writ of prohibition
Noun: A writ of prohibition is a formal written order issued by a higher court. This order commands a lower court, tribunal, or other public authority to cease from proceeding in a particular case because it is believed to lack the legal authority (jurisdiction) to do so. It is a preventative legal remedy used to restrain unlawful exercise of judicial or quasi-judicial power.
The writ is used in legal contexts to prevent a lower court from overstepping its jurisdictional boundaries. It is typically sought by a party who believes the lower body is acting outside its legal authority. - The defense attorney filed a petition for a writ of prohibition to stop the administrative hearing, arguing the agency had no jurisdiction over the matter. - The appellate court issued a writ of prohibition, thereby preventing the district court from hearing the case.
- "to seek a writ of prohibition": To formally apply to a higher court for this order.
- The company decided to seek a writ of prohibition to halt the regulatory proceedings.
- "to grant/issue a writ of prohibition": The action of the higher court in ordering the lower body to stop.
- The Supreme Court granted the writ of prohibition, effectively ending the lower court's involvement.
- Prohibition (n): The act of forbidding something by authority; in law, it can refer to the principle or the specific writ.
- Writ (n): A formal written order issued by a court, commanding a specific action.
- Prerogative writ: A classification for certain historic writs, like prohibition, mandamus, and certiorari, issued to control government actions.
- Injunction (specifically a prohibitory injunction): A court order commanding or preventing an action. (Note: An injunction is broader and can be issued by any court, while a writ of prohibition is specific to superior courts restraining inferior tribunals.)
- Restraining order: An order to stop a specific action. (Note: This is a more general term and not a direct procedural equivalent.)
- Lack of jurisdiction: The primary legal ground for issuing a writ of prohibition.
- The petition was based on a clear lack of jurisdiction by the lower tribunal.
- Excess of jurisdiction: Acting beyond the scope of granted legal authority, another ground for the writ.
- The judge's order was an excess of jurisdiction, warranting a writ of prohibition.
- a judicial writ from a higher court ordering a lower court not to exercise jurisdiction in a particular case