Disclaimer: This is a non-functional proof-of-concept website

Enforcement

What happens after the internal process ends

After the internal rounds are exhausted, the matter leaves the platform process and moves into formal court enforcement if payment is still not made.

District Court

The matter can move to court once the internal rounds finish

Once the internal process is exhausted, either side can move to the District Court. No further consent step is needed before court begins.

How the next step works

Once the platform process ends, outside enforcement is a court process rather than another internal round.

  • Either party can start District Court proceedings after exhaustion of the internal process.
  • The other party's permission is not needed.
  • Condensis does not act as the court or decide the case.

Records and support

The platform can still support the court step in limited ways.

  • Platform records can be requested for court use.
  • If the buyer files to enforce payment, Condensis pays a fixed €120 credit once proof of filing is provided.
  • That credit is separate from the main amount being claimed.

Costs

Court enforcement can still bring extra costs and pressure

If a finalised amount remains unpaid, the buyer can move to formal enforcement. Court action may also bring added amounts beyond the unpaid core figure.

Go next

Claim eligibility

Return to the starting point if the real argument is still about whether the cost was ever eligible.

New Agreement

Return to the transaction flow for a new sale.

Court position

The buyer does not need the seller's agreement to pursue formal enforcement once the contract conditions are met.

  • District Court enforcement can follow exhaustion of the internal process.
  • The buyer may seek recovery of the unpaid finalised amount.
  • Additional amounts may also be in issue, including delay sums and interest.

The €120 credit and other costs

The burden of a failed internal resolution process is acknowledged by a €120 credit

  • Condensis pays a fixed €120 credit once proof of District Court filing is provided.
  • That credit is distinct from the seller's reimbursement obligation.
  • Other enforcement costs can still arise and should be treated realistically.