Attachment, injunction and mandatory orders — preserving the status quo until a decision.
Interim relief is meant to preserve the status quo or prevent harm until the main claim is decided. The firm handles motions for attachment, injunction and mandatory orders — and defense against them — per the circumstances. Granting interim relief is at the court’s discretion and is not guaranteed.
When clients come to us
- There is a concern that an asset will be dissipated or harmed before a decision
- The other side is acting in a way that may frustrate your rights
- A motion for an interim order was filed against you and you need a defense
What we offer
- Temporary attachment order
- Temporary injunction
- Mandatory (mandamus-type) order
How the process works
- 01
Preliminary review and urgency
Assessing the need for interim relief and whether the conditions are met, per the circumstances.
- 02
Preparing the motion and affidavit
Drafting the motion with a supporting affidavit and evidence.
- 03
Filing and hearing
Filing the motion; an urgent hearing or a provisional order may follow — at the court’s discretion.
- 04
Conducting the proceeding
Representation in the motion or in defense against it. Granting the relief is at the court’s discretion and is not guaranteed.