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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
New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated 458:7, II Overruled by In the Matter of Molly Blaisdell and Robert Blaisdell , No. 2020-0211 (2021), "to the extent that it limits the definition of 'adultery,' as that term is used in RSA 458:7, II, to sexual intercourse between persons of the opposite sex."
Text of the law is the property of the state of New Hampshire, and can be read and searched without the annotations on the state web site. [1] The annotations are value added by Thomson West. The numbering of laws becomes obsolete through subsequent work of the legislature.
The law of New Hampshire is the state law of the U.S. state of New Hampshire. It consists of the Constitution of the State of New Hampshire, as well as the New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated, the New Hampshire Code of Administrative Rules, and precedents of the state courts.
Greenville, New Ipswich, Peterborough, Sharon: 4 4 Lyndeborough, Mont Vernon, New Boston, Temple, Wilton: 4 5 Brookline, Hollis, Mason: 4 6 Amherst, Milford: 8 7 Goffstown, Weare: 8 8 Manchester Ward 1 3 9 Manchester Ward 2 3 10 Manchester Ward 3 3 11 Manchester Ward 4 3 12 Manchester Ward 5 3 13 Manchester Ward 6 3 14 Manchester Ward 7 3 15
New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu signed measures into law to limit transition-related care for transgender minors and bar some trans students from competing on school sports teams that match their ...
The General Court of New Hampshire is the bicameral state legislature of the U.S. state of New Hampshire. The lower house is the New Hampshire House of Representatives with 400 members, and the upper house is the New Hampshire Senate with 24 members. This ratio of one Senate seat for every 16.67 House seats makes New Hampshire's ratio of upper ...
However, despite the repeal, the border between Massachusetts and New Hampshire has not been disputed, unlike New Hampshire's borders with Maine and Vermont. [The citation listed reads, "excepting from general repeal the following described statutes" and includes 115, 1901, which would seem to mean that 115, 1901 was NOT repealed.]