If the court orders you to use a specific person, then yes, you have to use that specific person. If the order says "Jane Doe or some other authorized provider" then you can use the other company.
You must hire an attorney and show that the parent needs the evaluation and the court will set a date for a hearing to see if the concern is valid and from there a decision is made.
A person who violates a court order is often referred to as a "contemnor" or simply as having engaged in "contempt of court."
It means they ordered to transport an inmate somewhere. Most likely to court or to have an evaluation done that they might need before they have to go back to court for sentencing.
The only person who can remove a beneficiary is the testator or a judge by a court order.The only person who can remove a beneficiary is the testator or a judge by a court order.The only person who can remove a beneficiary is the testator or a judge by a court order.The only person who can remove a beneficiary is the testator or a judge by a court order.
This is a circumstance where a person fails to adhere to a court order which may be for a specified time. Non-adherence to such order means the violation of the order. e.g court summons.
It depends a little on what legal context you're talking about (for example, a custody dispute, a hearing to determine competency to stand trial, an ongoing case to address issues of child abuse/neglect), and whether you want yourself evaluated, or someone else. So, assuming you are involved in a court case and you want a court-ordered evaluation of yourself, tell your attorney you want a psychological evaluation and consider their advice about whether it's a good idea. If they think it is, they can ask the judge to order it. The judge can say yes or no, based on the case and what the attorney for the other side has to say about it. If you want a court-ordered evaluation of someone else, the process is pretty much the same but it may be harder to get it ordered (if the other person doesn't want to have it done, or if their attorney thinks it's a bad idea, or the judge doesn't see the point). If the court *does* order a psychological evaluation, the written report from the evaluation will become part of the record for the court case, and the psychologist may be asked to testify as well. The testing client's attorney will get a copy of the report, which s/he will then copy for the judge and the other attorney. The person who was evaluated may get a written summary of the report, but more likely they will just get verbal feedback from the psychologist.
It means that the person receiving the order is directed by the court to produce to the court, the documents specifically identified in the court order.
You return to the court that issued the child support order. The court can impose sanctions when a person defies a court order.
You have to get a judgment against the person in court first.
If the husband has an order of protection from his wife, it applies everywhere. If a person has a protective order restraining another person from contacting them, and would then like to have contact with that person, the person who obtained the order should go back to the court and ask the court to dismiss the original protective order.
It is a court order preventing one person from having contact with another.