The U.S. Supreme Court is the final court of appeal for both civil and criminal law.
You can usually appeal and they may send you to civil court. They might also send you to a higher form of court.
If the defendant in the case has not exercised their right of appeal, then they have defaulted on their privilege to do so, then the original order of the court becomes fully enforceable. If this is a civil court judgement, there is no option except to file a motion for civil contempt (of the judge's original order) with the court, and getting the other party back to court for a hearing.
Yes
You must contact the Family Court and file an appeal for your objections.
A request to the court to re-consider the sentence handed down.
File a motion with the juvenile court to appeal the sentence.
wont' that be an appeal?
Yes, it is possible to appeal a civil judgment. This involves requesting a higher court to review the decision made by the lower court to determine if any errors were made in the legal process or interpretation of the law.
You would file a motion of appeal to the court's order requesting a re-consideration, and (hopefully) raise some (new) valid points for the court to consider.
A civil warrant or a civil arrest warrant in the state of Arizona is generally filed after failure to appear in court. It is basically the same thing as a bench warrant and is issued by the judge.
"court of final appeal" is a generic term that refers to the highest court whcih has jurisdiction of a particular matter. In criminal law and some civil law, this could be the US Supreme Court, or a State Supreme Court depending on the matter at hand. In most persoanl Civil cases this could be a state Superior Court, or a State Court. I am in Georgia, and for instance a small claims civil suit (under 14,000.00) may be filed in Magistrate Court, and is not appealable. Therefore it is the Court of Final Appeal in regard to a civil small claims case. The specific definition depends on the context of the term.