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In 1911, Nevada made three important laws: the Civil Practice Act, the Crimes and Punishments Act, and the Criminal Practice Act. Many of today's Nevada laws come from these acts. Before 1965, there were no notes explaining why lawmakers created these laws. To learn more about these 1911 laws, you can look at old law books from 1912 or visit the law library. If a law has a history note like the ones from 1911, it probably comes from one of these original acts.
In 1911, three major acts were enacted that form the foundation for many of Nevada's civil and criminal laws:
Many provisions in the current Nevada Revised Statutes (NRS) trace their origins to one of these acts.
If a statute originates from one of these acts, the statutory history note will indicate it. Here are examples:
The Statutes of Nevada (1911) do not include the text of these acts.
The enrolled versions were published in the two volumes of the Revised Laws of Nevada (1912).
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Advisory Note
This information is provided as a courtesy only. The law library shall not be liable for errors contained herein or for direct, indirect, special or consequential damages in connection with the furnishing of this material. The law librarians are not members of the Nevada State Bar and nothing on this site should be considered as legal advice.