2. What are Court Orders ?
A court order is the decision of a Judge, Registrar Magistrate as entered in
the records of the court.
In Scotland, it is the decision of a Judge or Sheriff
In SAP HR administration, Court Orders for each employee are maintained
via the Court Orders - GB (Infotype 0070).
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3. Subtypes of Court Orders (SAP)
The Court Orders/Student Loans GB
(0070) infotype is subdivided into various
court order types.
Each of these is represented by an infotype
subtype in table V_T5G16.
SAP delivers all the necessary subtypes
for processing court orders in your
company .
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4. Priorities of Court Orders
Deduction Priority
A further feature of the Court Order Indicator table (V_T5G16) is the setting of deduction
priority against each court order type. Court order deductions are either marked as priority (1),
or non priority (99).
Those with a setting of 1 have the highest priority and enable the claiming of any arrears in
deductions due to insufficient pay. This does not apply to priority 99 court orders.
In addition, the setting in the last column 'Relevant backlog', means that it is possible to carry
over both protected earnings and deductions for outstanding amounts from previous payroll
periods.
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5. Infotype 0070
Infotype 0070 record is to be created
when Employer receives a court order
pertaining to an Employee.
Object ID : It is used to make a
distinction between data records with
the same infotype, subtype, lock
indicator, start date, and end date. It is
generated automatically by the
system, and is used by the Payroll
Results report to differentiate between
the payments for different court
orders.
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6. Infotype 0070 (Court Orders)
Monetary values
These details are also given on the court order. The information is used by the payroll to make the court order
deductions from the employee’s pay.
The payroll takes protected earnings into account and automatically keeps a total of arrears and arrears of
protected earnings. For this reason, no retro calculation is required for court order processing.
Standard Payment : Standard amount that will be deducted from the employee's monetary earnings (/141
– Arrestable Earnings).
Protected Earnings: Sum that the court has declared the debtor may retain before any deductions can be
made.
Total Sum: Total amount an employee should pay for this specific court order. Payments will cease once
this total sum has been reached. A total sum should not be specified for a maintenance charge, for example,
since this is a standard payment that should continue indefinitely.
Depending on the court order type, entries need to be made in some or in all of these three fields.
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7. Payees for Court Orders
Payee
Payee details required for paying court orders are
entered here.
Payee: Payee key for bank transfers to display bank
data for payees from table V_T521B.
Postal Code: This field contains the postal (zip) code
for the house address.
Bank No. : This field contains the bank number or
the bank code.
Bank Acct: This field contains the number under
which the account is managed at the bank.
Purpose : The purpose is indicated on the bank
transfer form.
Payment Method: The payment method determines
how payments are to be made, e.g. by check, bank
transfer or bill of exchange.
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8. Setting Deduction Periods for Court Orders
Payment Periods/Dates
Specifies when the court order payments are to be made, and the frequency of such payments.
1st Payment Period/ 1st Payment Date: Enter the payroll period in which the first payment should be
made.
Interval in periods: Enter the number of periods that should lie between two consecutive payments.
If you choose to determine your payment schedule via payroll period, you must also enter the number of
periods that should lie between two consecutive payments using the interval in periods field. If you make
no entry in the interval in periods field, a repayment occurs in every period from the first payment period
Interval/ Unit : If Payment date is chosen to determine Payment schedule, then specify the interval
between each payment, using the interval and time unit fields.
Payment history
The Payment History option displays a payment history for the court order concerned. It shows the total
deductions made for this specific court order since it became effective, the deduction arrears, protected earnings
arrears, and accounting status (last payroll pay date).
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9. Admin / Processing Fee for Court Orders
Administration fee
Defines the administration fee that company can deduct to
process court orders
Constant fee: The constant fee serves to define the processing
fee. It is overridden when the processing fee is entered
separately.
Three standard constants are provided in the table T511P for the
administration fee for court orders.
CORT1 - England and Wales
CORT2 - Scotland
CORT3 - Northern Ireland
Any custom constant that is to be created should start with
CORT
Processing Fee: The sum entered here is the fee that the
company may deduct from the employee's earnings. It can be
defined through the Constant fee, or keyed in to this field
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10. Table Driven Court Order Deductions
Annual Changes and Deductions
Depending on the type of Court Order, there are
predefined percentage deductions in the table
V_T5G15.
These are updated according to government guidelines
and determine the amount to be deducted.
This is applicable for Court Order types EWC, EWF,
EWT, SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCEA, SCMA, SEA
For these types any value in Standard Payment field is
overwritten by value from the table
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11. Attachable Earnings
Attachable earnings are defined by the legislation relevant to the particular order.
AEOs can only be applied to certain categories of earnings, referred to as attachable earnings.
The 1971 Act defines ‘earnings’ as:
- wages and salary (including bonuses, fees, overtime and commission)
- pension (for past service and compensation for loss of employment)
- statutory sick pay
- holiday pay or other pay advances
Basically, only monetary components are treated as Attachable earnings.
but excludes
- armed forces pay, a tax credit, wages payable to a person as a seaman, disability pension, statutory
maternity pay, statutory adoption pay, statutory paternity pay, guaranteed minimum pension (as provided
by the Pension Scheme Act 1993), statutory redundancy pay, sums payable by any Public Department of
the Government of Northern Ireland or of a territory outside the UK.
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12. Attachable Earnings Contd..
Deduction to be made from what is left from the attachable earnings (as defined by the 1971 Act)
after you have deducted:
Income tax (PAYE)
National Insurance contributions
Superannuation or pension contributions (excluding free standing additional voluntary
contributions and contributions to stakeholder pension schemes).
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13. Normal Deduction and Protected Earnings
Normal deduction
The NDR is the amount that the court calculates is reasonable to pay employee’s debt(s). In the case of an
order for payment of maintenance, it is the amount that the court considers necessary and reasonable for the
maintenance of a child or spouse. (Ref: Standard Payment field in IT0070)
The NDR is usually expressed in an order as a weekly or monthly rate. This amount can be adjusted
proportionally if earnings are paid at unusual intervals
Protected earnings
The PER/PEP is the amount that the court calculates is necessary for your employee’s family and household
bills. You should set aside the protected earnings before making a deduction.
(Ref: Protected Earnings field in IT0070)
Protected earnings are usually expressed in an order as a weekly or monthly rate. This amount can be adjusted
proportionally if earnings are paid at unusual intervals
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14. Calculating Deductions: Priority and Non-priority orders
The orders referred to in this section fall into two categories:
• Priority AEO : AEOs for maintenance or fines
• Non- Priority AEO: AEOs for civil debts
Major Difference between Priority & Non Priority Orders
- In Priority Orders, any shortfall in the normal deduction or the protected earnings is carried forward from
pay day to pay day until it is cleared.
- Whereas in Non Priority orders any shortfall is not carried forward.
Note: When an employer takes up to £1.00 for administration costs, it can reduce the employee’s earnings
below the protected earnings rate.
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15. Calculations for Non-priority AEOs
Normal procedure for each pay-day
As per the Court Order, PER = £151.15 & NDR = £25
Calculate your employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £191.27
Set aside his protected earnings £151.15
This leaves £40.12
Take off the normal deduction £25
This leaves £15.27
Now:
Send the £25 normal deduction to the court
Deduct £1, Admin Charge from the remainder for making the deduction
Pay employee his protected earnings (£151) and the remainder (£14.27), i.e. £165.27 in total
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16. Calculations for Non-priority AEOs Contd…
Attachable earnings too low to allow full deduction
If employee earns less than usual, even then his protected earnings must be set aside even if that does not leave
enough for the normal deduction.
As per the court order, PER = £151.15 & NDR = £25
Calculate your employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £171.27
Set aside his protected earnings £151.15 which leaves £20.12 i.e., only £20.12 of the normal deduction can
be met
Now:
Send £20.12 to the court
Deduct £1, Admin Charge from employee’s protected earnings for making a deduction (even if this reduces
your employee’s income below the protected earnings rate)
This leaves £150.15 to be paid to the employee.
The deduction is £4.88 short of the normal deduction of £25, but do not carry this deficit forward to the next
pay-day. The normal deduction rate for a non-priority order should never be exceeded.
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17. Calculations for Non-priority AEOs Contd…
Attachable earnings below protected earnings
If employee’s attachable earnings are less than his protected earnings, pay him the full attachable earnings. Do
not carry forward the shortfall in the protected earnings or the normal deduction to the next pay-day.
As per the court order, PER = £151.15 & NDR = £25
Calculate employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £141.27
As the protected earnings rate is £151.15, you cannot
- make the normal deduction (£25) or
- take £1 from the sum paid to employee as you have made no deduction
Now:
Pay employee £141.27
Do not carry forward the £9.88 balance of protected earnings or the £25 unpaid normal deduction. Either of
the deductions should not be taken into account at the next pay-day.
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18. Calculations for Priority AEOs
Normal procedure for each pay-day
As per the court order , PER = £151.15 & NDR = £25
Calculate employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £191.27
Set aside his protected earnings £151.15, which leaves £40.12
Take off the normal deduction £25, which leaves £15.12
Now:
Send the £25 normal deduction to the court or Agency
Deduct £1, Admin fee from the remainder for making the deduction
Pay employee his protected earnings (£151.15) and the remainder (£14.12), i.e. £165.27 in total
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19. Calculations for Priority AEOs Contd…
Attachable earnings too low to allow full normal deduction
If employee earns less than usual, even then his protected earnings must be set aside even if that does not leave
enough for the normal deduction. This deduction needs to be recovered at the earliest
As per the court order , PER= £151.15 & NDR = £25
First pay-day
Calculate your employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £171.27
Set aside his protected earnings £151.15 which leaves £20.12, i.e., only £20.12 of the normal deduction can
be met.
Send £20.12 to the court or Agency, and carry forward the £4.88 deficit in the normal deduction to the
following pay-day
Deduct £1, admin fee from your employee’s protected earnings for making a deduction
This leaves £150.15 to be paid the employee.
Contd..
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20. Calculations for Priority AEOs Contd…
Second pay-day
Calculate employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £191.53
Set aside his protected earnings £151.15 which leaves £40.38
Now:
Send £29.88 to the court or Agency (£25 normal deduction + £4.88 deficit carried forward from the
previous pay-day)
Deduct £1, Admin fee from the remainder for making the deduction
Pay employee his protected earnings (£151.15) and the remainder (£9.50), i.e. £160.65 in total
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21. Calculations for Priority AEOs Contd…
Attachable earnings below protected earnings
If employee does not earn enough to cover even his protected earnings in one wage period, then both the
shortfall in his protected earnings and the whole normal deduction should be carried forward to the next pay day
As per the court order, PER = £151.15 & NDR = £25
First pay-day
Calculate employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £143.27
As the protected earnings rate is £151.15, you cannot:
- make the normal deduction (£25) or
- deduct £1 from the sum paid to employee as you have made no deduction
Now:
Carry forward £25 normal deduction to the following pay-day
Carry forward £7.88 deficit in protected earnings to the following pay-day
Pay employee £143.27
Contd…
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22. Calculations for Priority AEOs Contd…
Second pay-day
Calculate employee’s attachable earnings, e.g. £191.57
Set aside his protected earnings (£151.15 + £7.88 deficit) £159.03
This leaves £32.54
The total deduction due is £25 (from the previous pay-day)+ £25 (from this pay-day) = £50
Now:
Send £32.54 to the court or Agency, and carry forward £17.46 deficit to the following pay-day
Deduct £1, admin fee from employee’s protected earnings for making a deduction
Pay employee £158.03
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23. Student Loans
Students start repaying their loan once they've left higher education and their income is more than a certain
amount - the threshold. If their income is high enough, their repayments start in the April after they leave
higher education.
Infotype 0070, used with the Collection of Student Loans subtype (CSL), allows you to record and deduct
student loan repayments as specified by the Inland Revenue.
The system calculates the student loan deduction for an employee with reference to the current earnings
thresholds and percentage deduction rates set by the Inland Revenue.
The income threshold for starting to make repayments is £15,000 a year (£1,250 a month or £288 a week).
Once an employee's income goes over the threshold, you deduct 9 per cent of their income that's over the
threshold towards repaying their loan.
Collection of Student Loans (CSL) deductions are shown on the employee's payslip. Employers are
required to pass the CSL to the Collector of Taxes, together with tax and NIC remittance.
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24. Student Loans Start Notice
Start Identification
Notif. Source – Select one of the
following start identifier for
commencement of CSL deduction of an
employee:
- P45 (with 'Y' in the Student Loan
deductions to continue box 5)
- Start Notice (SL1)
- P46 Form (without a form P45 with a
tick in box D (Student Loans) )
- RTL2 – Select this option for
recommencement of CSL deduction.
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25. Student Loans Start Notice
Issued / Received Date – Enter the issue or receive date of the CSL deduction notification. The date
entered in this field is used to determine the priority sequence to be applied when there is more than one
court order/student loan for an employee.
When you electronically upload new or amended Collection of Student Loan data for an employee from the
Inland Revenue, the relevant Infotype 0070 record is delimited from the date that the new data is received,
and a new Infotype 0070 record is automatically created with the new CSL details.
Process ID : This field is used to track such automatic changes made to an employee’s CSL Infotype
record.
The new (or amended) Infotype 0070 record, updated electronically via the e-Filing Incoming process, now
contains a unique XML identifier code in the Process ID field. With this identification code, you can cross-
check any changes to this Infotype record with records of all CSL changes received from the Inland
Revenue during e-Filing Incoming processing.
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26. Student Loans Stop Notice
Stop Identification
Notification Source – Either of the following:
- Stop Notice (SL2)
- RTL1 Form – Select this option to stop the CSL deductions temporarily.
Issue / Recd – Enter a date with respect to RTL1 form, to notify the date on which this stop
identifier was issued or received. The system stops Student Loan deduction from the payroll
period in which this date falls.
Process ID - If e-Filing for Great Britain is implemented and this Infotype record has been
automatically updated when a SL2 stop notice is received, the field Process ID will be filled
with a unique identification number, allowing you to trace the source of this change to your
Infotype data.
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27. Function GCRTO (G000 Schema)
The function is necessary when calculating the court order deductions to be paid by an employee during a
particular pay period.
It makes use of the Court Orders infotype P0070 as well as the working net pay amount.
It will fill the wage types /Cxy, where:
- 'x' is the type of court order e.g. Council Tax. This directly corresponds to the subtype field in the P0070
record.
- 'y' is the number to identify the value held in the wage type
1 = This period deduction amount
2 = Total arrears of deductions
3 = Total arrears of protected earnings
4 = Deduction of admin, costs for period
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28. E Wage Types
E wage types are adjustment wage types. Each statutory wage type has a corresponding E wage type, for
example /101 (Total Gross) has the corresponding wage type E101 (total gross adjustment).
They enable adjustment of statutory cumulative totals that will be reported on at end of year. They are
processed by the personnel calculation rule GEOY.
They can be used as positive or negative values and are available for use on Infotype 15 (Additional
Payments).
Whenever E wage types are used, warning exception messages will be generated by the payroll driver.
Note: E wage types are not recommended for general use and should only be used in exceptional circumstances.
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29. E Wage Types Contd..
Integration
When E wage types are used, the RESULTS (RT) table as well as the CUMULATIVE RESULTS (CRT)
table are affected.
There are two reasons for this:
- This allows correct auditing of the results
- In the payroll driver, the CRT is only ever filled from the RT with the function ADDCU, so the value has
to be on the RT to feed the CRT.
The personnel calculation rule GEOY is situated at the end of the subschema GNTO, so that only wage
types already in the RT are affected. This means that use of adjustment wage types can only directly affect
the corresponding technical wage type and not indirectly any other wage types.
Note: Using E101 will adjust /101 only, and will not adjust any other wage types such as /121.
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30. Reporting
RPLCORG0
Transaction Code – PC00_M08_CCRT
RPLCORG0 provides a summary of the court orders processed in a given time frame, based on either
consolidated results or individual periods that have been processed and paid in payroll during the selected
Timeframe.
Consolidated report - displays a summary of each court order deduction type processed in the selected
timeframe.
Individual period report- lists each court order deduction individually for all the payroll periods in the
selected time frame.
The advantages of running the Consolidated report, as opposed to the Individual period report, are:
Considerably faster processing time.
The ability to delimit court orders that have been paid off, thereby automatically delimiting the infotype
Court Orders GB (0070) record.
The ability to automatically update infotype Court Orders GB (0070) records.
Note: The court order report does not list the court orders that have the court order type Collection of Student
Loan (CSL).
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31. Reporting Contd…
RPCSCOG0
Transaction Code - PC00_M08_CSCO
This report displays Scottish court orders details for any employee(s) selected
The output displays in detail, the information relating to the employee and all relevant court orders in the
chosen time frame, including employee name and number, arrestable earnings, court order effective date,
type, pay frequency and reference number.
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