Emergency filing — final step

Proposed Emergency Order

The proposed order is what you hand to the clerk when you file — it's what the judge signs if the ex parte is granted. Keep it clean, specific, and identical to what you requested in FL-305.

Complete

This is what the judge signs — word for word.

The proposed order gives the court a document to sign without needing to draft one on the spot. Judges often sign proposed orders with minimal changes when the language is clean and matches the showing in your declaration and FL-305.

Keep the language simple, direct, and consistent with everything else in your packet. If the FL-305 says "no removal from Los Angeles County" then the proposed order should say the same thing — not a variation of it.

Your packet is almost complete. After this step, go to the print gate to review the full packet, copy the text, and — if you're logged in — generate the PDFs for filing.

Write the exact temporary orders to be signed.


Write each order on its own line. This language is what gets signed — make it enforceable.

Confirm these match what you wrote above.

Emergency orders (from FL-305)
Requested relief (from declaration)
Review packet → ← Back Saved

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