California Codes - Codes Currently in Effect

Codes Currently in Effect

The 29 California Codes currently in effect are as follows (date of adoption by Legislature in parentheses):

  • California Business and Professions Code (June 15, 1937)
  • California Civil Code (March 21, 1872)
  • California Code of Civil Procedure (March 11, 1872)
  • California Commercial Code (June 8, 1963)
  • California Corporations Code (July 1, 1947)
  • California Education Code (April 7, 1943)
  • California Elections Code (February 2, 1939)
  • California Evidence Code (May 18, 1965)
  • California Family Code (July 13, 1992)
  • California Financial Code (May 15, 1951)
  • California Fish and Game Code (May 21, 1957)
  • California Food and Agricultural Code (March 15, 1967)
  • California Government Code (April 13, 1943)
  • California Harbors and Navigation Code (May 25, 1937)
  • California Health and Safety Code (April 7, 1939)
  • California Insurance Code (May 7, 1935)
  • California Labor Code (April 24, 1937)
  • California Military and Veterans Code (July 5, 1935)
  • California Penal Code (February 14, 1872)
  • California Probate Code (May 11, 1931)
  • California Public Contract Code (September 21, 1981)
  • California Public Resources Code (April 26, 1939)
  • California Public Utilities Code (May 31, 1951)
  • California Revenue and Taxation Code (May 16, 1939)
  • California Streets and Highways Code (March 27, 1935)
  • California Unemployment Insurance Code (April 21, 1953)
  • California Vehicle Code (September 15, 1935)
  • California Water Code (May 13, 1943)
  • California Welfare and Institutions Code (May 25, 1937)

Read more about this topic:  California Codes

Famous quotes containing the words codes and/or effect:

    ... until both employers’ and workers’ groups assume responsibility for chastising their own recalcitrant children, they can vainly bay the moon about “ignorant” and “unfair” public criticism. Moreover, their failure to impose voluntarily upon their own groups codes of decency and honor will result in more and more necessity for government control.
    Mary Barnett Gilson (1877–?)

    I would define the poetic effect as the capacity that a text displays for continuing to generate different readings, without ever being completely consumed.
    Umberto Eco (b. 1932)