Judicial Order
(Redirected from Court Order)
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A Judicial Order is a formal court directive that commands or prohibits specific actions and carries legal authority enforceable through judicial power.
- AKA: Court Order, Judicial Directive, Court Decree, Judicial Command, Legal Order.
- Context:
- It can typically require Judicial Order Compliance through judicial order legal obligation.
- It can typically establish Judicial Order Binding Effect via judicial order enforceable authority.
- It can typically specify Judicial Order Required Action through judicial order mandatory directive.
- It can typically prohibit Judicial Order Forbidden Conduct via judicial order restraining provision.
- It can typically include Judicial Order Enforcement Mechanism through judicial order contempt power.
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- It can often modify Judicial Order Legal Rights through judicial order status change.
- It can often create Judicial Order Legal Duty via judicial order obligation imposition.
- It can often protect Judicial Order Party Interests through judicial order relief provision.
- It can often resolve Judicial Order Legal Disputes via judicial order controversy settlement.
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- It can range from being a Temporary Judicial Order to being a Permanent Judicial Order, depending on its judicial order temporal duration.
- It can range from being an Interim Judicial Order to being a Final Judicial Order, depending on its judicial order proceeding stage.
- It can range from being a Mandatory Judicial Order to being a Prohibitory Judicial Order, depending on its judicial order directive nature.
- It can range from being a Domestic Judicial Order to being an International Judicial Order, depending on its judicial order jurisdictional scope.
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- It can have Judicial Order Party Identification for judicial order subject determination.
- It can have Judicial Order Specific Terms for judicial order compliance guidance.
- It can have Judicial Order Effective Date for judicial order temporal application.
- It can have Judicial Order Jurisdiction for judicial order territorial scope.
- It can have Judicial Order Appeal Rights for judicial order review opportunity.
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- Example(s):
- Injunctive Orders, such as:
- Temporary Restraining Order preventing immediate harm.
- Preliminary Injunction maintaining status quo.
- Permanent Injunction providing final relief.
- Provisional Orders, such as:
- International Court Provisional Measure preventing irreparable harm.
- Interim Protection Order ensuring party safety.
- Freeze Order preserving assets.
- Declaratory Orders, such as:
- Declaratory Judgment establishing legal rights.
- Advisory Opinion clarifying legal questions.
- Certification Order determining class status.
- Enforcement Orders, such as:
- Contempt Order punishing order violation.
- Execution Order enforcing judgment.
- Garnishment Order collecting debt.
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- Injunctive Orders, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- Judicial Opinion, which explains reasoning rather than commanding action.
- Legal Advice, which provides guidance rather than binding directive.
- Administrative Rule, which establishes regulations rather than case-specific orders.
- Legislative Act, which creates general law rather than particular command.
- Contract, which binds through agreement rather than judicial authority.
- See: Court, Judge, Judicial Power, International Court Provisional Measure, Injunction, Legal Authority, Court Procedure, Contempt of Court, Legal Remedy, International Tribunal, Judicial Decision.