as adjusted for partial satisfactions, if the judgment creditor has filed an affidavit with the court clerk stating such amount.
(3) The amount of interest that accrues on the principal amount of the judgment remaining unsatisfied from the date of issuance of the writ until the date interest ceases to accrue.
(4) The levying officer's statutory costs for performing the duties under the writ.
Interestingly, the California judicial council forms for memorandum of costs and writs, can lead to occasionally (and wrongly) showing negative amounts owed, when multiple writs are obtained after a levy has previously been performed. This happens mostly because the people who designed these forms wanted to make very sure interest could never be compounded.
A solution is to make sure you understand how to calculate judgment interest, and that your memorandum of costs is filled out carefully and correctly, so that the writ will not have a negative number.
About the Author
Mark D. Shapiro - Judgment Broker, http://www.JudgmentBuy.com - where Judgments go to get enforced. JudgmentBuy has the best judgment recovery system, best judgment FAQ and best judgment leads.
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