Call the Orange County Sheriff's Office or the Clerk of the Circuit Court and ask.
a pulisher writ the book
Independent Lens - 1999 Writ Writer - 9.23 was released on: USA: 3 June 2008
praecipe (or spelled precipe) - A written order directing the issurance of a specified writ. writ- a written order, under seal, issued by a court, and commanding the person to whom it is addressed to do or not to do a certain act.
The answer is the writ of habeas corpus
The individual wishing to obtain a writ of judgment must follow due process of law as required by the state in which the judgment is to be filed. Generally that would mean the person owed the debt (plaintiff) would file a civil suit in the appropriate state court against the debtor (defendant). If the issue is one of a Mechanic's Lien against real property owned by the debtor, the person to whom money is owed can contact the county recorder/assessor's office in the county where the property is located for information on how to file a claim.
house search is the answer
Writ of Assistance
There is no county in the U. S. with the name Writ.
A "Writ of Extradtion" sometimes called a "Governor's Warrant."
24 hours
A Bench Warrant - if you fled out of state - when you are caught and arrested - you will be returned via a Writ of Extradition, sometimes called a Governor's Warrant.
A writ is the name for any order from a court directing someone to do something. A writ of arrest is a warrant, meaning that the person named in the writ is suspected of committing a crime and there is reasonable cause to detain him or her on that suspicion. An alias warrant means it is the second or subsequent warrant issued in the same case and no plea has been entered in the proceeding. Alias warrants are used in other circumstances, but are common in cases where the warrant is issued due to the named defendant failing to appear in court on the original charge.
writ of assistance
Writ of Assistance
A writ of arrest is a document issued by the court allowing a person to be arrested. It is usually delivered by a police officer. An alias for this would be a warrant of arrest.
The term lookout notice is another word for a warrant. A warrant is a writ issued by the judge to have a person arrested for a crime or failure to appear in court.
You don't file a writ to be brought to court. You file a writ to have someone else brought to court. As to how long the court has to execute a writ, the writ itself will say how long it is good for. In some places, a warrant never expires, you could be brought in 50 years after the warrant was issued. However, if the state has a statute of limitations then that may apply. But if you're not in the state the statute of limitations does not apply. So it could be anything up to forever.