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The Family Division has courts in Grafton, Rockingham and Sullivan counties which have jurisdiction to hear cases involving cases divorce, parenting disputes, child support, domestic violence, guardianships, termination of parental rights, abuse and neglect cases, children in need of supervision, delinquencies, and some adoptions.
1784-1785 New Hampshire General Court June 2, 1784 February 25, 1785 2 [2] 1785-1786 New Hampshire General Court June 1, 1785 : March 4, 1786 3 [2] 1786-1787 New Hampshire General Court June 7, 1786 January 18, 1787 4 [2] 1787-1788 New Hampshire General Court June 6, 1787 February 13, 1788 1787 [3] 5 [2] 1788-1789 New Hampshire General Court
In some cases, such as patent and bankruptcy, certain forms are legally required. [4] Form books may be arranged chronologically, alphabetically, by subject, or by jurisdiction. They may also include additional resources such as outlines, research references, annotations, state considerations, and law practice checklists in addition to the forms.
CONCORD — The New Hampshire House passed a bill to ban child marriage in New Hampshire on Thursday. Senate Bill 359 , sponsored by Sen. Debra Altschiller, D-Stratham, would raise the minimum age ...
It took New Hampshire nearly 20 years to enact a fetal homicide bill in 2018 that allows murder charges for the killing of an unborn child. On March 15, the state attorney general’s office used ...
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The Administrative Rules in the Code are enacted by state agencies pursuant to the rulemaking authority granted by the New Hampshire General Court. The Code serves to supplement the Revised Statutes Annotated by allowing agencies to further develop a statute or to impose a general requirement legally binding on the state.
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