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Rule 62.Stay of proceedings to enforce a judgment or order

Part VII: Judgment · Last amended November 1, 2021 · Last verified July 13, 2026

In one sentenceRule 62 covers the automatic pause before a judgment can be enforced and how a party posts a bond to keep it paused while appealing.

Full Text of Rule 62

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) (g) (h)

(a) Delay in execution. No execution or other writ to enforce a judgment or an order to pay money under Rule 7(j)(8) may issue until the expiration of 28 days after entry of the judgment or order, unless the court in its discretion otherwise directs.
(b) Stay by bond or other security; duration of stay. A party may obtain a stay of the enforcement of a judgment or order to pay money by providing a bond or other security, unless a stay is otherwise prohibited by law or these rules.
(1) The stay takes affect when the court approves the bond or other security and remains in effect for the time specified in the order that approves the bond or other security.
(2) In its discretion and on such conditions for the security of the adverse party as are proper, the court may stay:
(A) an order that is certified as final under Rule 54(b) until the entry of a final judgment under Rule 58A;
(B) an order to pay money under Rule 7(j)(8) until the entry of a judgment under Rule 58A;
(C) a judgment until resolution of any motion made pursuant to Rule 50(b), Rule 52(b), Rule 59, Rule 60, or Rule 73; and
(D) a judgment until resolution of a motion made under this rule.
(c) Injunction pending appeal. When a party seeks an appeal from an interlocutory order, or takes an appeal from a judgment, granting, dissolving, or denying an injunction, the court in its discretion may suspend, modify, restore, or grant an injunction during the pendency of appellate proceedings upon such conditions for the security of the rights of the adverse party as are just.
(d) Stay in favor of the United States, the State of Utah, or political subdivision. When an appeal is taken by the United States, the State of Utah, a political subdivision, or an officer of agency of any of those entities, or by direction of any department of any of those entities, and the operation or enforcement of the judgment is stayed, no bond, obligation, or other security is required from the appellant.
(e) Stay in quo warranto proceedings. Where the defendant is adjudged guilty of usurping, intruding into or unlawfully holding public office, civil or military, within this state, the execution of the judgment shall not be stayed on an appeal.
(f) Power of appellate court not limited. The provisions in this rule do not limit any power of an appellate court or of a judge or justice of an appellate court.
(g) Form of bond; deposit in lieu of bond; stipulation on security; jurisdiction over sureties to be set forth in undertaking.
(1) A bond given under Subdivision (b) may be either a commercial bond having a surety authorized to transact insurance business under Title 31A, or a personal bond having one or more sureties who are residents of Utah having a collective net worth of at least twice the amount of the bond, exclusive of property exempt form execution. Sureties on personal bonds shall make and file a declaration setting forth in reasonable detail the assets and liabilities of the surety.
(2) The court may permit a deposit of money in court or other security to be given in lieu of giving a bond.
(3) The parties may by written stipulation agree to the form and amount of security.
(4) A bond shall provide that each surety submits to the jurisdiction of the court and irrevocably appoints the clerk of the court as the surety’s agent upon whom any papers affecting the surety’s liability on the bond may be served, and that the surety’s liability may be enforced on motion and upon such notice as the court may require without the necessity of an independent action.
(h) Amount of bond or other security.
(1) Except as provided in subsection (h)(2), a court shall set the bond or other security in an amount that adequately protects the adverse party against loss or damage occasioned by the stay and assures payment after the stay ends. In setting the amount, the court may consider any relevant factor including:
(A) the debtor’s ability to pay the judgment or order to pay money;
(B) the existence and value of other security;
(C) the debtor’s opportunity to dissipate assets;
(D) the debtor’s likelihood of success on appeal; and
(E) the respective harm to the parties from setting a higher or lower amount.
(2) Notwithstanding subsection (h)(1):
(A) the presumptive amount of a bond or other security for compensatory damages is the amount of the compensatory damages plus costs and attorney fees; as applicable, plus 3 years of interest at the applicable interest rate;
(B) the bond or other security for compensatory damages shall not exceed $25 million in an action by the plaintiffs certified as a class under Rule 23 or in an action by multiple plaintiffs in which compensatory damages are not proved for each plaintiff individually; and
(C) no bond or other security shall be required for punitive damages.
(3) If the court permits a bond or other security that is less than the presumptive amount in subsection (h)(2)(A), the court may enter such orders as are necessary to protect the adverse party during the stay.
(4) If the court finds that the party seeking the stay has violated an order or has otherwise dissipated assets, the court may set the amount of the bond or other security without regard to the presumptive amount under subsection (h)(1) and limits in subsection (h)(2).
(i) Objecting to sufficiency or amount of security. Any party whose judgment or order to pay money is stayed or sought to be stayed pursuant to Subdivision (b) may object to the sufficiency of the sureties on a bond or the amount thereof, or to the sufficiency of amount of other security given to stay the judgment by filing and giving notice of such objection. Either party shall be entitled to a hearing on the objection upon five days notice or such shorter time as the court may order. The burden of justifying the sufficiency of the sureties or other security and the amount of the bond of other security, shall be borne by the party seeking the stay, unless the objecting party seeks a bond or other security in an amount greater than the presumed amount in subsection (h)(2)(A). The fact that a bond, its surety or other security is generally permitted under this rule shall not be conclusive as to its sufficiency or amount.

Amendment History

Amended effective November 15, 1995; L. 2004, H.J.R. 16, § 1, effective March 2, 2004; April 1, 2004; May 12, 2004; February 4, 2005; April 1, 2006; L. 2013, S.J.R. 14, § 1, effective March 12, 2013; May 1, 2014; L. 2015, H.J.R. 20, § 1, effective March 12, 2015; November 1, 2021.

Advisory Committee Notes

Advisory Committee Notes

The 1995 amendments to this rule eliminated references to writs of mandate and prohibition in Subdivision (g) since the extraordinary relief procedure of Rule 65B has eliminated the concept of the “writ.” Subdivision (i) was substantially rewritten to define the requirements for both commercial and personal supersedeas bonds and to allow the court to permit a cash deposit or other form of security in lieu of a supersedeas bond. The committee concluded that individual circumstances will determine the degree to which a particular form of security may be affected by bankruptcy, financial instability or other uncertainty, and that the court should be given broad discretion to permit such forms of security as the facts may require. Subdivision (j) was amended to allow a party whose judgment is stayed to object to the amount or sufficiency of the security. The rule does not specify a time within which a party must object to security; thus a party may respond appropriately to changing circumstances affecting the sufficiency or form of security originally approved by the court.

2005 Amendment.

In considering conditions for setting a bond of less than the presumed amount under paragraph (j)(1), the judge’s objective is to protect both a judgment creditor’s interest in collecting a judgment affirmed on appeal and to afford a judgment debtor a reasonable opportunity to prosecute an appeal without unduly and unnecessarily affecting the judgment debtor’s operations. Among the options the judge might consider are to:

(1) require periodic financial reports;

(2) appoint a receiver or master;

(3) require the debtor to abstract the judgment to all jurisdictions in which the debtor has significant assets;

(4) require the debtor’s corporate officers to personally acknowledge receiving the judgment and to consent to personal jurisdiction for the purpose of enforcing the judgment;

(5) limit loans other than in the ordinary course of business;

(6) limit transfer or disposition of assets other than in the ordinary course of business; and

(7) limit payment of dividends.

Plain-English Summary

A judgment doesn't become collectible the instant it's signed. Rule 62 builds in a 28-day pause: no execution or other writ to enforce a judgment, and no writ to enforce an order to pay money, may issue until 28 days after entry, unless the court directs otherwise. That gives the losing party breathing room to weigh post-judgment motions or an appeal before collection efforts start. To extend that pause through an appeal, a party posts a bond or other security — a stay takes effect once the court approves it and lasts as long as the approving order specifies. Courts also have discretion to stay an order certified as final under Rule 54(b), an order to pay money pending entry of judgment, or a judgment pending resolution of post-judgment motions under Rules 50(b), 52(b), 59, 60, or 73. Separate provisions cover injunctions during an appeal, and exempt government entities from posting a bond to get a stay — except in quo warranto cases challenging someone's hold on public office, where the judgment isn't stayed on appeal at all.

The rule sets real structure around the bond itself. It can be a commercial bond from an authorized surety or a personal bond backed by Utah residents with a combined net worth at least twice the bond amount, and personal sureties must file a declaration describing their assets and liabilities. Courts can accept a cash deposit in lieu of a bond, and parties can stipulate to the form and amount by agreement. For the amount, the rule sets a presumptive figure for compensatory damages: the damages plus costs and attorney fees, plus three years of interest — though that amount is capped at $25 million in class actions or multifaction suits without individually proven damages, and no bond at all is required to stay punitive damages. A court can depart from that presumptive amount, up or down, after weighing factors like the debtor's ability to pay, other available security, the risk of dissipated assets, and the likely outcome on appeal — and if a party has already violated a court order or dissipated assets, the court can set the bond without regard to the presumptive figure or its cap. Any party affected by a bond can object to its sufficiency or amount and get a hearing on five days' notice.

Frequently Asked Questions

How soon can a judgment be enforced after it's entered?

Not right away. Rule 62 imposes an automatic 28-day pause on execution or other enforcement writs, unless the court directs otherwise. That window gives the losing party time to consider post-judgment motions or an appeal.

How do I stop the other side from collecting while my appeal is pending?

Post a bond or other security. Once the court approves it, the stay takes effect and lasts for the period the approving order specifies, keeping enforcement paused through the appeal.

How much does my bond need to cover?

The presumptive amount for compensatory damages is the damages themselves, plus costs and attorney fees, plus three years of interest at the applicable rate. The court can adjust that amount based on factors like the debtor's ability to pay, other security available, and the risk that assets get dissipated.

Is there a cap on the bond amount?

Yes, in certain cases. For compensatory damages in a class action certified under Rule 23, or a suit with multiple plaintiffs whose damages aren't proven individually, the bond can't exceed $25 million.

Do I need to post a bond to stay punitive damages?

No. Rule 62 specifically exempts punitive damages from any bond or security requirement.

What if I think the other side's proposed bond is too small?

You can object to the sufficiency of the sureties, the security, or the amount by filing and giving notice of the objection, and you're entitled to a hearing on five days' notice or a shorter time the court sets. The party seeking the stay generally has to justify the bond's sufficiency, unless you're the one asking for an amount above the presumptive figure.

Does the government have to post a bond to get a stay?

No. When the United States, the State of Utah, a political subdivision, or an officer or agency of one of those entities appeals and enforcement is stayed, no bond or other security is required.

Source & verification. Rule text, Advisory Committee Notes, and amendment history are reproduced verbatim from the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Utah Supreme Court. Last verified July 13, 2026. · Official source
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