Composition orders
A district judge can order that a client pay only a proportion of their debts. This is known as a ‘composition order’. This should be considered if the debts cannot be cleared in a reasonable time (see above for what this means). Note: an application for a composition order can only be decided by a district judge and cannot be rejected without a hearing.
You should help the client work out the monthly amount available to offer creditors. If this amount will not clear the debts plus the 10 per cent charge made by the court in three years, suggest that a composition order be made in the box in section C of Form N92.
The percentage of each debt offered is calculated by establishing the total time available for payments (ie, 36 – the number of months in three years) multiplied by the monthly payment offered, deducting 10 per cent from this total, and then dividing the resulting figure by the total of the debts owed, and finally showing this as a percentage.
Example
Sean has £75 a month available income and owes a total of £4,500. A suggested composition would be to offer:
36 x £75 = £2,700 total amount to be paid
Less 10% administration (£270) = £2,430
2,430 ÷ 4,500 = 0.54 (the proportion to be paid)
0.54 = 54% (the percentage to be paid)
In this case, the following wording can be inserted in the box: ‘I ask that the court consider making a composition order at the rate of 54 pence in the pound.’ The client should also use this box to explain their reasons for not wanting an attachment of earnings order, where applicable.
In many cases, the actual order is not opposed, but a composition may be. However, provided you are prepared with facts and figures to justify the financial necessity of what you argue, such orders are increasingly acceptable to the courts.