injunction
A general term for an order issued by a court.
A final court order that remains in effect indefinitely.
A court order that is effective for a limited time.
An injunction issued by a federal court.
A temporary court order, effective until a further hearing.
An injunction granted before a full hearing on the merits.
A serious or severe warning or order.
The injunction stops something from happening.
The injunction officially forbids something.
A formal word for forbidding something by law.
The injunction makes it necessary for something to happen.
The injunction legally requires something to be done or not done.
The injunction limits the actions of a person or entity.
Used to specify who or what the injunction is targeted at.
Used to specify the activity or subject matter of the injunction.
The act of violating the terms of a court injunction.
A common verb for a court officially giving an injunction.
For a court to officially give an injunction.
To successfully obtain an injunction.
To try to obtain an injunction from a court.
To officially end or remove an injunction.
A more formal way to say 'get an injunction'.
To formally request a court to issue an injunction.
To force an injunction on someone.
To succeed in a legal case to get an injunction.
To submit the official documents to a court to request an injunction.
For a higher court to confirm that a previous injunction was correct.
For a higher court to rule that a previous injunction was wrong.
To get an official document, like an injunction, from a court.
For a court to decide not to grant an injunction.
To do what an order or warning tells you to do.
To act in accordance with an order or warning.
To deliberately not do what an order or warning says.