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LSNJLAW > Legal Topics > Family and Relationships > Domestic Violence > How to Get a Restraining Order

How to Get a Restraining Order

 

If you are a victim of domestic violence, you may be able to get protection in the form of a temporary restraining order (TRO) that can later become final. A restraining order is a civil order from the Family Part of the Superior Court. It prohibits the abuser from having any contact with you, including over the telephone, in person, or electronically. That means no phone calls, text messages, or e-mails.

Who qualifies for a domestic violence restraining order?

You can get a domestic violence restraining order if:

  • You are or were married to the abuser.
  • You share child(ren) with the abuser.
  • One of you is pregnant with a child in common.
  • You are over 18 and are currently living with or previously lived with the abuser.
  • Regardless of your age, you are having or did have a dating relationship with an abuser over the age of 18.

Also, to qualify for a TRO, the abuser must have done something that meets the definition of at least one the following crimes: harassment, assault, terroristic threats, criminal mischief, kidnapping, burglary, sexual assault, criminal sexual contact, false imprisonment, criminal restraint, criminal trespass, lewdness, stalking, homicide, robbery, criminal coercion, cyber-harassment, violation of a restraining order, or any crime involving risk of death or serious bodily injury. See The 19 Crimes of Domestic Violence.

When and where should I go to get a domestic violence restraining order?

It is always best to try to get a restraining order as soon as possible after an act of domestic violence occurs. If you wait, you may have to explain to the court why you waited. For instance, victims may wait because they do not know about restraining orders, or because they cannot get to a telephone or to a court. However, if you continue to live with the abuser after the act of domestic violence, a judge may decide that you are not in danger and do not need a final restraining order.

You may seek a TRO at the police department 24 hours a day in the town where you live, where the act of domestic violence occurred, where the abuser lives, or where you are presently sheltered. You may also call or go in-person to the Superior Court (from 8:30 a.m. – 3:30 p.m.) in the county where you live, where the act of domestic violence occurred, where the abuser lives, or where you are presently sheltered.

What do I tell the judge?

It is important for you to give the municipal court judge, superior court judge, or hearing officer details about the most recent incident of domestic violence. If you are specific, your case will be stronger. You should also report any prior incidents of domestic violence between you and the abuser, concentrating on the more recent and more severe incidents that you experienced. This is important even if you did not tell anyone about the prior domestic violence incidents. Tell the judge if another person witnessed them, if you got medical treatment for injuries, or if someone took pictures of injuries or damage from those incidents. Physical proof is not necessary at the time you apply for a TRO but will be useful for getting a final restraining order (FRO).

What relief may I request in a temporary restraining order?

When requesting a TRO, you may request many types of relief along with protection, including the following:

  • Physical custody of any children that you and the abuser have together. The law presumes that a victim who gets a restraining order gets physical custody of the children. You may also request that the abuser’s parenting time be stopped until after the final hearing.
  • Possession of the home where you currently live, even if you are not the owner of the home, you are not on the lease, or you do not pay the bills.
  • Possession of and keys for a vehicle, even if you are not the owner and do not pay for the car.
    Possession of any important documents relating to you or the children, such as passports, birth certificates, etc.
  • Cash or other emergency support, such as payment of rent or mortgage or household bills.

If you choose to stay in the home, the abuser is not allowed to come to the home without police supervision until the final restraining order hearing. If you are granted a FRO, the abuser might be out of the home even longer.

After you provide all of this information to either a police officer or a staff member of the superior court domestic violence unit, they will create the temporary restraining order. It is very important that you review this entire document to make sure it is correct. If anything is missing or is not accurate, you must ask for it to be included or changed. After you sign the first page of this document, you will speak to the municipal court judge if you are at the police station or a superior court judge or domestic violence hearing officer if you are at the superior court. The judge or hearing officer will ask you to explain why you feel you need the order. You should repeat the information in the written document. After you answer the questions, the judge or hearing officer will decide whether to give you a TRO.

What happens after I get my temporary restraining order?

If you receive a TRO, you should keep it with you at all times. Take photos of it to keep on your phone. Make extra copies and keep one at your home and your job, in your car and purse, and give one to your child’s school. The court or police must try to give the abuser notice immediately by serving them with a copy of the order. Once the abuser has notice of the restraining order, the law prohibits them from having any contact with you.

How do I prepare for my final hearing?

As soon as you get your TRO, you should look for the date, time, and place of your final restraining order hearing, listed on page four or five of the restraining order. Before the hearing, think about what your testimony will be and what evidence you may have to prove your case. See Preparing for a Domestic Violence Trial.

How to Get an Adjournment (Later Court Date) for Your FRO Hearing

It is possible to request a later court date for your final restraining order hearing if you need more time to prepare your case, consult with an attorney, or are unable to make that date and time. This is called requesting an adjournment of your case. Your TRO will remain in place. You may request an adjournment of your case either on your court date or before.

Before Your Court Date

If you know before your court date that you will need more time to prepare your case or to consult with an attorney, you can ask the court to give you a later court date. You should call your county’s domestic violence unit and let them know you would like a later court date. To find the number for your county’s domestic violence unit, go to the New Jersey Courts website. Some counties allow you to request an adjournment over the phone, while others will ask that you send a written letter request by email or by the court’s electronic filing system, JEDS. If your county requests a letter, be sure to find out the specific person it should be addressed to. If you do not hear back from the court before your court date, be sure to call back and follow up on your request. Even if you make a request before your court date, you may still have to appear on the court date and make the request in person.

On Your Court Date

When you arrive at court on the date and time in your TRO, you will wait outside of the courtroom. A sheriff’s officer or court staff person will check in each person who has court on that date. When you check in, let that person know you are requesting an adjournment of your court date and the reason for your request. You will either be given a continuance order (a court order that gives you your next court date) or called in front of the judge to make your request. If you are called in front of the judge, you will need to repeat your request for a new court date and the reason.

If you request an adjournment at the courthouse, you can ask the court to give you additional relief, including financial relief or return of property. If there is something that you need before the second court date, you can ask the court to order that relief in your TRO. The types of requests the court will commonly hear are those for financial relief; payment of bills if there is a shut-off notice; return of important personal property (including checkbooks, passports, or immigration documents); or turning over possession of a car if that car was used by you before the TRO was entered. You should limit your requests to items that cannot wait until your return court date. Please note that it is also possible for the defendant to make requests to return to the home to get personal belongings or to have parenting time with the children. You have the right to object to these requests if you are concerned about defendant’s presence in the home or their interaction with your child(ren).

What happens at the final hearing?

You must appear at the date, time, and place listed on your TRO for your final hearing. After you arrive at court, check in with the sheriff’s officer or court staff for the judge assigned to your case. State your name and tell the officer whether you plan to go forward with a hearing, if you have any witnesses, and if you need an interpreter. You may also tell the officer that you want to request an adjournment (a new court date) to gather more evidence or to try to get an attorney.

When it is time for your case to be heard, a court staff member, sheriff’s officer, or the judge will call your name. Go to the table and stand in front of the nameplate marked “Plaintiff” until the judge tells you to be seated. In order to get a final restraining order, you must prove your case to the court by a preponderance (greater weight) of the evidence. You must prove that domestic violence occurred and that you need the protection of a final restraining order. You will do this with your testimony, the testimony of other witnesses, and with any physical evidence you present to the court. In your testimony, you should describe:

  • What your relationship is to the defendant;
  • The details about the current/predicate incident of domestic violence - the reason you came to court to get the restraining order;
  • Any history of domestic violence between you and the defendant;
  • Why you think you need protection from the defendant; and
  • Any pattern of coercive control against you, including:
    • Isolation from support networks, transportation or medical care,
    • Deprivation of basic necessities,
    • Monitoring movements, communications, or finances,
    • Making or threatening to make baseless reports to the authorities, or
    • Threatening harm to relatives or pets.

You also have the right to present physical evidence on your behalf. This may include photographs of injuries or damaged property, video or audio recordings, and medical and telephone records. After you have shared all of the above with the court, both the judge and the defendant will be able to ask you questions – “cross-examine” you. It is important to listen carefully and not to answer unless you fully understand the questions you are asked. If you are unsure about a question, ask for it to be repeated. Once this questioning is over, you may present other witnesses to testify on your behalf and question them, but they are not required.

After you and your witnesses have testified and you have presented all of your evidence, the defendant will have the opportunity to present their version of events. The defendant does not have to tell the court anything, but you have the right to cross-examine the defendant if they do testify. The defendant also has the right to present physical evidence and other witnesses. You will also have a chance to cross-examine these witnesses and examine the evidence.

See Representing Yourself in Court: How to Question Your Witness and Representing Yourself in Court: How to Cross-Examine (Question) An Opposing Witness.

After the defendant is done presenting evidence, you may ask the court if you may respond to that evidence or testimony. This is called rebuttal testimony. At this time, you are only permitted to respond directly to new issues raised by the defendant, not go over issues you already explained.

After you and the defendant present your cases, the court will deliver its opinion. While the court is delivering its opinion, you are not supposed to speak. This is the time when the judge tells you what they did and did not believe. You will also learn if you will be receiving a final restraining order. If you do not get a final restraining order, the temporary restraining order will be dismissed and the defendant will be permitted to have contact with you or return to a home you shared. If the court grants you a final restraining order, you have the right to request that the relief already in the order remain permanent, as well as additional relief. This may include:

  • A request that the court do a risk assessment. This is especially important in situations where the defendant has been violent towards the children or abuses alcohol or drugs. A risk assessment means that a member of the court staff will collect information and talk to you in order to determine whether or not to recommend that the defendant have unsupervised parenting time with the children.
  • A request to remain in the shared home permanently or for a certain amount of time before you leave, or time to remove your belongings. 
  • Support for you. The court can order that a certain amount of money be taken out of the defendant’s paycheck every week, or that they directly pay for rent, mortgage, or household bills. It is a good idea to know how much money you will need before you go into court. If there are specific bills that must be paid, bring those bills with you.
  • Reimbursement/compensation for medical bills, damage, or loss that resulted from the domestic violence. Bring those bills with you as well. 
  • Child support. When asking for child support, it is a good idea to bring pay stubs (yours and the defendant’s, if you have them), along with last year’s tax return, if available. This will help the court in determining the proper amount of child support. 
  • Specific custody and parenting time arrangements. If a current custody order exists, the court will take that into consideration when making its decision, but certain provisions may have to change. For example, you should request a specific safe place for pick-up and drop-off, such as the police station or a local library. It is important to have specific dates, times, and places for parenting time, because the defendant may have limited or no contact with you.

What happens after I get a final restraining order?

A final restraining order restrains the defendant from having any contact with you (unless exceptions are made in order to communicate about your children). If the defendant has contact with you that is not allowed, that is called a violation, and you should call the police. The defendant can be arrested for a violation of the restraining order. If the defendant does not follow the parenting time or support provisions of the order, you should file an application with the family court seeking to enforce that order.

What happens if I do not get a final restraining order?

If the temporary restraining order is dismissed, the protections in that order are also dismissed. This means if the only existing parenting time order was in the TRO, then there is no existing order. If an order existed before the TRO, in an FD case, you would go back to following that order. Also, if you and the abuser were living together prior to the TRO, they would be able to return to the shared home. If a future act of domestic violence is committed against you, you have the right to file a new TRO. Additionally, if you believe the judge made a mistake in dismissing your TRO, you may consult with an attorney regarding potential next steps to challenge that dismissal.

Where can I go for more help?

If you are a victim seeking help with obtaining a final restraining order or any domestic violence legal issue, please contact LSNJLAWSM, Legal Services of New Jersey’s statewide, toll-free legal hotline, online at www.lsnjlawhotline.org, or by phone at 1-888-LSNJ-LAW (1-888-576-5529).