Debtors (Ireland) Act 1872

JurisdictionIreland
Citation1872 c. 57


Debtors Act (Ireland), 1872

(35 & 36 Vict.) CHAPTER 57.

An Act for the Abolition of Imprisonment for Debt in Ireland, and for the Punishment of fraudulent Debtors, and for other purposes relating thereto.

[6th August 1872]

Be it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:

Preliminary.

Preliminary.

S-1 Short title.

1 Short title.

1. This Act may be cited for all purposes as ‘TheDebtors Act (Ireland), 1872.’

S-2 Extent of Act.

2 Extent of Act.

2. This Act shall not extend to England or Scotland.

S-3 Commencement of Act.

3 Commencement of Act.

3. This Act shall not come into operation until the day on which the Bankruptcy (Ireland) Amendment Act, 1872, comes into operation, which day is herein-after referred to as the commencement of this Act.

S-4 Interpretation of terms.

4 Interpretation of terms.

4. In this Act, if not inconsistent with the context, the following terms shall have the meanings herein-after respectively assigned to them; that is to say,

‘Debt contracted after the passing of this Act’ shall mean any sum of money due or payable under or in respect of any contract or obligation made or entered into or liability incurred, or cause of action or suit arisen after the passing of this Act:

‘Debt contracted before the passing of this Act’ shall mean any sum of money due or payable under or in respect of any contract or obligation made or entered into, or liability incurred, or cause of action or suit arisen before the passing of this Act:

And words and expressions defined or explained in the Bankruptcy (Ireland) Amendment Act, 1872, shall have the same meaning in this Act.

I

Part I.

Abolition of Imprisonment for future Debts.

Abolition of Imprisonment for future Debts.

S-5 Abolition of imprisonment for debt, with exceptions.

5 Abolition of imprisonment for debt, with exceptions.

5. With the exceptions herein-after mentioned, no person shall after the commencement of this Act be arrested or imprisoned for making default in payment of a debt contracted after the passing of this Act.

There shall be excepted from the operation of the above enactment:

(1) 1. Default in payment of a penalty, or sum in the nature of a penalty, other than a penalty in respect of any contract:

(2) 2. Default in payment of any sum recoverable summarily before a justice or justices of the peace:

(3) 3. Default by a trustee or person acting in a fiduciary capacity and ordered to pay by a court of equity any sum in his possession or under his control:

(4) 4. Default by an attorney or solicitor in payment of costs when ordered to pay costs for misconduct as such, or in payment of a sum of money when ordered to pay the same in his character of an officer of the court making the order:

(5) 5. Default in payment for the benefit of creditors of any portion of a salary or other income in respect of the payment of which any court having jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency is authorised to make an order:

(6) 6. Default in payment of sums in respect of the payment of which orders are in this Act authorised to be made:

Provided, first, that no person shall be imprisoned in any case excepted from the operation of this section for a longer period than one year; and, secondly, that nothing in this section shall alter the effect of any judgment or order of any court for payment of money except as regards the arrest and imprisonment of the person making default in paying such money.

S-6 Saving of power of committal for small debts.

6 Saving of power of committal for small debts.

6. Subject to the provisions herein-after mentioned and to the prescribed rules, any court may commit to prison for a term not exceeding six weeks, or until payment of the sum due, any person who makes default in payment of any debt or instalment of any debt due from him in pursuance of any order or judgment of that or any other competent court, made or recovered after the passing of this Act in respect of a debt contracted after the passing of this Act.

(1) Provided—(1.) That the jurisdiction by this section given of committing a person to prison shall, in the case of any court other than the superior courts of law and equity, be exercised only subject to the following restrictions; that is to say,

(a. ) Be exercised only by a judge, and by an order made in open court, and showing on its face the ground on which it is issued:

(b. ) Be exercised only as respects a judgment of a superior court of law or equity when such judgment does not exceed fifty pounds exclusive of costs:

(c. ) Be exercised only as respects a decree of a civil bill court by a chairman of quarter sessions or recorder.

(2) (2.) That such jurisdiction shall only be exercised where it is proved to the satisfaction of the court that the person making default either has or has had since the date of the order or judgment the means to pay the sum in respect of which he has made default, and has refused or neglected, or refuses or neglects, to pay the same.

Proof of the means of the person making default may be given in such manner as the court thinks just; and for the purposes of such proof the debtor and any witnesses may be summoned and examined on oath, according to the prescribed rules.

Any jurisdiction by this section given to the superior courts may be exercised by a judge sitting in chambers, or otherwise, in the prescribed manner.

For the purposes of this section any court may direct any debt due from any person in pursuance of any order or judgment of that or any other competent court to be paid by instalments, and may from time to time rescind or vary such order.

Persons committed under this section by a superior court may be committed to the prison in which they would have been confined if arrested on a writ of capias ad satisfaciendum, and every order of committal by any superior court shall, subject to the prescribed rules, be issued, obeyed, and executed in the like manner as such writ.

This section, so far as it relates to any civil bill court, shall be deemed to be substituted for sections one hundred and sixteen and one hundred and seventeen of an Act of the session of the fourteenth and fifteenth years of the reign of Her present Majesty, chapter fifty-seven, and that Act and the Acts amending the same shall be construed accordingly, and shall extend to orders made by the chairman of quarter sessions with respect to sums due in pursuance of any order or judgment of any court other than a civil bill court.

No imprisonment under this section shall operate as a satisfaction or extinguishment of any debt or demand or cause of action, or deprive any person of any right to take out execution against the lands, goods, or chattels of the person imprisoned, in the same manner as if such imprisonment had not taken place.

Any person imprisoned under this section shall be discharged out of custody upon a certificate, signed in the prescribed manner, to the effect that he has satisfied the debt or instalment of a debt in respect of which he was imprisoned, together with the prescribed costs (if any).

After the commencement of this Act section one of an Act of the session of the eleventh and twelfth years of the reign of Her present Majesty, chapter twenty-eight, shall, so far as regards debts contracted after the passing of this Act, be and the same is hereby repealed.

S-7 Abolition of arrest.

7 Abolition of arrest.

7. After the commencement of this Act a person shall not be arrested upon mesne process in any action brought for the recovery of a debt contracted after the passing of this Act.

Where the plaintiff in any action in any of Her Majesty's superior courts of law at Dublin, in which if brought before the commencement of this Act the defendant would have been liable to arrest, proves at any time before final judgment by evidence on oath, to the satisfaction of a judge of one of those courts, that the plaintiff has good cause of action against the defendant to the amount of twenty pounds or upwards, or has sustained damage to that amount, and that there is probable cause for believing that the defendant is about to quit Ireland unless he be apprehended, and that the absence of the defendant from Ireland will materially prejudice the plaintiff in the prosecution of his action, such judge may in the prescribed manner order such defendant to be arrested and imprisoned for a period not exceeding six months, unless and until he has sooner given the prescribed security, not exceeding the amount claimed in the action, that he will not go out of Ireland without the leave of the court.

Where the action is for a penalty or sum in the nature of a penalty, other than a penalty in respect of any contract, it shall not be necessary to prove that the absence of the defendant from Ireland will materially prejudice the plaintiff in the prosecution of his action, and the security given (instead of being that the defendant will not go out of Ireland) shall be to the effect that any sum recovered against the defendant in the action shall be paid or that the defendant shall be rendered to prison.

S-8 Saving for sequestration against property.

8 Saving for sequestration against property.

8. Sequestration against the property of a debtor who is not liable to be arrested or imprisoned after the commencement of this Act may, after the commencement of this Act, be issued by any court of equity in the same manner as if such debtor had been actually arrested.

S-9 Saving for 20 & 21 Vict. c. 60. and 35 & 36 Vict. c. 58.

9 Saving for 20 & 21 Vict. c. 60. and 35 & 36 Vict. c. 58.

9. Nothing in this part of this Act shall in any way affect any right or power, under the Irish Bankrupt and Insolvent...

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