July 8, 2026
Injunction Bonds Explained: The Security You Post to Get a TRO or Preliminary Injunction

When a party asks a court to order someone to stop doing something — to halt construction, freeze an account, or stop using a trade secret — the court often will not grant that order for free. It typically requires the requesting party to post an injunction bond first. The bond protects the other side […]

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July 2, 2026
Guardianship and Conservatorship Bonds: What the Court Requires and What It Costs

When a court appoints someone to manage the finances of a minor or an incapacitated adult, it usually wants a financial safety net in place first. That safety net is a guardianship or conservatorship bond. It protects the person under protection — the “ward” or “protected person” — if the appointed guardian mismanages or misuses […]

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June 25, 2026
Filing a Writ of Replevin in Florida: Timeline, Bond, and What Trips People Up

A writ of replevin is how you get specific personal property back through the court when someone else will not return it. Florida has one of the clearer replevin statutes in the country, but it also has a step that catches people off guard: if you want to recover the property before the case is […]

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June 17, 2026
Texas Supersedeas Bonds: How to Stop Judgment Collection While You Appeal

When your client loses a money judgment in Texas and wants to appeal, the judgment does not politely wait. The winning party can begin collecting — garnishing accounts, placing liens, seizing assets — even while the appeal is pending. A supersedeas bond is what stops that. Post one, and enforcement is suspended until the appellate […]

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June 12, 2026
Probate Bond Requirements: What Executors, Administrators, and Their Attorneys Should Know

When someone is appointed to manage a deceased person's estate, the probate court often wants a guarantee that they will do the job honestly. That guarantee is a probate bond — also called a fiduciary, executor, or administrator bond. It protects the estate's heirs and creditors if the person in charge mismanages or misappropriates assets. […]

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June 9, 2026
How to Get a Writ of Replevin in California (and the Bond You Need to Move Fast)

A writ of replevin is a court order that lets you recover specific personal property someone else is wrongfully holding. In California, that same remedy goes by a different name: “claim and delivery.” If a client needs equipment, a vehicle, leased assets, or collateral back before a case is fully decided, this is usually the […]

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June 3, 2026
Appeal Bonds in New York: How CPLR 5519 Stays Enforcement

A notice of appeal in New York doesn’t automatically stop a judgment creditor from acting. For most money judgments, the only reliable way to pause enforcement is by filing an undertaking under CPLR 5519. That’s what most practitioners simply call a New York appeal bond. Attorneys handling appeals out of any of the four Departments […]

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May 27, 2026
How Much Does a Surety Bond Cost?

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 […]

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May 21, 2026
Plaintiff Bond vs. Defendant Bond: What’s the Difference in Civil Court?

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 […]

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