When a restraining order is filed it is initially issued temporarily, until the case is heard in court, provided the judge is satisfied there is enough evidence to believe that a domestic violence or repeat abuse is occurring. When the case gets to court the judge will hear both sides of the case and make his final ruling. The judge could either dismiss the case or be satisfied that such an abuse or repeat violence is occurring and that the restraining order will then need to be final. A final order of restraint generally lasts for one year or until the petitioner files a voluntary dismissal of the case. In the case where such an order is extended until further order of the court, this order can extend beyond the year, until the court orders otherwise.
A court order is enforceable the minute a judge signs it. In reality however, this is timeframe is usually extended to the time when the order is recorded in the Court Clerk's office.
If you mean after the expiration of the court order? Not unless it is by mutual agreement of both parties which then constitutes a private contract. If there is some necessity to extend it, you could return to court and file a motion to have the court order extended, but you would have to show good cause to the court as to why your petition should be granted.
No it is not the same thing at all.
Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.Yes. The final account must be filed and allowed by the court in order to close the estate. An executor who refuses to file a final account should be reported to the court. The judge can compel the executor to file the final account so the court, and the heirs, can review the disposition of the estate by comparing it to the inventory and the distribution to heirs.
Yes, if they find the environment to be unsuitable or the parent to be unfit. Final custody is determined by the court system, without further detail I can't tell you what to do from here. Maybe try asking a lawyer on avvo.com
Arrange visitation with whoever has custody of your children. Court should be the final resort not the first one.
What was the matter concerning? More explicit information is needed in order to render an answer or opinion.
The Administrator should bring the situation to the attention of the court and the court can issue an order. Non-compliance of the order will result in the surviving spouse being held in contempt of court and the court can issue further sanctions.
They want to make sure there are no further claims against the estate. Yes it will delay the heirs receiving their distribution.
No. Interfaces themselves cannot be instantiated, so in order to be useful you must make a subclass. The final keyword will make a class unable to be extended, which would defeat the point of using an interface.
Temporary child custody lasts for as long as it takes to have a final order put into place by the court. If you have never taken the matter to court, then what you actually have is called defacto custody.