Title 28 › Part PART VI— - PARTICULAR PROCEEDINGS › Chapter CHAPTER 176— - FEDERAL DEBT COLLECTION PROCEDURE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER B— - PREJUDGMENT REMEDIES › § 3101
The U.S. government can ask a court, when it files a lawsuit about a debt or any time after, to place a prejudgment remedy — a court action that holds or takes property before a final judgment. The government must apply under oath, file the application with the court, and describe the facts and legal reasons for each remedy it wants. The application must say the debtor will get a chance for a hearing and must show, in detail, that the law’s rules for the remedy are met. The government must show reasonable cause to believe one of several things is happening: the debtor is about to leave the United States to avoid paying, is hiding, moving, destroying, wasting, transferring, or converting property to frustrate collection, has evaded being served or temporarily left to do the same, or that the remedy is needed to get court jurisdiction. The application must include an affidavit saying the likely validity of the debt, the exact amount claimed (including interest or costs), the ground(s) relied on, and which legal requirements apply. The government does not need to post a bond. When the government files, the clerk sends a court-approved notice in three copies to the debtor and anyone believed to control the affected property. The notice must explain the debt, why the property is being taken, major exemptions that might protect some property, and how to ask for a hearing. If the debtor asks for a hearing, it will be held within 5 days if requested that quickly, and the debtor can also ask within 20 days to move the case to the federal district where they live. Before final judgment, the debtor may move to cancel the remedy; the court must hold a prompt hearing (within 5 days if asked). The hearing is limited to the likely validity of the claim and any defenses or exemptions, whether the legal rules were followed, whether the listed grounds exist, and whether other remedies would protect the government. If the court finds the requirements satisfied, it will issue the process needed to carry out the prejudgment remedy.
Full Legal Text
Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
28 U.S.C. § 3101
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73