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Setting aside judgment in default is one of the most time-sensitive applications a Malaysian defendant can face, miss the 30‑day window prescribed by the Rules of Court 2012 and enforcement of the judgment may already be underway before you file a single document. Whether you are in-house counsel who has just discovered a writ that slipped through, or a litigation team scrambling after substituted service was posted to an old registered address, the procedural pathway is the same: identify the type of default judgment, assemble the right evidence, and file before the clock runs out.
This guide walks through every step, from the governing ROC 2012 orders and the critical regular-versus-irregular distinction to the affidavit structure, draft-defence checklist, and tactical options that determine whether the court grants the set-aside.
Immediate 6‑point action checklist:
A judgment in default (JID) is a court order entered in favour of a plaintiff when the defendant fails to take a required procedural step within the time allowed by the Rules of Court 2012. Malaysian civil procedure recognises two principal categories:
Both types bypass the trial process entirely, and both can be challenged through an application for setting aside, but the legal tests differ depending on whether the judgment was regularly or irregularly obtained.
Practitioners must cite the correct ROC 2012 provisions when filing a set-aside application. The key orders are:
All references above are to the Rules of Court 2012 [PU(A) 205/2012] as amended. Practitioners should verify the current consolidated text via the official judiciary portal or the Malaysian Bar compilation. In any summary suit for recovery of money, for example, a defendant who fails to obtain leave to defend may face a similar judgment, but the procedural route for challenge differs from the Order 13/19 pathway discussed here.
The 30-day time limit to set aside a JID is one of the most critical deadlines in Malaysian civil litigation. Under the Rules of Court 2012, a defendant who wishes to set aside a default judgment must file the application within 30 days of receiving the judgment. The clock does not start on the date the judgment was entered by the court, it starts on the date the defendant (or the defendant’s solicitor) received notice of the judgment.
How “receipt” is established depends on the mode of service:
Practical example, timeline calculator: If a sealed default judgment is personally served on a defendant’s solicitor on 1 July, the last day to file the set-aside application is 31 July. If 31 July falls on a weekend or public holiday, the deadline extends to the next working day under general computation-of-time rules.
Missing the 30-day window does not automatically bar an application, but it means the defendant must first obtain an extension of time under Order 3 rule 5, an additional hurdle that courts scrutinise carefully.
The most important preliminary question in any set-aside application is whether the default judgment is regular (entered in compliance with the Rules) or irregular (entered in breach of the Rules). This classification fundamentally changes the legal test the court applies and, consequently, the evidence the defendant must prepare.
| Issue / Test | Regular Judgment (Entered Properly) | Irregular Judgment (Procedural Defect) |
|---|---|---|
| How it was entered | Plaintiff complied with all ROC requirements, proper service, correct form of writ, correct Order invoked | Plaintiff failed to comply strictly with ROC, e.g., defective service, wrong mode of entry, premature filing before time for appearance/defence expired |
| Burden on the applicant (defendant) | Must satisfy three factors: (i) reasonable explanation for the default, (ii) affidavit of merits showing a prima facie triable defence, (iii) promptness in applying and absence of irremediable prejudice to the plaintiff | Entitled to set aside as of right, the court will ordinarily set aside without requiring the defendant to demonstrate merits of the defence |
| Typical outcome | Court may set aside on terms: filing of draft defence, payment of security, costs to plaintiff | Court commonly sets aside unconditionally; may impose terms but cannot refuse set-aside solely because the defendant lacks a meritorious defence |
| Key evidence to prepare | Full affidavit of merits with proposed defence annexed, explanation affidavit, chronology showing promptness | Evidence of the procedural irregularity (e.g., proof that service was defective, certificate of non-appearance, wrong order cited by plaintiff) |
Before drafting a single affidavit, answer two questions:
If the answer to either question is “no,” the judgment is irregular and the application for setting aside judgment in default becomes significantly simpler, focus the affidavit on proving the irregularity rather than on the merits of the defence.
For a regular default judgment, Malaysian courts generally apply a multi-factor test derived from the English decision in Evans v Bartlam and adopted in local jurisprudence. The court exercises a judicial discretion, weighing several factors:
Industry observers note that Malaysian courts tend to favour allowing cases to be decided on their merits rather than on procedural default, provided the defendant satisfies the threshold tests and applies promptly. The court retains an overriding discretion to refuse the application if it considers the defence hopeless or the delay inexcusable.
The following step-by-step playbook covers both the standard (within 30 days) and late (requiring extension) scenarios.
The application is brought by way of a notice of application (formerly notice of motion) under Order 32, supported by an affidavit. The notice must specify the relief sought, typically “that the judgment in default dated [date] be set aside”, and cite the relevant rule (Order 42 rule 13).
The affidavit is the centrepiece of the application. It should be structured as follows:
Courts expect a complete draft defence, not a summary, to be annexed to the affidavit. This demonstrates that the defendant has a genuine case and is ready to proceed to trial. The draft should comply with the requirements for a defence under the ROC 2012 (Order 18): numbered paragraphs, admissions and denials, and positive case where applicable. In disputes arising from Section 75 of the Contracts Act, for example, the draft defence should specifically plead the statutory limitation on liquidated damages.
The notice of application, affidavit, and draft defence must be served on the plaintiff or the plaintiff’s solicitors within the time prescribed by Order 32. Service must be effected in sufficient time before the hearing date to allow the plaintiff to file an affidavit in reply.
If the plaintiff has already commenced enforcement, for instance, by filing a writ of seizure and sale, garnishee proceedings, or a bankruptcy notice, the defendant should simultaneously apply ex parte for a stay of execution pending the hearing of the set-aside application. This prevents the judgment from being executed while the court considers the merits of the application.
Where the 30-day time limit has expired, the defendant must apply to the court for an extension of time under Order 3 rule 5 of the Rules of Court 2012. The court has a general power to extend time “on such terms as it thinks just,” but this power is exercised cautiously in the context of set-aside applications.
The defendant’s affidavit in support of the extension application must address:
The likely practical effect of a poorly explained delay is dismissal of the extension application, which effectively kills the set-aside. Practitioners should treat this affidavit with the same care as the substantive set-aside affidavit.
Beyond the core content described in Step 2 above, the affidavit should attach the following exhibits in an orderly and paginated bundle:
A certificate of non-appearance is a document issued by the court registrar confirming that a party did not appear at a particular hearing. In setting-aside applications, this document is relevant where the defendant argues that the judgment was entered in the defendant’s absence without proper notice of the hearing date. Defendants should request this certificate from the court registry promptly, as it constitutes contemporaneous court evidence that corroborates a claim of non-receipt or non-notification. It is particularly powerful in supporting an argument that the judgment is irregular.
Setting aside a default judgment is not purely a procedural exercise, it is a strategic decision with significant commercial implications. Business defendants and their in-house counsel should weigh several factors before committing to the application.
Employment-related disputes, such as those arising from a retrenchment exercise, may involve additional regulatory considerations that influence whether litigation or settlement is the optimal path.
At the hearing of a set-aside application, the court will typically make one of the following orders:
If the application is dismissed, enforcement of the judgment resumes. The defendant’s options at that stage include an appeal to the Court of Appeal (within the applicable appeal period) and an application for a stay pending appeal. Practitioners should note that stamp duty and conveyancing implications may arise if the judgment involves real property and enforcement proceeds to a forced sale.
The following resources are designed for in-house counsel and litigation teams who need to act quickly upon discovering a default judgment.
Setting aside judgment in default in Malaysia is achievable, but only for defendants who act with speed, precision, and proper documentation. The 30-day time limit under the Rules of Court 2012 is unforgiving, and the distinction between regular and irregular judgments determines whether the court demands a full defence on the merits or simply corrects a procedural error. Business defendants should treat a default judgment as a board-level issue: assess the type of judgment immediately, instruct litigation counsel on day one, and prepare the affidavit and draft defence in parallel. Delay is the single greatest threat to a successful set-aside.
For defendants facing enforcement in connection with commercial contracts, property disputes, or cross-border claims, timely legal advice from a qualified Malaysian litigator is essential.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kenneth Koh at Xavier & Koh Partnership (XK Law), a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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