Today, a majority of circuit courts permit appeal of TROs in narrow instances when, for instance, the TRO has the practical effect of an injunction, threatens serious or irreparable injury, and can only be reviewed effectively by immediate appeal.
In California, either party can appeal a judge's decision to grant or deny a restraining order. In filing an appeal, you are asking a higher court to review the court's ruling.
A temporary order of protection is issued on the day you file for an order of protection before the respondent is served with the papers. It only lasts until the next time that you are in court. The court usually will extend the temporary order at each court date until the case is over.
A Subsequent Order Granting or Denying a Motion Seeking to Modify or Cancel the TRO May be Appealable. There are a number of reported cases holding that such orders are, in fact, appealable, which provides a backdoor way to appeal the initial order granting or denying the TRO.
A former DA explains the 5 most common grands to appeal a criminal conviction. These include erroneous admission of evidence, prosecutorial misconduct, jury misconduct, ineffective assistance of counsel and insufficient evidence.