Debt collection requests and orders to pay – a possible criminal offence?

In this framework, the Federal Supreme Court has lately issued decisions in which it confirmed its case law that a debt collection request and the resulting order to pay – though in and of themselves lawful instruments – can constitute a criminal offence under certain circumstances.

Launching debt collection proceedings: Debt collection request and order to pay

Under Swiss law, a creditor does not necessarily have to file a claim against a debtor before the civil courts to demand repayment of a debt. Instead, the creditor can simply file a debt collection request with the Debt Collection Office at the domicile of the debtor, which will then notify an "order to pay" to the latter. The debtor can declare his opposition to the order to pay by means of a simple declaration, either on the same document or separately. This opposition will stop the debt collection proceedings. In order to continue them, the creditor will need to have the debtor's opposition set aside, which involves filing a civil claim in court, where the validity of the claim is examined. In other words, it is only if the debtor objects to the order to pay that the creditor needs to turn to the courts.

Submitting a debt collection request is therefore a simple and practical means of recovering uncontested debts. In practice, a debt collection request is also often used to notify the debtor of the creditor's intention to enforce his claim by means of legal action if necessary.

A debt collection request and the resulting order to pay can constitute a criminal offence

Even though they are entirely legal instruments, a debt collection request and the resulting order to pay can amount to a criminal offence under certain circumstances. Especially relevant in this context is the crime of coercion under the Swiss Criminal Code.

Coercion may be given when an order to pay is considered to be an abusive or immoral means of pressuring a debtor. According to the case law of the Federal Supreme Court, being served with an order to pay a large sum of money is a psychological burden for a person of average sensitivity. Such an order to pay is thus likely to induce an average person to give in to the pressure and to substantially hinder his freedom of decision or action, all of which constitutes a coercive act. In other words, while it is lawful to have an order to pay notified to a debtor when the creditor is entitled to claim such a sum, using such a procedure as a means of exerting pressure on a debtor is clearly abusive and may therefore be a crime on the creditor's part.

Other criminal offences can also be relevant, such as criminal offences protecting honor. The Federal Debt Enforcement and Bankruptcy Act ("DEBA") states that the creditor must precisely state the cause of the obligation in the debt collection request and not limit himself to general terms like "claim" or "liability", as the purpose of the order to pay is to inform the debtor of the alleged claim and enable him to respond to it. It is however possible (and quite common) that the cause of the obligation are damages due to contractual breaches or criminal offences allegedly committed by the debtor. These allegations could, depending on the circumstances and especially if untrue or unnecessarily hurtful, make the creditor guilty of defamation or slander.

Lawyers can be held liable

It is worth noting that the fact that the client signs the debt collection request himself (as is customary in Geneva in connection with criminal complaints, for example) does not protect the client's lawyer from being targeted by a criminal complaint should the request prove abusive.

If the lawyer advised the client to file such a debt collection request and drafted it (which will usually be the case), he could, depending on the circumstances, be considered as co-perpetrator, accomplice or instigator of the criminal offence.

Further means of defense for the debtor

In addition to or parallel to a criminal complaint, the debtor has other means of defense at his disposal against an abusive order to pay. He can, for instance, and depending on the circumstances at hand:

  • File a complaint with the Supervisory Authority of the Debt Collection Office against the order to pay (art. 17 DEBA).
  • File a civil claim for annulment or suspension of the alleged claim (art. 85a DEBA). For now, a condition for filing such a claim is that the debtor did not oppose the order to pay. However, this will no longer be necessary following the amendment of art. 85a DEBA that will enter into force on 1 January 2019. Furthermore, two other modifications to the DEBA that increase the protection of debtors against abusive debt collection proceedings will enter into force as of the new year: the possibility to request that the Debt Collection Office refuse third parties access to mention of the debt collection proceedings in its register, and the possibility for the debtor to demand that the creditor produce at all time the evidence underlying his debt collection request.
  • File an action for a declaratory judgement regarding the non-existence of the alleged claim (art. 88 of the Swiss Civil Procedural Code). This line of defense is available even if the debtor already opposed the order to pay.

Conclusions

The Federal Supreme Court's recent decisions are a welcome reminder that, although used very often in practice, debt collection requests and orders to pay are not meaningless instruments.  

Therefore, and prior to filing a debt collection request, a creditor would be wise to ask himself the following questions:

  • Is the debt collection request necessary in the present case (whether to interrupt the statute of limitations or to start debt recovery proceedings)?
  • Is it possible to first try to contact the debtor to obtain a waiver of the statute of limitations?
  • What wording can or must be used in the debt collection request to specify the claim?