Pre-Litigation Asset Search: Know Before You Sue
Litigation is expensive. Before investing $10,000 or $100,000 in a lawsuit, smart attorneys ask a simple question: Can the defendant pay? A pre-litigation asset search answers that question—and potentially saves clients from pursuing uncollectible judgments.
📌 Key Takeaways
- 70% of civil judgments go partially or fully uncollected
- Pre-litigation asset searches reveal if defendants are worth suing
- Identify real estate, vehicles, businesses, and employment before filing
- Discover existing liens competing for the same assets
- Information strengthens settlement negotiations
- Cost: $150-300 vs potentially tens of thousands in wasted litigation
📑 Table of Contents
🤔 Why Search Before Suing?
Winning a lawsuit means nothing if you can’t collect. Courts issue judgments—they don’t collect them. Collection is the creditor’s responsibility, and it requires finding assets to garnish, levy, or lien.
Pre-litigation asset searches help you:
Assess Collectibility
Is the defendant judgment-proof or do they have substantial assets? Know before you invest in litigation.
Estimate Recovery
Identify specific assets you can target. Calculate potential recovery vs litigation costs.
Strengthen Negotiations
Knowing what defendants own gives you leverage. They know you can find their assets.
Plan Attachment
Some assets can be attached pre-judgment to prevent dissipation during litigation.
📋 What Pre-Litigation Searches Reveal
A comprehensive pre-litigation asset search typically uncovers:
Real Property
- Properties owned nationwide
- Estimated equity after mortgages
- Existing liens and judgments
- Transfer history (recent sales may indicate dissipation)
Vehicles & Watercraft
- Cars, trucks, motorcycles
- Boats and aircraft
- RVs and recreational vehicles
- Lien holder information
Business Interests
- Corporate officer/director positions
- LLC memberships
- Partnership interests
- DBA filings
Employment & Other
- Current employer (for wage garnishment potential)
- UCC filings showing business equipment
- Existing judgments (competing creditors)
- Bankruptcy history
⚠️ Existing Liens Reduce Recovery
A defendant may own a $500,000 property—but if there’s a $400,000 mortgage plus $75,000 in existing judgment liens, your potential recovery is minimal. Asset searches should identify encumbrances, not just gross values.
📊 The ROI Calculation
Consider two scenarios:
Scenario A: Sue Without Searching
| Litigation costs | $25,000 |
| Judgment obtained | $75,000 |
| Assets found post-judgment | None (defendant is judgment-proof) |
| Net result | -$25,000 |
Scenario B: Search First
| Asset search cost | $150 |
| Assets found | None |
| Decision | Don’t sue |
| Net result | -$150 |
The $150 asset search saved $24,850 in wasted litigation costs.
💡 When to Sue Anyway
Even judgment-proof defendants may become collectible. Judgments last 10-20 years with renewal. Someone unemployed today may have garnishable wages next year. If litigation costs are low (small claims) or the principle matters, proceeding may make sense—but with realistic expectations.
🎯 Strategic Uses of Pre-Litigation Searches
Demand Letter Leverage
Reference specific assets in your demand letter: “We are aware of your property at [address] and your ownership of [business name].” This signals you’ve done your homework and will pursue collection aggressively.
Settlement Negotiations
Knowing the defendant has $200,000 in home equity changes how you negotiate. They know you can lien that property and eventually force a sale. Settlements often increase.
Case Selection
Law firms handling contingency cases use asset searches to select cases likely to pay. Why take a contingency case against someone with nothing to collect?
Pre-Judgment Attachment
In some jurisdictions, you can attach defendant’s assets before judgment to prevent dissipation. Asset searches identify what exists and where it’s located.
🔍 Know Before You Sue
Pre-litigation asset searches reveal whether defendants can pay judgments. Make informed decisions about litigation investments.
