It is likely a warrant will be issued for arrest
The case would be drop
In all probablity the judge will issue a warrant for his/her arrest.
The court will enter a default judgment against them. Better to show up and have a say in what is going to happen.
A default judgment is nothing more than a judgment obtained because defendant did not show up for court. In Texas, when a default judgment is entered, the petitioner gets all that they have asked for.
Warrant for your arrest.
Yes. Its the same as not showing up for other court dates.
Can you type english please?
If the respondent does not want to be served, it is really not up to the petitioner to locate him. What the court wants is a concerted effort in locating the respondent so that later the respondent cannot say that no effort was made. Keep a journal of your efforts to show the court. Make an entry for every phone call, every address check, every mutual friend you talk to, every possible employer you contact, etc. You can relay this information then to the court as you learn about the individual's whereabouts, but it probably will not result in the individual being served.
If you show up in court and it is discovered that you have an open and un-served warrant out for you, you will be taken into custody, transported to the law enforcement agency and booked, and then returned to court for arraignment.
You run the risk of being arrested to show up over there, unless you presents a valid impeachment for not to appear at the Federal Court.
More commonly referred to as a "restraining order" or a "no-cointact order." It is an order issued by the civil court at the request of the petitioner, if they can show sufficient legal grounds to be protected, from the unwanted advances of the respondant, against whom the order is issued. It is a valid court order and a violater of it can either be arrested and/or cited for contempt of court.