Defendants who refuse to execute deeds pursuant to a court decree in a divorce are not uncommon. In Massachusetts, a certified copy of the divorce decree ordering the conveyance can be recorded in the land records and will transfer the title of the defendant. The attorney who represented you at the time of your divorce should have followed through on this issue at that time. You should call her/him and ask if the recording of the decree will effectively transfer your ex-husbands interest and if so you should get that decree recorded ASAP. You should also ask the attorney to check to see if the deed to girlfriend was recorded and if so what effect that deed would have on the title. Attorneys should be encourged to follow through on legal matters they have been paid to handle.
You could be found in contempt.
You can be found in contempt of court and a warrant will be issued for your arrest. Added: If it was court ordered as part a sentence of probation, your probation might be revoked and you could be remanded to jail to serve the remainder of your sentence behind bars.
King Henry VIII ordered the execution of John Fisher. John Fisher was found out to be guilty during his court case. The penalty for his crimes was death.
Yes it can. Actually I was just in court yesterday and my ex was ordered to have a test done. I do not believe that it is common but we currently have joint custody and I am fighting for full custody. My ex works in a hospital along with his girlfriend. My 12 year old son found vials of morphine in his drawer- that is a drug that is not prescribed but given in the hospital. I asked that he be drug tested. We will now wait and see what the results show.
Depends on what for. If they are ordered to return your kids they typically wait until they are found in contempt to return them. They dont mine paying fines with tax money.
Not exactly. But they can still find you at fault for the claim even if the court system doesn't.
If this was a court-ordered arbitration, that information would be forwarded to the judge who ordered the arbitration in the first place and would factor into their decision in the case. If this is a case of binding arbitration, and the referee found in your favor, then you win.
Federal law limits it to 18 years old
Maid Marian was either a ward of the noble court under the protection of the king, or a maternal cousin according to the accounts I have found.
The child is always free to express their wishes, either in court or by writing a letter to the judge in charge of their custody/visitation. If the judge feels the child provides valid reasons why they no longer wish to visit their father, the visitation order may be modified. However, court ordered visitation must continue until that happens, if it happens. Otherwise, the mother could be found in contempt of court and fined or even jailed for their child's failure to obey court ordered visitation.
There typically isn't going to be one. You were found guilty and charged, the court ordered you to pay and you haven't. They could issue a bench warrant.
If you were ordered by a judge, or via a court order, to do certain things by a certain time - and you don't do it, yes, you can be found in contempt for violating a court order. If you are just failing to fulfill an administrative requirement of the law, no, not contempt.