An interim measure such as an “interim injunction” can be used as a provisional measure to secure the monetary claim.
- Purpose of the interim injunction
An interim injunction is a summary court proceeding designed to secure claims before the court renders a final decision. It is a matter of securing a possible enforcement of a court judgment.
The purpose of the interim injunction is to protect the applicant (the endangered party) against a change in the debtor’s current situation, which would be associated with imminent and irretrievable damage for the former.
- Application for an injunction by the party at risk
Interim injunctions can be ordered even before a lawsuit is pending. If an interim injunction was applied for prior to the commencement of litigation, the lawsuit must be filed and the proceeding initiated thereafter because, otherwise, the prerequisites for the preliminary injunction cease to apply.
- Requirements for the issuance of an interim injunction for monetary claims
Application for issuance of a temporary injunction
For the issuance of an injunction, it is sufficient for the creditor to merely assert and certify his claim, which must be money.
- Danger of non-recoverability of the claim
In addition, the creditor must claim that there is a danger that his claim may not be collected due to the opponent's behaviours endangering the future execution.
This means that it must be probable that, without the issuance of an injunction, the debtor will make it considerably more difficult for the endangered party to collect the debt (e.g., by damaging, destroying, or concealing assets). These circumstances must be concretely asserted and certified.
The risk of not recovering the credit must depend on the debtor’s conduct. For example, the opponent may say he will move his residence to a country outside of Europe, taking his assets with him.
- Binding to the main claim
Only the monetary claim that is or should be the subject of the lawsuit can be secured. The preliminary injunction is bound to the main claim (the claim at issue in the lawsuit). The endangered party may not be granted any measures to which it would not be entitled, even if the main claim were enforced.
Measures (means of security)
The following may be considered as measures to secure the claim:
- safekeeping and administration of the debtor's property or deposit of money
- prohibition of sale of the debtor's property
- prohibition of third parties (if the opposing party has a claim against another person, the latter shall be prohibited from collecting the claim)
- administration of real estate
- prohibition of alienation and encumbrance of real estate