One of the first questions people ask when they find out they need a surety bond is: how much is this going to cost me? The honest answer is: it depends. But “it depends” doesn’t have to mean “we can’t tell you anything useful.” There are clear factors that determine surety bond pricing, and understanding […]
When a client walks into your office with a civil dispute, one of the first practical questions you’ll face is which side of the caption they belong on. That answer doesn’t just shape your strategy. It also determines the kind of court bond you may need to file on their behalf. Plaintiff bonds and defendant […]
When a client petitions to be appointed guardian of a minor or a disabled adult in Illinois, the surety bond is one of the steps that can stall the case if it isn’t handled early. The Illinois Probate Act treats the bond as the financial backstop that ensures the guardian carries out their fiduciary duties. […]
Texas doesn’t give judgment debtors much breathing room. A creditor can initiate garnishment and turnover proceedings the moment a judgment is signed, even though execution itself waits 30 days. That timeline puts attorneys in a position where the bond paperwork needs to be ready almost before the ink dries. If your client is heading into […]
Filing a notice of appeal in California does not stop the clock on collection. For most money judgments, the only thing standing between an appellant and a sheriff’s levy is a supersedeas bond, which California courts technically call an undertaking. Attorneys who litigate civil appeals in California should know the basic framework before the trial […]
If someone is wrongfully holding property that belongs to you, Florida law gives you a legal tool to recover it before your case ever goes to trial. It's called a writ of replevin — and while the concept is straightforward, the process involves specific legal steps, court filings, and a surety bond that must be […]
Being named executor of an estate in New York comes with significant responsibility — and before you can take a single action on the estate's behalf, New York's Surrogate's Court may require you to post a probate bond. For many first-time executors and administrators, this is an unexpected step that can delay the entire process […]
When a court appoints someone to manage money or property on behalf of another person — a minor, an incapacitated adult, or a deceased person's estate — it rarely takes that appointment on faith alone. In most cases, the court requires the appointed fiduciary to post a bond before they can begin their duties. That […]
Surety bonds aren't meant to last forever — and in some cases, they don't make it to their intended end date. Whether you're a principal looking to exit a bond early, an obligee trying to understand your protections, or an attorney advising a client on what cancellation actually means, it helps to know the rules […]