Rule 69.Execution, proceedings supplemental to execution, foreclosure sales
Current through July 1, 2026 · Last verified July 13, 2026
In one sentenceTrial Rule 69 governs enforcing a money judgment in Indiana: execution sales of property, liens on property a debtor later acquires, foreclosure and other judicial sales of real estate, proceedings supplemental to execution against a debtor or garnishee, and optional title insurance before a judicial land sale.
(A)Execution sales. Process to enforce a judgment or a decree for the payment of money shall be by writ of exe- cution, unless the court directs otherwise and except as provided herein. Notwithstanding any statute to the contrary, real estate shall not be sold until the elapse of six [6] months from the time the judgment or execution thereon becomes a lien upon the property. The sale of real estate shall be conducted under the same rules and the same procedures applicable to foreclosure of mortgages, including subdivision (C) of this rule, without right of redemption after the sale but subject to the judgment debtor’s right to care for and remove crops growing at the time the lien attached as in the case of mortgage foreclosure. Unless otherwise ordered by the court, the sheriff or person conducting the sale of any property upon execution shall not be required to offer it for sale in any particular order, in parcels, or first offer rents and profits and shall be required to sell real and personal property separately pursuant to the law applicable. Execution upon any property shall not suspend the right and duty to levy upon other property.
(B)Judgment and execution liens on after-acquired property. In the case of property acquired by the debtor after prior judgment or execution liens have been perfected, such liens shall share pro rata with each other without further levy.
(C)Foreclosure of liens upon real estate. Unless otherwise ordered by the court, judicial foreclosure of all liens upon real estate shall be conducted under the same rules and the same procedures applicable to foreclosure of mortgages upon real estate, including without limitation redemption rights, manner and notice of sale, appointment of a receiver, execution of deed to purchaser and without valu- ation and appraisement. Judicial lien foreclosures including mortgage foreclosures may be held at any reasonable place stated in the notice of sale. In all cases where a foreclosure or execution sale of realty is not confirmed by the court, the sheriff or other officer conducting the sale shall make a record of his actions therein in his return to be filed promptly with the record of the case and also in the execution docket maintained in the office of the clerk.
(D)Other judicial sales. Unless otherwise ordered by the court all public judicial sales of real estate, other than lien and mortgage foreclosures and execution sales, shall, to the extent possible, be sold in the same manner that real estate is sold in the administration of decedents’ estates, and subject to the same rules applicable to the manner and effect thereof. This provision shall apply, without limitation, to judicial sales by trustees, guardians, receivers, assignees for the benefit of creditors and sales in partition proceedings.
(E)Proceedings supplemental to execution. Notwithstanding any other statute to the contrary, proceedings supplemental to execution may be enforced by verified motion or with affidavits in the court where the judgment is rendered alleging generally:
(1)that the plaintiff owns the described judgment against the defendant;
(2)that the plaintiff has no cause to believe that levy of execution against the defendant will satisfy the judgment;
(3)that the defendant be ordered to appear before the court to answer as to his non- exempt property subject to execution or proceedings supplemental to execution or to apply any such specified or unspecified property towards satisfaction of the judgment; and,
(4)if any person is named as garnishee, that garnishee has or will have specified or unspe- cified nonexempt property of, or an obligation owing to the judgment debtor subject to execution or proceedings supplemental to execution, and that the garnishee be ordered to appear and answer concerning the same or answer interrogatories submitted with the motion. If the court determines that the motion meets the foregoing requirements it shall, ex parte and without notice, order the judgment debtor, other named parties defendant and the gar- nishee to appear for a hearing thereon or to answer the interrogatories attached to the motion, or both. The motion, along with the court’s order stating the time for the appearance and hearing or the time for the answer to interrogatories submitted with the motion, shall be served upon the judgment debtor as provided in Rule 5, and other parties and the garnishee shall be entitled to service of process as provided in Rule 4. The date fixed for appearance and hear- ing or answer to interrogatories shall be not less than twenty [20] days after service. No fur- ther pleadings shall be required, and the case shall be heard and determined and property ordered applied towards the judgment in accordance with statutes allowing proceedings sup- plementary to execution. In aid of the judgment or execution, the judgment creditor or his successor in interest of record and the judgment debtor may utilize the discovery provisions of these rules in the manner provided in these rules for discovery or as provided under the laws allowing proceedings supplemental. Writs of attachment, bench warrants, and body attachments are governed by Trial Rule 64(A).
(F)Title opinion or insurance required in all judicial sales of land. In the case of any judicial sale of land, including without limitation mortgage and lien fore- closures, execution sales, sales by receivers, assignees for the benefit of creditors, guardians or trustees, or partition sales, upon motion the court in its discretion may order the judgment creditor, person seeking the sale, or officer conducting the sale to procure a qualified title opinion or a title insurance policy from a title insurance company authorized to do business in Indiana with respect to the interest of the person whose land is being sold. The policy must be conditioned to cover the purchase price at the sale and may be given with any necessary exclusions. The opinion or policy shall run to all parties interested in the litigation and to any purchaser or purchasers at the sale. The opinion or policy or copy thereof shall be available for inspection in the court from which the sale is being conducted or in the office of the court officer conducting the sale at the first notice of sale and shall be made available for inspec- tion at the sale. Expenses of the opinion or policy shall be taxed as costs like other expenses of the sale and paid from the first proceeds of the sale. The opinion or policy shall not cover defects arising in the conduct of the sale.
Amendment History
This rule’s current text took effect January 1, 2019. For the full history of earlier amendments and adoption orders, see the Indiana Office of Court Services.
Plain-English Summary
Trial Rule 69(A) starts with the ordinary path for collecting a money judgment: a writ of execution, unless the court directs otherwise. Real estate can’t be sold to satisfy the judgment until six months pass from when the judgment, or the execution on it, first becomes a lien on the property — a built-in waiting period before a debtor can lose land. When the sale happens, it follows the same procedure the rule sets out for mortgage foreclosures in section (C), with one exception: unlike a mortgage or lien foreclosure sale, an execution sale of real estate leaves the debtor no right to redeem the property afterward. The debtor does keep the right to care for and remove crops that were already growing when the lien attached. The sheriff running the sale doesn’t have to follow a particular order, sell in parcels, or offer rents and profits first, but does have to sell real and personal property in separate sales. And levying on one piece of property doesn’t use up the creditor’s right to go after other property too.
Section (B) settles a priority fight that can arise when a debtor picks up new property after judgment or execution liens are already in place. Rather than letting whichever creditor levies first take priority, the rule has every existing lienholder share the newly acquired property pro rata, without needing a fresh levy to protect their claim.
Section (C) extends the mortgage-foreclosure procedure to judicial foreclosure of any lien on real estate — including redemption rights, how notice and the sale work, appointing a receiver if one is needed, and issuing the deed — without requiring an appraisal first. Unlike an execution sale, a foreclosure sale under this section keeps the redemption right built into mortgage-foreclosure procedure. The sale doesn’t have to happen at the courthouse door; the officer running it can hold it anywhere reasonable, as long as the notice of sale says where. And whenever a foreclosure or execution sale of real estate isn’t confirmed by the court, the officer who ran it has to record what happened, both in a return filed with the case and in the clerk’s execution docket. Section (D) then covers judicial sales that fall outside both categories — sales by trustees, guardians, receivers, assignees for creditors, and sales in partition cases — directing courts to run those, where practical, the way real estate is sold in the administration of decedents’ estates.
Section (E) covers proceedings supplemental to execution — the tool a judgment creditor reaches for when an ordinary levy won’t get the judgment paid. The creditor files a verified motion or affidavit in the court that entered the judgment, stating that it owns the judgment, that it has no reason to believe execution alone would satisfy it, and asking the court to order the debtor to appear and account for nonexempt property. If a garnishee — someone holding property or owing an obligation to the debtor — is named, the creditor can ask that the garnishee be ordered to appear and answer, or to answer written interrogatories instead. Once the motion checks those boxes, the court issues the order ex parte, without a hearing on the motion itself. The debtor is served under Rule 5; other parties and any garnishee are served under Rule 4. Whoever is ordered to appear or answer gets at least twenty days from service before that deadline arrives. No further pleadings are required, and the parties can use ordinary discovery tools to track down assets; writs of attachment, bench warrants, and body attachments used along the way are governed separately, under Rule 64(A).
Finally, section (F) lets a court, on motion and in its discretion, require the judgment creditor, the person seeking the sale, or the officer running it to obtain a title opinion or a title insurance policy before any judicial sale of land — whether that’s an execution sale, a mortgage or lien foreclosure, or a sale by a receiver, guardian, trustee, assignee, or in a partition case. That opinion or policy has to cover the purchase price, has to be open for inspection from the first notice of sale through the sale itself, and its cost gets taxed as a cost of the sale, paid out of the first proceeds. It won’t, however, cover a defect that arises from how the sale itself was conducted.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to wait before real estate can be sold to satisfy a judgment in Indiana?
Six months. Trial Rule 69(A) prohibits selling real estate on execution until six months have passed from the time the judgment, or the execution issued on it, becomes a lien on the property.
Can I redeem property after it’s sold at an execution sale?
No. Trial Rule 69(A) specifically eliminates any right of redemption after an execution sale of real estate. That is different from a mortgage or lien foreclosure sale under section (C), which keeps the redemption rights built into ordinary mortgage-foreclosure procedure.
What are “proceedings supplemental to execution”?
They are the process a judgment creditor uses to track down and reach a debtor’s property when a plain levy isn’t likely to satisfy the judgment. The creditor files a verified motion or affidavit asking the court to order the debtor — and, if one is named, a garnishee — to appear and account for nonexempt property or answer written interrogatories about it.
How much notice do I get before I have to appear or answer interrogatories in a proceedings supplemental case?
At least twenty days from the date of service. Trial Rule 69(E) requires the date set for appearance, hearing, or an answer to interrogatories to be no less than twenty days after the debtor, other parties, or the garnishee are served.
If someone gets a judgment against me and I later acquire property, can they take it?
They can share in it, along with any other creditor whose judgment or execution lien was already perfected before you acquired the property. Trial Rule 69(B) has those existing lienholders share the newly acquired property pro rata, rather than letting whichever creditor levies first take priority.
Can a court require title insurance before a judicial sale of my property?
Yes. Trial Rule 69(F) lets the court, on motion and at its discretion, order the judgment creditor, the party seeking the sale, or the officer running it to obtain a title opinion or a title insurance policy covering the purchase price before the sale goes forward.
Does an execution sale have to happen at the courthouse?
No. Because execution sales of real estate follow the same sale procedure the rule sets out for mortgage and lien foreclosures, the officer conducting the sale can hold it at any reasonable place, so long as the notice of sale states where.
Source & verification. The rule text is reproduced verbatim from the
official Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure (T.R. 69). Prescribed by the Supreme Court of Indiana, under its inherent constitutional rulemaking power (reaffirmed by Ind. Code 34-8-1-1 and 34-8-2-1); originally enacted by the Indiana General Assembly in 1969. The plain-English summary is original and written by us. Last verified July 13, 2026. ·
Official source
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