Your Partner
in Legal Success
| Reading Time: 4 Minutes
Basics For Debt Collection in Turkey For Foreign Entities and Real Persons
Fundamentals For Foreign Entities and Real Persons Collecting Debts in Turkey
Parties to a commercial agreement usually reduce into writing their mutual understanding and try to set forth penalties and other clauses of a deterrent nature, as much as they can, to protect their best interest in dealing with the counterparty.
Sometimes, parties to a contract fail to live up with the other party’s expectations in meeting their end of the bargain and materially breach their obligations, which inevitably lead to commercial court proceedings initiated by the aggrieved party.
How Does Debt Collection Law Work in Turkey?
With its Continental European legal system, Turkey is no different from the other countries when it comes to the debt collection process to compensate for the harm incurred by the plaintiff. Due to the complexity of a foreign jurisdiction, foreign entities and real persons are strongly advised to retain the services of lawyers who are familiar with procedures within Turkey to pursue and collect the debt owed to them due to the failure of the debtor to perform as promised.
In the forthcoming process of debt collection, the following are less similar to what should be expected;
- At the beginning of the process, it is imperative to declare the counterparty as the party in default. Most of the time, oral communications and e-mails correspondences would be no good and sufficient for that purpose. In general practice, a demand letter or based on the type of the dispute, a cease and desist letter issued by the plaintiff to be addressed to the defendant with the involvement of notary public of Turkey might best serve this purpose and be well-used as evidence to substantiate the claim in the court. With the same notary public notification, in addition to the declaration of the counterparty as the party in default, a plaintiff might also extend to the counterparty a grace period during which the defendant might compensate the plaintiff or rectify the breach within the set deadline to avoid any ensuing litigation.
- Dispute resolution officially starts with the Mandatory Mediation Process. This concept has been introduced with the enactment of Mediation Law on Civil Disputes Numbered 6325 as a condition precedent to filing a lawsuit at the competent court with the proper venue. The plaintiff must exercise and exhaust a short mediation process imposed by law to find an amicable out-of-court solution to the dispute before the court-appointed mediator. Suppose the parties or the mediator, at their sole discretion, conclude that continuing the mediation process would be fruitless. In that case, a Minute of Disagreement is drafted by the mediator, and parties are expected to sign off the document to continue the legal proceeding.
- Having completed the mandatory mediation process, the plaintiff is now ready to initiate the lawsuit for collection and compensation of expectation damages, including loss of profit arising out of contract or reliance damages, as is unfettered discretion. The idea is to put the aggrieved party in the position he would have been in had the contract been performed or compensate the losses incurred due to reasonable reliance on the promise of the party in breach. Special or indirect damages are also fine under Turkish law and jurisdiction. Still, the chances are relatively slim to prove and convince the court to sustain this type of remedy sought.
What if The Plaintiff is a Foreigner?
If the plaintiff is a foreigner, either a legal entity or a real person, then in addition to the court fees to be incurred, the plaintiff shall also post security pursuant to Article 48 of Turkish Law Numbered 5718 on International Private Law. The plaintiff needs to check and see whether there exists any reciprocity or agreement on judicial cooperation in civil matters between the Republic of Turkey and the country of origin of the plaintiff that foregoes the necessity of posting security on a reciprocal basis. Otherwise, the amount to be calculated by the court based on surrounding circumstances shall be deposited in advance along with court fees to file the lawsuit.
The adjudication process ends with the final verdict of the Court of First instance in charge and might be subject to appeal depending on the monetary value in dispute.
In the early stages of litigation and before the court renders a judgment on the merits, the plaintiff might seek injunctive relief in the form of attachment of the assets of the to make sure there will be some assets left from which the plaintiff might debtor satisfy the debt owed along with the court-related expenses.
There is always a risk that the plaintiff should assume that the defendant proves to be judgment proof at the end of the litigation. Therefore, to mitigate the risk in international transactions, we suggest obtaining bank guarantees or Letters of Credit in exchange for any payment made to secure the counterparty’s performance.
Article Keywords: Basics For Debt Collection in Turkey For Foreign Entities and Real Persons, Debt Collection, Debt Collection in Turkey, Foreign Entities, Real Persons, Basics For Debt Collection, Commercial Agreement.
Related Articles:
- Court of Appeal Decision Regarding The Request For The Collection of The Penalty Clause Due to The Worker’s Violation of The Ban Competition,
- Determination of Exit Share Value in Termination of Partnership Lawsuits Under Turkish Commercial Code,
- Limit of Unappealability in Partial Litigation and Unquantified Debt Lawsuits,
- Foreign Court Decisions in Turkey: Recognition and Enforcement,
- Exercising Voluntary Mediation Process in Termination of Employment Contracts Under Covid-19 Pandemic Era in Turkey.