what are = Registry of Injunctions and Cease and Desist Affidavits =
A court Injunction is the practice of issuing a legal order
An injunction is an equitable remedy in the form of a court order, whereby a party is required to do, or to refrain from doing, certain acts.
Only a judge may issue an injunction.
This depends upon your state's laws and to some degree its court rules. You get an injunction by filing with the appropriate court a complaint or petition alleging the reasons you are entitled to the injunction. The papers are served on the defendant and ultimately there will be a trial in the usual way. If the court agrees with you, it will issue an injunction to prohibit the other party from doing whatever it was doing that was wrong.
"Granted" means that the judge agreed with and allowed whatever was contained in the Preliminary Injunction.
Yes, but if there's a concern this move is permanent, file an injunction exerting jurisdiction and ordering a return of the child.
. For a temporary restraining order, a preliminary injunction, and a permanent injunction, all enjoining defendants, and each of them, and their agents, servants, and employees, and all persons acting under, in concert with, or for them . given that-- the answer would be eighteen months.
An injunction is an order by the court. An injunction of dismissal is just that: An order dismissing all or part of the case before the court. Since the question is fairly ambiguous: Dismissing an Injunction means a previous court order has been cancelled.
Injunction by: Andrea Burke
An injunction forbids a defendant to take or continue an action.
A temporary injunction - is a short term restriction put in place to prevent certain actions by a defendant. For example - a judge may order the defendant not to approach witnesses, or to prohibit them from entering certain business premises. The temporary injunction will usually be enforced by a more permanent ruling on completion of a court case.
Negative injunction is one of equitable remedies. "The court grants negative injunction" means the court order you to stop doing something. For example: if A signed a contract with BBC to perform exclusively on BBC for three years. A breached the contract 1 year later and signed the contract with ABC. Then BBC could sue A repudiated the contract and seek for an injunction. If the court decree the injunction, the order will ask A to stop perform on ABC. This injunction will be considered as a negative injunction.
a court order forcing something to happen
Injunction
He can still file an injunction
There are several ways: At the trial court level: If the order dissolving the injunction has not yet taken effect, make a motion to have the court reconsider its decision to dissolve the injunction. If the order has taken effect but the problems persist or if circumstances have changed, file a petition or motion for an order for reinstatement of the injunction. At the appellate level: If you believe the court made a mistake in dissolving the injunction, take an appeal of the court's decision and ask the appellate court to reverse the lower court's decision and reinstate the injunction.
Injunctions can be either "temporary" or "permanent." Somewhere in the wording of the injunction (you should have received a copy) the terms of the injunction should be spelled out. If the injunction was awarded at your request to protect your minor child it is quite possible that now that she has legally become an adult it might no longer have any effect. If you cannot determine the information from reading the injunction papers, you will have to check with the issuing court to find out.