How many of us have been faced with a recalcitrant defendant who, despite numerous judgments pronouncing guilt, refuses to pay the fine? What is a City to do? Unfortunately, despite many remedies at our fingertips, the choices require the expenditure of time and money, some nominal, some excessive. The purpose of this article is to provide one low-cost, effective, civil alternative to capias pro fine warrants, to assist with the collection of municipal court judgments - abstracting judgments.
Article 45.047 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure expressly provides that a “justice or judge may order the fine and costs collected by execution against the defendant’s property in the same manner as a judgment in a civil suit.” An abstract of judgment is a time-honored civil remedy that places a judgment lien on the defendant’s real property in any county where the abstract is properly recorded. Chapter 52.001, et seq., of the Texas Property Code governs the issuance and application of abstracting judgments. The purpose of abstracting a judgment is two-fold: 1) to create a statutory lien on property where none previously existed; and 2) to give notice of a pre-existing judgment lien on property. Since the judgment lien is purely statutory in nature, the provisions of the Texas Property Code must be strictly complied with before the lien is established.
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