Use case · Mortgage litigation
Mortgage litigation: rebuild the full history in minutes
In mortgage litigation — bankruptcy, loss of the benefit of the term, collocation — everything turns on the accuracy of the RDPRM history. Every rank assignment, every partial discharge, every prior notice of exercise changes the creditor payment order. Tablix rebuilds that history from the PDFs in minutes, with child inscriptions correctly attached to their parents.
What's at stake in collocation
Quebec mortgage collocation order is not read in inscription chronology: rank assignments, hypothec preservations, tax legal hypothecs, construction legal hypothecs — it all mixes. One consolidated, ordered, annotated table is the difference between a strong argument and a rushed reconstruction.
Your litigation workflow
- 1
Pull the full RDPRM history on the debtor and the immovable.
- 2
Drop all extracts into Tablix — including historical versions pulled on different dates.
- 3
Tablix ranks parent hypothecs by priority and attaches every child inscription (rank assignment, discharge, preservation) to its parent.
- 4
For each attached inscription, the French remark sentence is generated with correct participle agreement.
- 5
Export to Word, attach to your brief or argument plan.
Integrity of remark sentences
A judge reading your brief will instantly spot a miswritten remark sentence ("Radiation volontaire publié" instead of "publiée"). Tablix bakes grammatical gender into its rendering engine for each of the 112 natures — 112 natures, 112 remark sentences, participle agreement handled automatically. Nothing reaches review without already being correct.
What loses cases
- A rank assignment that inverts collocation order — missed in an 80-page RDPRM extract.
- Hypothec preservation after maturity — changes the nature of the claim.
- Construction legal hypothec filed late but with retroactive effect.
- Renunciation of succession that breaks hereditary transmission of the hypothec.