INJUNTION
In law, an injunction is an order by a court to one or more of the parties in a civil trial to refrain from doing, or less commonly to do, some specified act or acts (the former kind of injunction is called prohibitory or preventive, the latter mandatory). The usual purpose of an injunction is to preserve the status quo in situations in which further acts of the specified type, or the failure to perform such acts, would cause one of the parties irreparable harm (i.e., harm that cannot be adequately remedied by an award of monetary damages). Preliminary, or temporary, injunctions are usually issued before the start of a trial; they expire upon resolution of the proceeding or at an earlier specified time. Permanent, or perpetual, injunctions may be issued at the end of a trial as part of the court’s final judgment; they usually enjoin (or mandate) the specified act or acts permanently or for as long as the relevant circumstances obtain. A temporary restraining order is an unusual type of preliminary injunction that is issued without a hearing and sometimes without notice to the party against whom it is directed; it is valid for only a short period (no more than two weeks) or until such time as a formal hearing on a preliminary injunction may be conducted.
In order to be granted an injunction, the plaintiff must demonstrate that he is likely to suffer irreparable harm without it, that the injunction’s benefit to him outweighs its burden on the defendant, that the injunction is in the public interest, and (in the case of a preliminary injunction) that he is likely to succeed in the eventual trial. Failure to comply with an injunction can result in a charge of contempt of court.
Preliminary and permanent injunctions may be sought to prevent the bulldozing of a historic building, the pollution of a public water supply, the infringement of a copyright, the manual recounting of ballots in a presidential election, or the enforcement of a constitutionally suspect law or executive order. In the area of family law, injunctions may be used to end harassment by an abusive domestic partner or to force payment of child support. In the 1970s and ’80s, mandatory injunctions were used to achieve racial integration in public schools through busing.