A temporary restraining order (TRO) and a writ of preliminary injunction are provisional remedies to preserve the status quo and prevent irreparable harm while a case is decided. A TRO is short-term, a 72-hour TRO issued in extreme urgency and a regular TRO effective for up to 20 days, meant to hold things until the court can hear an injunction application. A preliminary injunction lasts through the case. To obtain either, the applicant must show a clear and unmistakable right, a material and substantial invasion of that right, and an urgent need to prevent serious and irreparable injury, and must post a bond.
Sometimes you cannot wait for a case to end — a demolition is scheduled, an account is about to be frozen, a project is being destroyed. The remedy to stop something now is a temporary restraining order (TRO) or a writ of preliminary injunction under Rule 58.
What They Do
These are provisional remedies that either restrain a party from doing an act (prohibitory) or require the performance of an act (mandatory), to preserve the status quo and prevent irreparable harm while the main case is pending. They do not decide the case; they hold the situation so that a later judgment is not rendered meaningless.
TRO vs. Preliminary Injunction
- A temporary restraining order (TRO) is a short, stopgap order. It comes in two forms: a 72-hour TRO that an executive judge may issue in matters of extreme urgency to prevent grave injustice before a hearing, and a regular TRO effective for up to 20 days (inclusive of the 72 hours), during which the court must hear and decide the application for a preliminary injunction. A TRO is non-extendible beyond its period.
- A writ of preliminary injunction is issued after a hearing and, once granted, generally lasts until the case is decided (or the court dissolves it). It is the more durable remedy.
The Requirements
Courts do not grant these lightly, because they restrain a party before final judgment. The applicant must show:
- A right in esse — a clear and unmistakable right that is being violated (not a doubtful or contingent one);
- A material and substantial invasion of that right; and
- An urgent and paramount necessity to prevent serious and irreparable injury — harm that cannot be adequately compensated in damages.
If the injury can be fully repaired by money damages, an injunction is generally not proper, since the applicant can be made whole later.
The Bond
An injunction (and usually a TRO) requires the applicant to post an injunction bond — security to answer for the damages the enjoined party may suffer if it turns out the injunction should not have been granted. This protects the restrained party from an improvidently issued order and discourages baseless applications.
Limits on Injunctions
The law restricts injunctions in certain areas to prevent abuse — for example, limits on courts (other than the Supreme Court) issuing TROs or injunctions against government infrastructure projects, and rules on injunctions affecting foreclosures and government processes. And an injunction generally cannot be used to take property out of the possession of one party and give it to another before the merits are decided, nor to enjoin acts already consummated.
Practical Advice
- If you face imminent, irreparable harm, move quickly for a TRO to buy time, then for a preliminary injunction at the hearing.
- Be ready to prove a clear legal right and irreparable injury — not merely that you will suffer some loss that money could fix.
- Budget for the bond, and note the strict TRO time limits and the areas where injunctions are restricted.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between a TRO and a preliminary injunction? A TRO is a short stopgap, a 72-hour TRO in extreme urgency and a regular TRO for up to 20 days, meant to hold things until an injunction hearing. A preliminary injunction is issued after a hearing and generally lasts until the case is decided.
What must I prove to get an injunction? A clear and unmistakable right, a material and substantial invasion of that right, and an urgent need to prevent serious and irreparable injury that cannot be adequately compensated by damages.
Do I need to post a bond? Yes. An injunction, and usually a TRO, requires an injunction bond to answer for damages the enjoined party may suffer if the injunction should not have been granted.
When will a court refuse an injunction? When the injury can be fully repaired by money damages, when the right is doubtful, when the act is already consummated, or in areas where injunctions are restricted, such as against certain government infrastructure projects.
This commentary is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. For guidance specific to your situation, please consult a licensed attorney.
If you need to stop an urgent, harmful act, our firm can move fast for a TRO and injunction. You may reach us via Viber or WhatsApp, call us at 0995 433 5550, or send an email to vivasnobles@gmail.com. We look forward to hearing from you.