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Cross-border trade between Singapore and the People’s Republic of China continues to generate a significant volume of commercial disputes, and creditors who obtain monetary judgments from PRC courts increasingly need to enforce those awards against assets located in Singapore. The enforcement of Chinese judgment in Singapore is not a single, uniform procedure, it requires careful selection among three distinct legal routes, each with its own eligibility criteria, documentary requirements and tactical risks. Singapore’s framework for the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments rests on two statutory regimes (the Reciprocal Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act 1959 and the Choice of Court Agreements Act 2016) alongside the residual common‑law action for judgment debt.
This guide walks in‑house counsel and commercial litigators through each route, provides practical checklists and timelines, and highlights the defences that judgment debtors commonly raise.
Before assembling documents or instructing Singapore counsel, creditors should answer three threshold questions in sequence. The answers determine which enforcement route is available, and which is strategically optimal.
Industry observers expect that further bilateral or multilateral instruments may eventually bring PRC judgments within a statutory registration regime, but until that occurs, creditors should plan for a common‑law action as the default pathway.
Singapore offers three distinct pathways. Understanding the scope of each is essential before committing resources.
The Reciprocal Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act 1959 permits registration of final money judgments from courts in gazetted countries. Key provisions include:
The Choice of Court Agreements Act 2016 gives effect to the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements. Registration is available where:
Contracting states include EU member states, the United Kingdom, Mexico, Montenegro and Singapore itself. The PRC signed the Convention in 2017 but has not ratified it, so the CCAA route remains unavailable for most Chinese court judgments.
| Route | Eligibility / When to Use | Typical Timeline & Pros/Cons |
|---|---|---|
| REFJA (Reciprocal Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act 1959) | Judgments from gazetted REFJA countries that are final and for a debt. Statutory registration required; excludes certain categories (family, tax, penalties). | Fastest for eligible judgments (4–12 weeks). Pros: direct registration, execution as domestic judgment. Cons: limited to gazetted countries, PRC is not included. |
| CCAA (Choice of Court Agreements Act 2016 / Hague Convention) | Judgments from contracting states where parties had an exclusive choice‑of‑court agreement. Requires treaty procedures. | Variable. Pros: treaty‑backed recognition. Cons: limited membership; PRC has signed but not ratified; documentation‑heavy. |
| Common‑law action (fresh action for judgment debt) | When neither statute applies, the default route for PRC judgments. | Longer (6–12+ months). Pros: flexible, no country list restriction. Cons: open to substantive defences (jurisdiction, public policy, fraud). |
REFJA applies only to judgments from courts of countries listed in the First Schedule. To qualify for registration, a judgment must satisfy all of the following conditions:
| Gazetted Country | Is PRC/China Included? | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Hong Kong SAR | No, Hong Kong is gazetted but mainland PRC is not. | Judgments from the Hong Kong Court of First Instance and above may be registered. Not applicable to mainland PRC courts. |
| United Kingdom | No | Covers England & Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, High Court and above. |
| Australia, Brunei, India, Malaysia, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Papua New Guinea, Windward Islands | No | Each country’s gazetted courts are specified in subsidiary legislation. Verify current court‑level coverage before filing. |
Key takeaway: Mainland China (PRC) is not a gazetted REFJA country. Creditors holding PRC judgments cannot use REFJA registration and must turn to the common‑law route.
Although REFJA is unavailable for PRC judgments, understanding its procedure remains relevant for creditors with judgments from listed jurisdictions and for context when comparing routes:
Typical timeline for REFJA registration is four to twelve weeks from filing to enforceable order, depending on court scheduling and service logistics.
The Choice of Court Agreements Act 2016 transposes the Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements into Singapore law. For a judgment to be registered under the CCAA:
The registration procedure mirrors REFJA in its mechanics: an ex parte application, service on the judgment debtor, a period to challenge and then execution. However, the grounds for refusal are drawn from the Convention itself, including fraud, public policy, and inconsistent judgments.
The PRC signed the 2005 Hague Convention in September 2017 but has not ratified it. Until ratification occurs, the CCAA cannot be used for enforcement of Chinese judgment in Singapore. Practitioners monitoring PRC treaty activity note that ratification timelines remain uncertain. For creditors whose contracts contain an exclusive choice‑of‑PRC‑court clause, the practical route remains a common‑law action.
Because PRC judgments fall outside both REFJA and the CCAA, the common‑law action is the workhorse route. The creditor treats the foreign judgment as creating a debt obligation and commences a fresh suit in Singapore.
The process unfolds as follows:
The limitation period for commencing a common‑law action judgment debt in Singapore is six years from the date of the foreign judgment. Creditors should also consider applying for interim measures, such as a Mareva injunction, if there is a risk that the debtor will dissipate assets before judgment.
| Defence | Likelihood of Success | Evidence Typically Required |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign court lacked jurisdiction (under Singapore private international law rules) | Moderate, depends on basis of jurisdiction (submission, residence, presence) | Evidence that defendant did not submit, reside in or carry on business in the foreign jurisdiction |
| Fraud | Low to moderate, must show fraud that was not (or could not have been) raised in original proceedings | Documents or testimony demonstrating fabricated evidence or fraudulent procurement |
| Breach of natural justice | Moderate, viable where defendant was not given notice or an opportunity to be heard | Proof that service was defective or hearing rights were denied |
| Judgment contrary to Singapore public policy | Low, Singapore courts apply this narrowly | Expert evidence or legal submissions on why enforcement would violate fundamental Singapore principles |
| Judgment not final and conclusive | Moderate, relevant if an appeal is pending that suspends enforceability | Court records showing pending appeal and suspension of judgment in origin jurisdiction |
| Prior inconsistent judgment | Low, applies only where there is an earlier, irreconcilable judgment between the same parties | Certified copy of the earlier inconsistent judgment |
Where a creditor has obtained a PRC judgment for breach of contract, the common‑law action effectively “enforces the agreement” by treating the judgment as conclusive proof of the debt. Interest may be claimed from the date of the foreign judgment, and costs of the Singapore proceedings are awarded in the court’s discretion. This approach answers the practical question of how to enforce a breach of contract across borders, by converting the foreign court’s finding into a Singapore‑enforceable obligation.
Whether using REFJA, the CCAA or a common‑law action, creditors should assemble the following documents before instructing Singapore counsel:
Practitioners advise allowing two to four weeks for certified translations and legalisation of PRC court documents, particularly where the service of documents involves Chinese courts.
| Route | Typical Timeline | Indicative Cost Range |
|---|---|---|
| REFJA registration | 4–12 weeks (filing to enforceable order) | SGD 5,000–15,000 (simple cases, excluding execution costs) |
| CCAA registration | 6–16 weeks (variable, depending on documentation) | SGD 8,000–20,000 |
| Common‑law action (uncontested / summary judgment) | 3–6 months | SGD 15,000–50,000 |
| Common‑law action (contested, full trial) | 12–24+ months | SGD 50,000–200,000+ |
Court filing fees, translation and legalisation costs, sheriff’s fees for writs of seizure and sale, and disbursements for service out of jurisdiction are additional. The cost ranges above reflect professional fees only and will vary depending on the complexity of the case and the defences raised.
The Memorandum of Guidance on Recognition and Enforcement of Money Judgments in Commercial Cases was signed by the Supreme Court of Singapore and the Supreme People’s Court of the PRC in 2018. While the MOG is not a treaty and does not create binding legal obligations, it establishes mutual expectations of reciprocity and signals to courts in both jurisdictions that recognition should be facilitated where the standard grounds of refusal are not engaged.
Since the MOG, Singapore courts have recognised PRC money judgments in common‑law actions with increasing regularity. The practical significance is that Singapore courts are now less likely to refuse enforcement on grounds of non‑reciprocity, a concern that historically made common‑law enforcement of Chinese judgments uncertain. For the broader framework of cross-border dispute resolution, see our international commercial disputes guide.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Shem Khoo at Focus Law Asia, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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