What happens if both parties violate a restraining order?
The question makes no sense. There is no payment of a restraining order. To obtain a restraining order, you either contact your local law enforcement agency and have a temporary order filed, or you motion the courts for an order, in which case you pay a motion fee to the court. Nothing is paid to the plaintiff, and the only reason your landlord would be involved is if he is the plaintiff or the defendant.
No, but violations of such do. A restraining order is a civil order.
If you filed the restraining order, you can withdraw it. You must go back to the court where you filed the restraining order and ask that it be dropped.
No evidence is necessary for a temporary restraining order. What happens is when you go into court and get a restraining order they give a temporary restraining order until trial. You can then push the date back a few times and extend it. Some people would argue this is how you get custody of children in a divorce situation. For a long term restraining order you will need documented cases of abuse.
Depends on the reason for the restraining order but I don't think, considering its temporary for whatever reason, it would count as a criminal offense.
Usually, a "temporary restraining order" will expire according to its own terms. This means that the order itself will specify a date or event when the order is no longer effective. If a restraining order does not have such a limitation in it, then it is not a temporary order. If you are the person the restraining order benefits and you wish to drop it, you should apply to the court for an order vacating the restraints.
You will probably serve time in juvenile detention center.
Yes, return to court and request that the restraining order be withdrawn.
By obeying it!
Do not make contact! The other person broke the restrain order. Not you. But if YOU make contact YOU broke the order and can be charged with a misdemeanor. Added: Maintain records of any calls from the plaintiff. You could use them against the plaintiff at trial.
If the plaintiff (meaning the one who asked for the restraining order) violates the very order they requested, and seeks out the other party then they could be subject to the same penalty as the person against whom the order was sought. The options which the judge may exercise are broad. It can become very complicated depending upon the restrictions the judge set in place. Since it was a TEMPORARY order - the judge COULD just vacate the order and dissolve it.
"If a restraining order is placed on you because of supposed aggression or assault, a battery attorney can help you prove in court that the plaintiff was never in any danger. Thus, you prove the restraining order was baseless and it becomes moot."