To which department of the court do you apply for enforcement?

First submit it to the people's court for filing. If the people's court fails to execute the application for execution for more than six months from the date of receiving it, the person against whom the application is made may apply to the people's court at the next higher level for execution. After examination, the people's court at a higher level may order the original people's court to execute it within a certain period of time, or decide to execute it by itself or instruct other people's courts to execute it.

The application for execution can be mailed to the court, but it is recommended to submit it directly to the court filing court. The application for compulsory execution is a document that citizens, legal persons or other organizations apply to the people's court with jurisdiction to order the other party to perform its obligations according to the legal documents that have come into force when the other party refuses to perform the obligations determined by the judgment.

To apply for enforcement, you can apply to the court. If you need to submit an application for enforcement, you can execute it in the court's enforcement court or entrust a lawyer to assist you. Find the executive board of the court.

If the losing party fails to perform the judgment of the court, the winning party may apply to the court for compulsory execution, and the specific work shall be carried out by the executive board of the court.

If a case has been filed with the enforcement court, an application for enforcement may be filed with the filing court after the judgment of the court takes effect.

What legal documents can apply to the court for enforcement?

1. Civil and administrative judgments and rulings of the people's courts, civil conciliation statements, administrative compensation judgments and conciliation statements, civil sanctions decisions and payment orders, and criminal incidental civil judgments, rulings and conciliation statements;

2. Administrative penalty decisions and administrative rulings made by the people's courts according to law;

3. The arbitration award and conciliation statement of China arbitration institution;

4. Creditor's rights documents and articles granted by the notary office that are legally enforceable to recover debts;

5. Judgments and rulings made by foreign courts and Taiwan Province provincial courts recognized by the people's courts, and arbitral awards made by foreign arbitral institutions;

6. Other legal documents stipulated by law to be executed by the people's courts.

Legal basis:

Administrative Compulsory Law of the People's Republic of China

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Administrative coercion as mentioned in this Law includes administrative coercive measures and administrative compulsory execution.

Administrative coercive measures refer to the acts that administrative organs temporarily restrict citizens' personal freedom or temporarily control the property of citizens, legal persons or other organizations in the process of administrative management in order to stop illegal acts, prevent evidence from being damaged, avoid harm and control the expansion of danger.

Administrative enforcement refers to the act of an administrative organ or an administrative organ applying to a people's court to enforce the obligations of a citizen, legal person or other organization that fails to perform an administrative decision.