Motion to Enforce definition

Motion to Enforce means the Emergency Motion for Entry of an Order (i) Enforcing Sale Order and Asset Purchase Agreement; (ii) Compelling Performance; and (iii) Awarding Fees and Expenses Incurred by the Debtors’ Estates as a Result of Delayed Closing [Dkt. No. 356].
Motion to Enforce means the Emergency Motion for Entry of an Order (i)
Motion to Enforce means the Reorganized Debtors’ Motion For The Entry Of An Order: (I) Enforcing The Plan And Confirmation Order, Including The Plan Injunction And Third-Party Release; (II) Holding Dr. Arie Pablo Dosoretz, Dr. Amy Fox, Dr. Michael J. Katin

Examples of Motion to Enforce in a sentence

  • In August 2005, the Mississippi Attorney General filed in the Chancery Court of Jackson County, Mississippi, a Notice of Violation, Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement, and Request for an Accounting by Defendant Brown & Williamson Holdings, Inc., formerly known as Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation.

  • If such dispute cannot be resolved within twenty (20) business days, a Party may move to enforce the terms of this Agreement through a Motion to Enforce, as laid out in Section V.C. below.

  • The Court presiding over the Motion to Enforce under this subsection shall retain discretion to provide any equitable remedies not otherwise specified in this Agreement.

  • The Parties may move to enforce this Agreement through a Motion to Enforce brought in the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois.

  • If the dispute cannot be resolved within five (5) business days of the date of the meet and confer, Plaintiffs may move to enforce the terms of this Agreement through a Motion to Enforce, as laid out in Section V.C. below.

  • Prior to filing a Motion to Enforce, the Parties shall meet and confer according to the provisions set forth in Section V.A. or V.B. above.

  • The terms and conditions of this Consent Decree shall be enforceable by either party by filing a Motion to Enforce Consent Decree with this Court, which shall not be considered a motion for contempt, nor be subject to the procedures prescribed by M.R. Civ.

  • Proc No. 18-50383); (ii) DIP Lender’s Motion to Enforce Agreement By and Among the Debtors, Polk 33 Lending, LLC and THL Corporation Finance, Inc.

  • If the dispute cannot be resolved within five (5) business days for detention and removal matters, or ten (10) business days for all other matters, of the date of the meet and confer, Plaintiffs may move to enforce the terms of this Agreement through a Motion to Enforce, subject to the provisions in Section VI(A).

  • Prior to filing a Motion to Enforce, HRDC shall provide written notice of the alleged breach to NCDAC and provide NCDAC with no fewer than fourteen (14) days to cure the alleged breach.


More Definitions of Motion to Enforce

Motion to Enforce means that certain motion to enforce the Plan injunction filed by the Independent Directors on February 11, 2014 in the Bankruptcy Court [Docket No. 796].
Motion to Enforce means Defendant’s Motion to Enforce the Automatic Supersedeas and for Sanctions filed on April 15, 2024 in the above-captioned case.
Motion to Enforce means the Reorganized Debtors’ Motion For The Entry Of An Order: (I) Enforcing The Plan And Confirmation Order, Including The Plan Injunction And Third-Party Release; (II) Holding Dr. Arie Pablo Dosoretz, Dr. Amy Fox, Dr. Michael J. Katin And Dr. James H. Rubenstein In Contempt; (III) Imposing Sanctions; and (IV) Granting Related Relief (Doc. 1326).