Home (Enjoin)
Home  
 
 
Home » Law » Enjoin


 

Enjoin

Law EnhancementsEnjoining

Enjoining - An order by the court telling a person to stop performing a specific act.
For legal advise regarding Enjoining, you can contact our legal staff via phone (800) 341-2684 or email myweblawyer@aol.com .

 


Enjoin: To require a person by order of the court to perform, to abstain or resist from some act.

Enjoin
v. for a court to order that someone either do a specific act, cease a course of conduct or be prohibited from committing a certain act.

Enjoin: Direct or to impose by court order.
Equivalent: A patent that relates to the same invention and shares the same priority application as a patent from a different issuing authority.

Enjoin - To require a person to perform, or abstain or desist from some act.
Evidence - Any form of proof legally presented at a trial through witnesses, records, documents, etc.

enjoinTo order a person to perform, or to abstain and desist from performing a specified act or course of conduct. See injunction.

enjoin: to require a person, by writ of injunction from a court of equity, to perform or to abstain or desist from some act ...

enjoin - See injunction.
entrapment - In criminal procedures, a complete defense.

ENJOIN - To order a person to cease performing a certain act. Circuit courts may enjoin a person from acting in certain cases.

enjoin: To order or require; to order that something be stopped.
equitable: (1) Describes civil suits in "equity" instead of in "law." In the legal history of England, courts of "law" could order only the payment of damages.

enjoin To require a party to do something, or refrain from doing something; to grant an injunction against.
enter To record an order, judgment, or other decision of the court in the court's records.

ENJOIN - To forbid; restrain.
Endowment - The transfer of money or property (usually as a gift) to a public organization for a specific purpose, such as medical research or scholarships.

TO ENJOIN. To command; to require; as, private individuals are not only permitted, but enjoined by law to arrest an offender when present at the time a felony is committed or dangerous wound given, ...

Enjoining - An order by the court telling a person to stop performing a specific act.
Entrapment - A defense to criminal charges alleging that agents of the government induced a person to commit a crime he/she otherwise would not have committed.

And I hereby enjoin upon the people so declared to be free to abstain from all violence, unless in necessary self-defense; and I recommend to them that, in all cases when allowed, they labor faithfully for reasonable wages.

See also: chancery enjoin equitable injunction writ
The People's Law Dictionary by Gerald and Kathleen Hill Publisher Fine Communications ...

The numerous statutes enjoining tillage and discouraging pastoral farms - or in other words requiring that agriculturists should turn from what was profitable to what was unprofitable - had consequently no substantial effect, ...

Writ An order of the court enforcing the law or its separate orders by directing that some act be performed, as opposed to an order of judgment declaring a debt (as in a case for damages in tort or breach of contract) or enjoining some future ...

[Latin, we enjoin, from mandare to enjoin]
: an extraordinary writ issued by a court of competent jurisdiction to an inferior tribunal, a public official, an administrative agency, a corporation, ...

The punishment for defamation, in this court, is payment of costs and penance enjoined at the discretion of the judge.

"It commonly consists in a party's doing otherwise than he is enjoined to do, or not doing what he is commanded or required by the process, order or decree of the Court.

The power of federal courts to enjoin union activity was restricted by the Federal Anti-Injunction (Norris-LaGuardia) Act of 1932, and many states passed similar laws.

"Lawful" properly implies a thing conformable to or enjoined by law; "Legal", a thing in the form or after the manner of law or binding by law. A writ or warrant issuing from any court, under color of law, is a "legal" process however defective.

See also: Court, Law, Person, Action, State

Law EnhancementsEnjoining

 
 rssRSS