Consequences of attachment order

6 Effect and contents of order.

1

An attachment of earnings order shall be an order directed to a person who appears to the court F1, or as the case may be the fines officer, making the order to have the debtor in his employment and shall operate as an instruction to that person—

a

to make periodical deductions from the debtor’s earnings in accordance with Part I of Schedule 3 to this Act; and

b

at such times as the order may require, or as the court F2, or where the order is made under Schedule 5 to the Courts Act 2003, as the court or the fines officer as the case may be, may allow, to pay the amounts deducted to the collecting officer of the court, as specified in the order.

2

For the purposes of this Act, the relationship of employer and employee shall be treated as subsisting between two persons if one of them as a principal and not as a servant or agent, pays to the other any sums defined as earnings by section 24 of this Act.

3

An attachment of earnings order shall contain prescribed particulars enabling the debtor to be identified by the employer.

4

Except where it is made to secure maintenance payments, the order shall specify the whole amount payable under the relevant adjudication (or so much of that amount as remains unpaid), including any relevant costs.

5

F3Subject to subsection (5A) below, the order shall specify—

a

the normal deduction rate, that is to say, the rate (expressed as a sum of money per week, month or other period) at which the court thinks it reasonable for the debtor’s earnings to be applied to meeting his liability under the relevant adjudication; and

b

the protected earnings rate, that is to say the rate (so expressed) below which, having regard to the debtor’s resources and needs, the court thinks it reasonable that the earnings actually paid to him should not be reduced.

F45A

If the order is made under Schedule 5 to the Courts Act 2003 then it shall specify the percentage deduction rate in accordance with fines collection regulations made under that Schedule.

6

In the case of an order made to secure payments under a maintenance order (not being an order for the payment of a lump sum), the normal deduction rate—

a

shall be determined after taking account of any right or liability of the debtor to deduct income tax when making the payments; and

b

shall not exceed the rate which appears to the court necessary for the purpose of—

i

securing payment of the sums falling due from time to time under the maintenance order, and

ii

securing payment within a reasonable period of any sums already due and unpaid under the maintenance order.

7

For the purposes of an attachment of earnings order, the collecting officer of the court shall be (subject to later variation of the order under section 9 of this Act)—

a

in the case of an order made by the High Court, either—

i

the proper officer of the High Court, or

ii

the F5appropriate officer of F10the family court orF11the county court if the order so specifies;

F9aa

in the case of an order made by the family court, the appropriate officer of that court;

b

in the case of an order made by F8the county court, the F5appropriate officer of that court; and

c

in the case of an order made by a magistrates’ court, the F6designated officer for that court or for another magistrates’ court specified in the order.

F78

In subsection (7) above “appropriate officer” means an officer designated by the Lord Chancellor.