Yes, in Family Court Division of the Circuit Court.
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.
Call the court where you filed and inquire there.Call the court where you filed and inquire there.Call the court where you filed and inquire there.Call the court where you filed and inquire there.
Because - if you are summoned to a court of law to answer for your actions, or hear the outcome of a judgement, you mustattend - or face arrest ! The restraining order will not be enforced in the court, since you have been legally ordered by the judge to be in the presence of the complainant.
yes probably, the woman cannot deny she contacted the man as the police can check the phone records. if the man is only having 1 trial then i wud suggest he brings that up but if hes a having a court hearing about the restraining order aswell then i suggest he brings the phone call subject up on that court hearing
A petition for a restraining order must normally be filed in the same county where the defendant lives, because the court must have personal jurisdiction over the defendant.
Contact the court and ask for a POSTPONEMENT, giving the reason. It will probably be granted and they will re-schedule the date. If you don't do this, and simply fail to show up, the complaint will be dismissed for "want of prosecution."
Bankruptcy can be filed at the Bankruptcy court for the area you are in. For instance in Northern Florida, it's the Florida Northern District Bankruptcy Court.
Several possibilities: The court, and/or the advocate's office, may attempt to contact the petitioner to determine if they were coerced into not attending the hearing or were kept away forcibly, and/or determine if they still wished the order.ANS#2:If the Complainant/Plaintiff or his Council do not appear before the Court on the date fixed then the Court builds up an impression that the
Call or visit the court where the Will was filed. You can obtain the proper form for filing, fill it out and sign it, and then file it with the court for a hearing.
No definitive answer can be given. Unless filed as an "emergency" action, the hearing will be added to the court's docket and assigned a hearing date in the norml course of events.
If there was a restraining order preventing one parent from seeing their children, and you have not filed for, or been given an extension on that order, it's best to take the matter back to court. You should have your original custody agreement amended to reflect the fact that there was a restraining order keeping the parent from the child.
No. Judgments can only be granted by the court, after a lawsuit has been filed and won.