---
name: consent-judgment
title: Consent Judgment and Injunction
description: Drafts enforceable consent judgments with injunctive relief for IP litigation settlement. Triggers when drafting consent judgments, agreed judgments, permanent injunctions, settlement judgments, or stipulated orders resolving disputes without trial.
author: CaseMark
author_url: https://github.com/CaseMark/skills/tree/main/skills/legal/consent-judgment
license: Apache-2.0
version: 0.1.0
execution_mode: open
jurisdiction: us
practice: ip
language: en
tags: [agreement, drafting, litigation]
---

# Consent Judgment and Injunction

Drafts an enforceable consent judgment with injunctive relief that memorializes a negotiated resolution while preserving the court's enforcement authority.

## Quick Start

Gather before drafting:
1. **Complaint/pleadings** — party names, capacities, case number, court/division
2. **Settlement terms** — monetary amounts, payment schedules, admissions/denials, injunctive scope
3. **Governing contracts** — underlying IP licenses, assignments, or agreements at issue
4. **Local rules** — formatting, e-filing requirements, consent judgment approval procedures

## Document Structure

### 1. Caption

- Court name with division, matching local formatting
- Case number exactly as docketed
- Party names matching original complaint with designations
- Title: "Consent Judgment and Injunction" or "Agreed Judgment and Permanent Injunction" per local practice

### 2. Recitals (WHEREAS Clauses)

Establish:
- [ ] Subject-matter and personal jurisdiction
- [ ] Nature of claims and defenses (neutral framing)
- [ ] Voluntary agreement to resolve without trial
- [ ] Representation by competent counsel; understanding of binding nature
- [ ] Statutory/procedural authority (cite FRCP or state equivalent)
- [ ] Whether resolution is on the merits or without merits adjudication

### 3. Substantive Terms

**Monetary:** Award amount, payment schedule, interest rate, default consequences, costs/fees allocation.

**Non-monetary:** Property transfers, document deliveries, specific performance with concrete deadlines. State admissions or denials of liability unambiguously.

### 4. Injunctive Relief

Draft with Rule 65(d) specificity — every prohibition or requirement must be concrete enough for a contempt proceeding.

| Component | Standard |
|-----------|----------|
| Prohibited conduct | Specific, measurable actions enjoined party must not take |
| Required conduct | Exact actions, by whom, by when, to what standard |
| Geographic scope | Precisely defined |
| Duration | Permanent or time-limited; state modification standard |
| Compliance monitoring | Reporting, inspection rights, third-party oversight |
| Enforcement | Contempt procedures, modification/dissolution process |

> **Critical:** Avoid vague language ("shall not engage in unfair practices"). Must be specific enough to enforce via contempt.

### 5. Releases and Waivers

- [ ] Mutual release scope — identify released claims, causes of action, parties with specificity
- [ ] Known/unknown claims — include Cal. Civ. Code § 1542 waiver or equivalent if applicable [VERIFY]
- [ ] Appeal waiver — explicit if agreed
- [ ] Carve-outs — claims against non-parties, unrelated matters, enforcement of this judgment
- [ ] Adequate consideration acknowledged

### 6. Jurisdiction Retention

Include continuing jurisdiction for: (a) enforcement; (b) interpretation/compliance disputes; (c) injunction modification on changed circumstances; (d) contempt proceedings.

Also address: notice requirements before enforcement motions, meet-and-confer obligations, prevailing-party fees in enforcement, expedited relief for imminent violations.

### 7. Execution and Approval

**Signature blocks:** All parties with authority-to-bind language; attorneys of record (name, bar number, contact); date lines.

**Judicial approval:** Proposed findings (fair, reasonable, voluntary, entered with counsel); separate court approval line; comply with e-filing format (e.g., `/s/` signatures).

### 8. Formatting

- Numbered paragraphs throughout
- Full caption page 1; abbreviated on subsequent pages
- Certificate of service if required by local rules
- Consistent defined terms; proper citation format

## Pitfalls and Checks

- **Merits framing** — unless parties agree otherwise, recitals should state this is not an adjudication on the merits
- **FRE 408** — exclude settlement negotiation details usable against either party in related proceedings
- **Enforceability** — verify terms comply with substantive law and public policy; courts can refuse unconscionable consent judgments
- **IP-specific** — trademark: address mark usage going forward; patent: license-back provisions; trade secret: ensure injunction doesn't function as unenforceable non-compete
- **Jurisdiction-specific** — some courts require separate proposed orders, Tunney Act procedures (antitrust) [VERIFY], or approval for minors/incapacitated parties
- **Do not** include integration clauses conflicting with retained jurisdiction
- **Do not** draft releases that inadvertently release claims parties intend to preserve
