Rule 3-634.Judgment debtor fact information sheet
District Court · Last amended July 1, 2024 · Last verified July 13, 2026
Full Text of Rule 3-634
Amendment History
Added June 29, 2020, effective August 1, 2020; amended April 5, 2024, effective July 1, 2024.
Committee Note & Source
Committee note. This Notice may accompany or be included in the copy of the judgment that the clerk sends to the judgment debtor pursuant to Rule 1-324.
Source. This Rule is new.
Plain-English Summary
When the District Court enters a money judgment against an individual — outside of small claim cases — the clerk sends the debtor a plain-language notice explaining what comes next: the debtor may receive a form asking about income, employment, assets, and expenses, isn't required to fill it out, but risks being summoned for a sworn examination if the deadline passes without a response. Complete and return the form on time, and the debtor is protected from other post-judgment discovery for at least a year, absent a court order allowing it sooner.
That form is the Fact Information Sheet. The judgment creditor sends it no earlier than ten days after entry, using the state-approved format; the creditor can drop categories of information from the form but can't add new ones, and the debtor gets 30 days to complete and return it. The form must be sworn, must repeat the advisement about the debtor's options and the consequences of ignoring it, and must point self-represented debtors toward available help. Sensitive information the debtor discloses — Social Security number, financial account details, tax returns — has to stay confidential, usable only to pursue collection on that judgment or another one the same creditor holds against the same debtor. If the debtor completes and returns the sheet on time, the creditor can't turn to the discovery methods in Rule 3-633 unless a year has passed or the court grants leave for good cause.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Fact Information Sheet?
A state-approved sworn form a judgment debtor fills out with details about income, expenses, assets, and liabilities, sent by the judgment creditor after a money judgment is entered.
Am I required to fill it out?
No, but ignoring it within the time given exposes you to being summoned for a sworn examination before a judge or examiner instead.
What do I gain by completing and returning it on time?
Protection from other discovery in aid of enforcement for at least a year from the judgment, unless the creditor gets a court's permission sooner for good cause.
Can the creditor change what the form asks?
The creditor may remove categories of information from the approved form but can't add anything beyond what the state-approved version requests.
Is my Social Security number or financial information protected once I disclose it?
Yes. The creditor has to keep that information confidential and can only use it to pursue collection on the judgment at hand or another judgment the same creditor holds against you.