Issue of writ of execution
Rule 6—(1) Issue of a writ of execution takes place on its being sealed by a court officer of the appropriate office.
(2) Before such a writ is issued a praecipe for its issue must be filed.
(3) The praecipe must be signed by or on behalf of the solicitor of the person entitled to execution or, if that person is acting in person, by him.
(4) No such writ shall be sealed unless at the time of the tender thereof for sealing—
(a)the person tendering it produces—
(i)the judgment or order on which the writ is to issue, or an office copy thereof;
(ii)where the writ may not issue without the permission of the Court, the order granting such permission or evidence of the granting of it;
(iii)where judgment on failure to acknowledge service has been entered against a State, as defined in section 14 of the State Immunity Act 1978(), evidence that the State has been served in accordance with CPR rule 40.10 and that the judgment has taken effect; and
(b)the court officer authorised to seal it is satisfied that the period, if any, specified in the judgment or order for the payment of any money or the doing of any other act thereunder has expired.
(5) Every writ of execution shall bear the date of the day on which it is issued.
(6) In this rule “the appropriate office” means—
(a)where the proceedings in which execution is to issue are in a District Registry, that Registry;
(b)where the proceedings are in the Principal Registry of the Family Division, that Registry;
(c)where the proceedings are Admiralty proceedings or commercial proceedings which are not in a District Registry, the Admiralty and Commercial Registry;
(ca)where the proceedings are in the Chancery Division, Chancery Chambers;
(d)in any other case, the Central Office of the Supreme Court.