It is always best to hire a lawyer or legal aid to represent you in your case. If you can`t find a lawyer, your local victim advocate may be able to help you fill out the forms. You can check with the case worker`s office or contact www.fcadv.org for a list of accommodations for victim advocates in your area. If you need to submit these documents yourself, read the instructions carefully and fill in each section with as much specific information as you can specify. Write cleanly and clearly; Be sure to include important dates, specific locations and actions or threats of violence. List any other court cases you have in your application, as they may provide important information for the court. After completing the required forms, you must sign them under oath and submit them to the clerk`s office. For example, one parent may apply for an injunction to prevent the other parent from allowing a third party to have contact with the child if there is evidence that the third party has abused or may abuse the child, or if there is a risk of domestic violence in the presence of the child. 1. Injunction: An injunction prohibiting a person from performing a specific act, including approaching or contacting a particular person. Injunctions (or „protection orders“ or „protection orders“ as they are called in some states) are most often used to protect an adult from abuse, threats of abuse, harassment or harassment.

3. Injunction: Injunctive relief is often only granted in an emergency to prevent injury while the custody case is pending. This is the discretion of the court, in which, in deciding that the plaintiff`s rights are violated, the court assesses the irreparability of the violations and the inappropriateness of the damages in the absence of an injunction against the harm that the granting of an injunction would cause. In a custody case, the court may grant an injunction to a parent who has refused to comply with a custody decision or other aspect of a parenting plan. It can also be used as a tool to prevent one parent from alienating the other or permanently removing a child from one of their parents. A restraining order is a court order, sometimes called a restraining order, that orders a person not to have contact with you. It is a legal way to protect one person from threats or acts of violence by another person. There are four (4) types of civil injunctions that can be filed with your county court clerk: domestic violence, sexual violence, dating violence and repeated violence. Each type has different requirements depending on your relationship with the other person and what happened. Below you will find information about each type of injunction so that you can determine the type of application for an injunction you may be able to file.

Please read carefully. We also have some related FAQs to provide additional information. If you are divorcing and think your former partner will hide assets or hide or destroy assets, it is important to have the help of an experienced and hard-working family lawyer. Detecting and proving fraud in court can be a high bar in an already extremely complicated legal process. Arnold & Smith, PLLC`s family lawyers provide comprehensive representation in divorce and many other family law proceedings. Contact our office today for advice from one of our family law lawyers about your case. NOTE: While an injunction is designed to prevent undesirable behaviour before it begins when persistent fraudulent concealment of assets is discovered, the injunction that the judge would issue to force the person to stop hiding the assets and disclose them would only be called a restraining order. Other types of injunctions that can be issued in divorce cases include suspension orders and injunctions. Under article 114, paragraph 6, where a party to a marriage is bankrupt, a court may issue an interim injunction preventing an insolvency practitioner from distributing dividends to the creditors of the insolvent party. Injunctions are not limited to family law, but are a mechanism used in many civil law situations.

In the context of family law, it may also apply to the division of matrimonial property and other family matters. In fact, the rules of family law do not specifically refer to injunctions, but family courts have the power to order them under the Courts Act.