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The State Corporation Commission's structure is unique in that it is organized as a separate department of government with delegated administrative, legislative, and judicial powers. The SCC's membership, powers, duties, and procedures are set out in Article IX of the Constitution of Virginia . [ 1 ]
Similarly, service on a foreign corporation may be effected through the company's registered agent, or through the clerk of the State Corporation Commission (who will mail a copy to the corporation's registered office), or to any officer or director of the company who can be found in Virginia.
From 2010 until 2015, he was the Chief Information Officer of the state, and head of the Virginia Information Technologies Agency (VITA). [1] [2] [3] In March 2015, Nixon assumed the position of Chief Administrative Officer of the Virginia State Corporation Commission having been nominated by the commissioners of that agency. [3] [4]
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=State_Corporation_Commission&oldid=289911682"
State Corporation Commission (Virginia), American regulatory agency; Supreme Court of Canada, highest and final court of appeal in Canada; Santa Clara County, California, a county government in California; Sligo County Council, the local government for County Sligo; Small claims court, a legal court with limited jurisdiction
Mark Curtis Christie (born August 8, 1953) is an American attorney who has, since 2021, been a Republican member of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission.He was previously a judge of the Virginia State Corporation Commission, counsel to Virginia House speaker William J. Howell, and counsel to Virginia governor George Allen.
Elizabeth Bermingham Lacy (born January 12, 1945) is a Virginia jurist. She was the first woman named to the Virginia State Corporation Commission and later was the first woman named to be a justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia, where she served until her retirement in 2007.
Kansas Court of Appeals judges sit in panels of three at locations throughout the state, but most frequently at the primary courtroom in the Kansas Judicial Center in Topeka. The court also has the power to review matters en banc. Each panel typically rules on approximately 30 appeals over a two-day period every month.