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The Marketing of Eggs (No. 2) Rules (Northern Ireland) 1939 No. 79: The Public Elementary Schools Amending No. 10 Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1939 No. 80: The Importation of Plants (No. 2) Order (Northern Ireland) 1939 No. 81: The Public Elementary Teachers Superannuation Order in Council (Northern Ireland) 1939 No. 82: No. 83
Insurance regulatory law is the body of statutory law, administrative regulations and jurisprudence that governs and regulates the insurance industry and those engaged in the business of insurance. Insurance regulatory law is primarily enforced through regulations, rules and directives by state insurance departments as authorized and directed ...
The McCarran–Ferguson Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 1011-1015, is a United States federal law that exempts the business of insurance from most federal regulation, including federal antitrust laws to a limited extent.
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Statutory rules and orders were the means by which delegated legislation used to be made in the United Kingdom between 1893 and 1974 and in the Irish Free State until 1947. Statutory rules and orders began with the Rules Publication Act 1893 .
The Insurance Act, 1938 is a law originally passed in 1938 in British India to regulate the insurance sector. It provides the broad legal framework within which the industry operates. It provides the broad legal framework within which the industry operates.
An online-subscription version of The Bluebook was launched in 2008. [8] A mobile version was launched in 2012 within the Rulebook app, which enables access for legal professionals to federal or state court rules, codes, and style manuals on iPad, and other mobile devices. [9]
The tax statutes were re-codified by an Act of Congress on February 10, 1939 as the "Internal Revenue Code" (later known as the "Internal Revenue Code of 1939"). The 1939 Code was published as volume 53, Part I, of the United States Statutes at Large and as title 26 of the United States Code.