Difference between revisions of "Being Sued in Small Claims Court"

From Clicklaw Wikibooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(13 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Dial-A-Law Blurb}}
{{REVIEWEDPLS | reviewer = [https://www.ganapathico.com/our-team/anna-kurt/ Anna Kurt], Ganapathi Law Group|date= August 2017}} {{Dial-A-Law TOC|expanded = courts}}
If a notice of claim names you as a defendant in a Small Claims Court lawsuit, learn what options you have, how to act on them, and what happens next.


{{Dial-A-Law TOC|expanded = smallclaims}}
==What you should know==
I will discuss being sued in Small Claims Court.


==Don’t ignore a Notice of Claim==
===If you receive a notice of claim===
If you receive a Notice of Claim from Small Claims Court showing you as a “defendant,” this means that some other person, called the “claimant,” is suing you.
If you receive a '''notice of claim''' in a Small Claims Court lawsuit naming you as a defendant, it means someone is suing you.


A Notice of Claim may be handed to you personally by the claimant or any adult person, or it can be sent to you by registered mail. If you’re difficult to locate, the court may order that you be notified through an ad in the newspaper or a notice posted to the front door of yor home address. Whatever the case, you cannot avoid the lawsuit simply by ignoring the Notice of Claim. You must respond to it – within 14 days of receiving the Notice of Claim if you live in BC, or within 30 days if you live outside of BC.
A notice of claim may be handed to you personally by the party suing you or by another person, or it can be sent to you by registered mail. If you’re hard to find, the court may order that you be notified in some other way, such as by a notice posted on your front door or an ad in the local newspaper.


==How do you reply?==
Once you receive the notice, '''don’t ignore it'''. If you do nothing, the other party can get a judgment against you, just as if there had been a trial.
There are several ways to respond to a Notice of Claim, but the main ones are:


#you agree you owe the claim
You must respond to the notice of claim ''within 14 days''. (If you live outside BC, you have 30 days to respond.) You can respond by filing a '''reply''' with the court. We explain how shortly. Or you can contact the other party to make arrangements you can both live with and the other party can withdraw the claim.
#you admit you owe the claim, but don’t have enough money to pay it off
#you deny responsibility for all or part of the claim
You may want to get legal advice before you make any admissions.


==What should you do if you agree you owe the claim?==
===If you admit the claim and intend to pay===
If you agree you owe the amount claimed in the Notice of Claim, you can contact the claimant directly and offer to pay the claim. You must also pay the claimant’s expenses, such as the fees to “file” or enter the claim in the court records and to deliver the documents to you. You should get a receipt and have the claimant sign a form called a Notice of Withdrawal, which you can obtain from the Small Claims Court registry. You should then take this form to the registry to discontinue the court action against you.
If you '''admit''' the claim, you can contact the other party directly and tell them. You can pay the amount claimed directly to them.


Alternatively, you and the claimant might reach some other satisfactory agreement, in which case you can both sign a Consent Order and file it with the Small Claims Court registry. Or the claimant may file a Payment Order with the registry. If you follow the Consent Order or Payment Order, that also ends the lawsuit.
Alternatively, you and the other party might make some arrangements you can both live with. For example, they may agree to accept a reduced amount, or a payment plan. If so, the other party can file a '''consent order''' or a '''payment order''' with the court, and the lawsuit will end. (You must also pay their expenses, such as the fees to file the claim and deliver the notice to you.)


==What should you do if you admit the claim, but don’t have enough money to pay it off?==
===If you admit the claim, but can’t pay it===
Then you should fill out the Reply form attached to the Notice of Claim you received. If you didn’t get a blank Reply form with the Notice of Claim, you can go to any Small Claims Court registry to pick one up, or you can download the form from the Ministry of Attorney General’s website (web address provided at the end of this script). In the space provided, list the amounts you plan to pay and the dates you can make those payments.
If you admit the claim, but can’t pay the amount involved, you should file a '''reply''' to the claim. A blank reply form should have been attached to the notice of claim. If you didn’t get a blank reply form with the notice, you can get it online at [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/documents-forms-records/court-forms/small-claims-forms gov.bc.ca/smallclaims] or from any [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/courthouse-locations Small Claims Court registry]. On the reply, list the amounts you can pay and when you will pay.


Then file your Reply with the Small Claims Court registry shown on the Notice of Claim. The registry will send a copy to the claimant, who’ll decide whether to accept your proposed payment plan.
Then, '''file your reply''' with the Small Claims Court registry shown on the notice of claim. You must pay a filing fee.


If the claimant accepts, you’ll receive a Consent Order to sign, which will end the lawsuit. If the claimant doesn’t accept, you can ask for a payment hearing, or the claimant may summons you to a payment hearing, so the court can set a Payment Schedule.
The registry will send a copy of your reply to the other party. They will decide whether to accept your proposed payment plan.


==What should you do if you deny all or part of the claim?==
If the other party accepts your reply, you will receive a '''consent order''' to sign. It will end the lawsuit. If the other party doesn’t accept, you (or they) can ask for a '''payment hearing''', where the court will set a payment schedule.
If you admit the claim, but disagree with part of what is claimed, indicate what you disagree with on the Reply form, and again go to the Small Claims Court registry to file your Reply. In this case, you’ll have to pay a filing fee for the Reply.


If you deny the whole claim, again, complete a Reply, this time indicating why you deny it. You don’t need to tell everything about your case, as you’ll get a chance to present your case later, but you must list all your reasons.
{| class="wikitable"
|align="left"|'''Tip'''
You must file the reply ''within 14 days'' of receiving the notice of claim. (If you live outside BC, you have 30 days to file the reply.)
|}


==What’s the risk if you dispute the claim and lose?==
===If you deny the claim, or part of it===
You’ll have to pay the amount of the judgment plus the claimant’s fees and costs for getting the court documents to you. The judge can also order you to pay an additional 10% of the amount claimed if you file a Reply and go to trial when you had no reasonable chance of success. Also, if you refuse to resolve or "settle" the claim (for an amount offered by the claimant) and the trial judgement is more than or equal to the claimant's offer, you may have to pay a penalty of up to 20% of the amount of the offer.
If you disagree with part of the claim, fill out the '''reply''' form. You can get it online at [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/documents-forms-records/court-forms/small-claims-forms gov.bc.ca/smallclaims] if the notice of claim didn’t have a blank reply form attached. Explain on the reply form what parts of the claim you disagree with and what parts you agree with. File the reply with the [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/courthouse-locations Small Claims Court registry]. You must pay a filing fee.


==How long do you have to file a Reply?==
If you deny the whole claim, fill out the '''reply''' form. List the reasons why you deny the claim. You do not need to describe everything in detail, as you’ll get a chance to present your case later. Evidence is not submitted at this stage, and the reply should be brief, factual and specific. File the reply with the [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/courthouse-locations Small Claims Court registry], together with the filing fee.
If you live in BC, you have 14 days after you receive the Notice of Claim. If you live outside BC, you have 30 days.


==What if you ignore a claim or don’t file a Reply in time?==
===If you ignore the claim===  
It’s very important to file a Reply – and to file it in time. If you don’t, the claimant can get a Default Order against you without you having the opportunity to dispute their claim.
If you receive a notice of claim and do nothing, the other party can get a judgment against you, just as if there had been a trial. This is called a '''default order'''.


==There are also other ways to respond to a claim==
After the time for you to reply has passed (14 days if you live in BC), the other party can apply to court for the default order. If their claim is for a debt, a default order may be made without a hearing. If the claim is not for a debt, the court will schedule a '''default hearing''', where a judge decides the amount you will have to pay.
For example, you may think that the claimant shouldn’t be suing you, but that you should be suing the claimant. In this case, you can file a Counterclaim, and the judge would later decide who was at fault.


Or you may admit that you owe money, but believe the claimant also owes you money for some other reason. In this case, you can file a Counterclaim claiming a “set-off.” You’d be setting off the money you owe against the money owed to you.
===If you dispute the claim and lose===
If the case goes to trial and you lose, you will have to pay the amount of the judgment, plus the other party’s fees and costs for getting the court documents to you.


Or you may think another person should pay all or part of the claim against you, in which case you’d file a Third Party Notice.
The judge can also order you to pay an additional 10% of the amount claimed if you file a reply and go to trial when you had no reasonable chance of winning. Also, if the other party makes a '''settlement offer''' that you refuse, and the trial judgment is more than or equal to their offer, you may have to pay a penalty of up to 20% of the offer.


All of these options require you to pay an additional filing fee.
===If you have a claim of your own===
If you have your own claim against the other party relating to the matters in dispute, you can file a counterclaim. There is space on the reply form for you to describe your '''counterclaim'''. If your case goes to trial, the judge will decide on both the original claim and your counterclaim.


==What happens if the lawsuit proceeds?==
If you admit the claim, but believe the other party also owes you money for some other reason, you can file a counterclaim claiming a '''set-off'''. A set-off involves using the money the other party owes you to reduce the amount you owe them.
After you’ve filed your Reply (and maybe a Counterclaim or Third Party Notice), the registry will send a copy to the claimant.


For most disputed claims, a “settlement conference” will be scheduled. The registry will notify you of the date and time for this meeting, which is attended by the claimant, the judge and you. The purpose of the settlement conference is to try and resolve some or all of the issues between you and the claimant before going to trial. If the claim can’t be resolved, there will be a trial.
Each of these options require you to pay another filing fee.


You may also receive notification regarding a court “mediation” for the dispute, where a neutral mediator will attempt to resolve the dispute.
===If you think another party is responsible===
You may think another person should pay all or part of the claim against you. If so, you can file a '''third party notice''' to bring that other person into the lawsuit. You can get the third party notice form online at [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/documents-forms-records/court-forms/small-claims-forms gov.bc.ca/smallclaims] or from any [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/courthouse-locations Small Claims Court registry].


You must attend the settlement conference or mediation, or you risk having a payment order made against you for the full amount of the claim. If you cannot attend, you must notify the scheduler immediately and seek an adjournment or postponement of the scheduled date.
==What happens next==


==The most important thing to remember is that you must respond==
===If you admit the claim===
If you get a Notice of Claim, you must file a Reply within 14 days (if you live in BC).
If you pay the amount claimed to the other party, you should get a receipt. The other party can end the lawsuit by filing a '''notice of withdrawal'''.


==Where can you get help or more information?==
Alternatively, if you and the other party make arrangements you can both live with (such as you paying a reduced amount or a payment plan), the other party may file a '''consent order''' or a '''payment order'''. You will get a copy of the order, which ends the lawsuit.
*Talk to the Small Claims Court staff, or read over one of the Small Claims Court booklets available at the registry, at your local public library and on the Attorney General’s website at [http://www.ag.gov.bc.ca/courts/small_claims/ www.ag.gov.bc.ca/courts/small_claims/].
*Also refer to the other Dial-A-Law scripts in this Small Claims Court series.


(These forms are available online at [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/documents-forms-records/court-forms/small-claims-forms gov.bc.ca/smallclaims].)


[updated March 2013]
===If you file a reply===
If you file a reply, the court registry will send a copy of it to the other party. If you file a third party notice, the registry will send it to the third party you added.


For most claims, the court will schedule a '''settlement conference'''. The registry will tell you the date and time for the conference. You must attend. The judge will give their opinion of the case during the conference. If the claim cannot be settled, it will go to '''trial'''.


----
You can try to resolve the claim any time before trial. If the claim is over $10,000, you or the other party can file a '''notice to mediate''', which will result in a '''mediation session'''. There, a neutral mediator will try to help you both come to an agreement on the issues. See our information on [[Going to Trial in Small Claims Court|going to trial in Small Claims Court]] for more on this option, as well as what happens at trial.
----


{| class="wikitable"
|align="left"|'''Tip'''
You must attend the settlement conference and any mediation session that is set. Otherwise, a '''payment order''' may be made against you for the amount claimed. If you cannot attend, notify the court immediately and seek an adjournment or postponement of the scheduled date.
|}


==Who can help==
===With your case===
You do not need a lawyer to go to Small Claims Court. But you'll probably better understand the process, as well as the strength of your case, if you get '''legal advice'''. If you have limited means, you might be able to get legal help from pro bono services, a student legal clinic, or an advocate. See our information on [[Free and Low-Cost Legal Help|free and low-cost legal help]].
===More information===
The '''BC government''' website has how-to guides on Small Claims Court, including [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/small-claims/how-to-guides/replying-to-a-claim replying to a claim], serving documents, and getting ready for court.
* [https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/justice/courthouse-services/small-claims/how-to-guides Visit website]
The BC government’s '''Small Claims Court Filing Assistant''' walks you through the steps of completing court forms.
* [http://justice.gov.bc.ca/FilingAssistant/ Visit website]
The '''BC Provincial Court''' website features information on Small Claims Court, as well as past court decisions.
* [http://www.provincialcourt.bc.ca/ Visit website]
The '''Small Claims BC Online Help Guide''', from Justice Education Society, provides step-by-step information on each stage of a small claims case.
* [http://www.smallclaimsbc.ca/ Visit website]
{{Dial-A-Law_Navbox|type=courts}}
{{Dial-A-Law Copyright}}
{{Dial-A-Law Copyright}}
{{Dial-A-Law_Navbox|type=small}}

Latest revision as of 02:27, 5 November 2020

This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Anna Kurt, Ganapathi Law Group in August 2017.

If a notice of claim names you as a defendant in a Small Claims Court lawsuit, learn what options you have, how to act on them, and what happens next.

What you should know

If you receive a notice of claim

If you receive a notice of claim in a Small Claims Court lawsuit naming you as a defendant, it means someone is suing you.

A notice of claim may be handed to you personally by the party suing you or by another person, or it can be sent to you by registered mail. If you’re hard to find, the court may order that you be notified in some other way, such as by a notice posted on your front door or an ad in the local newspaper.

Once you receive the notice, don’t ignore it. If you do nothing, the other party can get a judgment against you, just as if there had been a trial.

You must respond to the notice of claim within 14 days. (If you live outside BC, you have 30 days to respond.) You can respond by filing a reply with the court. We explain how shortly. Or you can contact the other party to make arrangements you can both live with and the other party can withdraw the claim.

If you admit the claim and intend to pay

If you admit the claim, you can contact the other party directly and tell them. You can pay the amount claimed directly to them.

Alternatively, you and the other party might make some arrangements you can both live with. For example, they may agree to accept a reduced amount, or a payment plan. If so, the other party can file a consent order or a payment order with the court, and the lawsuit will end. (You must also pay their expenses, such as the fees to file the claim and deliver the notice to you.)

If you admit the claim, but can’t pay it

If you admit the claim, but can’t pay the amount involved, you should file a reply to the claim. A blank reply form should have been attached to the notice of claim. If you didn’t get a blank reply form with the notice, you can get it online at gov.bc.ca/smallclaims or from any Small Claims Court registry. On the reply, list the amounts you can pay and when you will pay.

Then, file your reply with the Small Claims Court registry shown on the notice of claim. You must pay a filing fee.

The registry will send a copy of your reply to the other party. They will decide whether to accept your proposed payment plan.

If the other party accepts your reply, you will receive a consent order to sign. It will end the lawsuit. If the other party doesn’t accept, you (or they) can ask for a payment hearing, where the court will set a payment schedule.

Tip

You must file the reply within 14 days of receiving the notice of claim. (If you live outside BC, you have 30 days to file the reply.)

If you deny the claim, or part of it

If you disagree with part of the claim, fill out the reply form. You can get it online at gov.bc.ca/smallclaims if the notice of claim didn’t have a blank reply form attached. Explain on the reply form what parts of the claim you disagree with and what parts you agree with. File the reply with the Small Claims Court registry. You must pay a filing fee.

If you deny the whole claim, fill out the reply form. List the reasons why you deny the claim. You do not need to describe everything in detail, as you’ll get a chance to present your case later. Evidence is not submitted at this stage, and the reply should be brief, factual and specific. File the reply with the Small Claims Court registry, together with the filing fee.

If you ignore the claim

If you receive a notice of claim and do nothing, the other party can get a judgment against you, just as if there had been a trial. This is called a default order.

After the time for you to reply has passed (14 days if you live in BC), the other party can apply to court for the default order. If their claim is for a debt, a default order may be made without a hearing. If the claim is not for a debt, the court will schedule a default hearing, where a judge decides the amount you will have to pay.

If you dispute the claim and lose

If the case goes to trial and you lose, you will have to pay the amount of the judgment, plus the other party’s fees and costs for getting the court documents to you.

The judge can also order you to pay an additional 10% of the amount claimed if you file a reply and go to trial when you had no reasonable chance of winning. Also, if the other party makes a settlement offer that you refuse, and the trial judgment is more than or equal to their offer, you may have to pay a penalty of up to 20% of the offer.

If you have a claim of your own

If you have your own claim against the other party relating to the matters in dispute, you can file a counterclaim. There is space on the reply form for you to describe your counterclaim. If your case goes to trial, the judge will decide on both the original claim and your counterclaim.

If you admit the claim, but believe the other party also owes you money for some other reason, you can file a counterclaim claiming a set-off. A set-off involves using the money the other party owes you to reduce the amount you owe them.

Each of these options require you to pay another filing fee.

If you think another party is responsible

You may think another person should pay all or part of the claim against you. If so, you can file a third party notice to bring that other person into the lawsuit. You can get the third party notice form online at gov.bc.ca/smallclaims or from any Small Claims Court registry.

What happens next

If you admit the claim

If you pay the amount claimed to the other party, you should get a receipt. The other party can end the lawsuit by filing a notice of withdrawal.

Alternatively, if you and the other party make arrangements you can both live with (such as you paying a reduced amount or a payment plan), the other party may file a consent order or a payment order. You will get a copy of the order, which ends the lawsuit.

(These forms are available online at gov.bc.ca/smallclaims.)

If you file a reply

If you file a reply, the court registry will send a copy of it to the other party. If you file a third party notice, the registry will send it to the third party you added.

For most claims, the court will schedule a settlement conference. The registry will tell you the date and time for the conference. You must attend. The judge will give their opinion of the case during the conference. If the claim cannot be settled, it will go to trial.

You can try to resolve the claim any time before trial. If the claim is over $10,000, you or the other party can file a notice to mediate, which will result in a mediation session. There, a neutral mediator will try to help you both come to an agreement on the issues. See our information on going to trial in Small Claims Court for more on this option, as well as what happens at trial.

Tip

You must attend the settlement conference and any mediation session that is set. Otherwise, a payment order may be made against you for the amount claimed. If you cannot attend, notify the court immediately and seek an adjournment or postponement of the scheduled date.

Who can help

With your case

You do not need a lawyer to go to Small Claims Court. But you'll probably better understand the process, as well as the strength of your case, if you get legal advice. If you have limited means, you might be able to get legal help from pro bono services, a student legal clinic, or an advocate. See our information on free and low-cost legal help.

More information

The BC government website has how-to guides on Small Claims Court, including replying to a claim, serving documents, and getting ready for court.

The BC government’s Small Claims Court Filing Assistant walks you through the steps of completing court forms.

The BC Provincial Court website features information on Small Claims Court, as well as past court decisions.

The Small Claims BC Online Help Guide, from Justice Education Society, provides step-by-step information on each stage of a small claims case.

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence Dial-A-Law © People's Law School is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence.