If the creditor, who has objected to the sequence table, does not claim that the transaction is applied incorrectly, but also objects to a creditor’s claim or his order, which is included in the sequence table, he or she must appeal against the sequence table in the general courts, in short, file a lawsuit against that creditor. Here, the plaintiff is the creditor who objects to the creditor’s receivable or order, which is included in the list. The defendant, on the other hand, is in the position of objecting to his claim or order. If the debtor can file a complaint against the rank sheet, he has no right to file an objection case against the rank sheet.
The Supreme Court has stated in some of its references that “which objections are about the basis and amount of the claim” are objections and therefore should be reported to the general court in the form of an objection case against the order list. E.g:
It emphasizes that “If the plaintiff objects to the amount of his claim, the dispute will have to be resolved in the general court, the claim that the claim that has been recorded in the order list will have to be removed from there due to the statute of limitations will be examined in the general court, and the claim that the creditor’s claim in the line list should be excluded from the list will be examined in the general court”. If no complaints or objections are made to the rank list within 7 days, the rank list becomes final and the right to sue and complain is lost.