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Hawaii False Claims Act
FALSE
CLAIMS TO THE STATE (661-21 et seq)
AND
FALSE CLAIMS TO THE COUNTIES (46-171 et seq.)
Chapter 661,
Hawaii Revised Statutes
PART II. QUI
TAM ACTIONS OR RECOVERY OF FALSE CLAIMS TO THE
STATE
§661-21
Actions for false claims to the State; qui tam
actions.
(a)
Notwithstanding section 661-7 to the contrary,
any person who:
(1) Knowingly presents, or causes to be
presented, to an officer or employee of the State
a false or fraudulent claim for payment or
approval;
(2) Knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made
or used, a false record or statement to get a
false or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the
State;
(3) Conspires to defraud the State by getting a
false or fraudulent claim allowed or paid;
(4) Has possession, custody, or control of
property or money used, or to be used, by the
State and, intending to defraud the State or
wilfully to conceal the property, delivers, or
causes to be delivered, less property than the
amount for which the person receives a
certificate or receipt;
(5) Is authorized to make or deliver a document
certifying receipt of property used, or to be
used by the State and, intending to defraud the
State, makes or delivers the receipt without
completely knowing that the information on the
receipt is true;
(6) Knowingly buys, or receives as a pledge of an
obligation or debt, public property from any
officer or employee of the State who may not
lawfully sell or pledge the property;
(7) Knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made
or used, a false record or statement to conceal,
avoid, or decrease an obligation to pay or
transmit money or property to the State; or
(8) Is a beneficiary of an inadvertant submission
of a false claim to the State, who subsequently
discovers the falsity of the claim, and fails to
disclose the false claim to the State within a
reasonable time after discovery of the false
claim;
shall be liable to the State for a civil penalty
of not less than $5,000 and not more than
$10,000, plus three times the amount of damages
that the State sustains due to the act of that
person.
(b) If the court
finds that a person who has violated subsection
(a):
(1) Furnished officials of the State responsible
for investigating false claims violations with
all information known to the person about the
violation within thirty days after the date on
which the defendant first obtained the
information;
(2) Fully cooperated with any State investigation
of such violation; and
(3) At the time the person furnished the State
with the information about the violation, no
criminal prosecution, civil action, or
administrative action had commenced under this
title with respect to such violation, and the
person did not have actual knowledge of the
existence of an investigation into such
violation; the court may assess not less than two
times the amount of damages that the State
sustains because of the act of the person. A
person violating subsection (a), shall also be
liable to the State for the costs and attorneys'
fees of a civil action brought to recover the
penalty or damages.
(c) Liability
under this section shall be joint and several for
any act committed by two or more persons.
(d) This section
shall not apply to any controversy involving an
amount of less than $500 in value. For purposes
of this subsection, "controversy" means
the aggregate of any one or more false claims
submitted by the same person in violation of this
chapter. Proof of specific intent to defraud is
not required.
(e) For purposes
of this section:
"Claim" includes any request or demand,
whether under a contract or otherwise, for money
or property that is made to a contractor,
grantee, or other recipient if the State provides
any portion of the money or property that is
requested or demanded, or if the government will
reimburse the contractor, grantee, or other
recipient for any portion of the money or
property that is requested or demanded.
"Knowing"
and "knowingly" means that a person,
with respect to information:
(1) Has actual knowledge of the information;
(2) Acts in deliberate ignorance of the truth or
falsity of the information; or
(3) Acts in reckless disregard of the truth or
falsity of the information;
and no proof of specific intent to defraud is
required.
(f) This section
shall not apply to claims, records, or statements
for which procedures and remedies are otherwise
specifically provided for under chapter 231.
§661-22
Civil actions for false claims.
The attorney
general shall investigate any violation under
section 661-21.
If the attorney general finds that a person has
violated or is violating section 661-21, the
attorney general may bring a civil action under
this section.
§661-23
Evidentiary determination; burden of proof.
A determination
that a person has violated the provisions of this
chapter shall be based on a preponderance of the
evidence.
§661-24
Statute of limitations.
An action for
false claims to the State pursuant to this
chapter shall be brought within six years after
the false claim is discovered or by exercise of
reasonable diligence should have been discovered
and, in any event, no more than ten years after
the date on which the violation of section 661-21
is committed.
§661-25
Action by private persons.
(a) A person may
bring a civil action for a violation of section
661-21 for the person and for the State. The
action shall be brought in the name of the State.
The action may be dismissed only with the written
consent of the court, taking into account the
best interests of the parties involved and the
public purposes behind this chapter.
(b) A copy of
the complaint and written disclosure of
substantially all material evidence and
information the person possesses shall be served
on the State in accordance with the Hawaii Rules
of Civil Procedure. The complaint shall be filed
in camera, shall remain under seal for at least
sixty days, and shall not be served on the
defendant until the court so orders. The State
may elect to intervene and proceed with the
action within sixty days after it receives both
the complaint and the material evidence and
information.
(c) The State
may, for good cause shown, move the court for
extensions of the time during which the complaint
remains under seal under subsection (b). Any such
motions may be supported by affidavits or other
submissions in camera. The defendant shall not be
required to respond to any complaint filed under
this section until twenty days after the
complaint is unsealed and served upon the
defendant in accordance with the Hawaii Rules of
Civil Procedure.
(d) Before the
expiration of the sixty-day period or any
extension obtained, the State shall:
(1) Proceed with the action, in which case the
action shall be conducted by the State and the
seal shall be lifted;
or
(2) Notify the court that it declines to take
over the action, in which case the person
bringing the action shall have the right to
conduct the action and the seal shall be lifted.
(e) When a
person brings an action under this section, no
person other than the State may intervene or
bring a related action based on the facts
underlying the pending action.
§661-26
Rights of parties to qui tam actions.
(a) If the State
proceeds with an action under section 661- , the
State shall have the primary responsibility for
prosecuting the action and shall not be bound by
an act of the person bringing the action. The
person shall have the right to continue as a
party to the action, subject to the following
limitations:
(1) The State
may dismiss the action notwithstanding the
objections of the person initiating the action if
the court determines, after a hearing on the
motion, that dismissal should be allowed;
(2) The State may settle the action with the
defendant notwithstanding the objections of the
person initiating the action if the court
determines, after a hearing,
that the proposed settlement is fair, adequate,
and reasonable. Upon a showing of good cause, the
hearing may be held in camera;
(3) The court, upon a showing by the State that
unrestricted participation during the course of
the litigation by the person initiating the
action would interfere with or unduly delay the
State's prosecution of the case, or would be
repetitious, irrelevant, or for purposes of
harassment, may, in its discretion impose
limitations on the person's participation by:
(A) Limiting the number of witnesses the person
may call;
(B) Limiting the length of the testimony of the
witnesses;
(C) Limiting the person's cross-examination of
witnesses; or
(D) Otherwise limiting the participation by the
person in the litigation.
(b) The
defendant, by motion upon the court, may show
that unrestricted participation during the course
of the litigation by the person initiating the
action would be for purposes of harassment or
would cause the defendant undue burden or
unnecessary expense. At the court's discretion,
the court may limit the participation by the
person in the litigation.
(c) If the State
elects not to proceed with the action, the person
who initiated that action shall have the right to
conduct the action. If the State so requests, it
shall be served with copies of all pleadings
filed in the action and shall be supplied
with copies of
all deposition transcripts at the State's
expense.
When a person proceeds with the action, the court
without limiting the status and rights of the
person initiating the action, may nevertheless
permit the State to intervene at a later date
upon showing of good cause.
(d) Whether or
not the State proceeds with the action, upon
motion and a showing by the State that certain
actions of discovery by the person initiating the
action would interfere with the State's
investigation or prosecution of a criminal or
civil matter arising out of the same facts, the
court may stay the discovery for a period of not
more than sixty days. The court may extend the
sixty day period upon a motion and showing by the
State that the State has pursued the
investigation or prosecution of the criminal or
civil matter with reasonable diligence and the
proposed discovery would interfere with the
ongoing investigation or prosecution of the
criminal or civil matter.
(e)
Notwithstanding section 661-25, the State may
elect to pursue its claim through any alternate
remedy available to the State, including any
administrative proceedings to determine civil
monetary penalties. If any alternate remedy is
pursued in another proceeding, the person
initiating the action shall have the same rights
in the proceedings as the person would have had
if the action had continued under this section.
Any finding of fact or conclusion of law made in
the other proceeding that becomes final shall be
conclusive on all parties to an action under this
section.
(f) Whether or
not the State elects to proceed with the action,
the parties to the action shall receive court
approval of any settlements reached.
§661-27
Awards to qui tam plaintiffs.
(a) If the State
proceeds with an action brought by a person under
section 661-25, the person shall receive at least
fifteen per cent but not more than twenty-five
per cent of the proceeds of the action or
settlement of the claim, depending upon the
extent to which the person substantially
contributed to the prosecution of the action.
Where the action is one that the court finds to
be based primarily on disclosures of specific
information, other than information provided by
the person bringing the action, relating to
allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil,
or administrative hearing, in a legislative or
administrative report, hearing, audit, or
investigation, or from the news media, the court
may award sums as it considers appropriate, but
in no case more than ten per cent of the
proceeds, taking into account the significance of
the information and the role of the person
bringing the action in advancing the case to
litigation. Any payment to a person under this
subsection shall be made from the proceeds. Any
person shall also receive an amount for
reasonable expenses that the court finds to have
been necessarily incurred,plus reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. All expenses, fees,
and costs shall be awarded against the defendant.
(b) If the State
does not proceed with an action under this
section, the person bringing the action or
settling the claim shall receive an amount that
the court decides is reasonable for collecting
the civil penalty and damages. The amount shall
be not less than twenty-five per cent and not
more than thirty per cent of the proceeds of the
action or settlement and shall be paid out of the
proceeds. The person shall also receive an amount
for reasonable expenses that the court finds to
have been necessarily incurred, plus reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. All expenses, fees,
and costs shall be awarded against the defendant.
(c) Whether or
not the State proceeds with the action, if the
court finds that the action was brought by a
person who planned and initiated the violation of
section 661-21 upon which the action was brought,
then the court may, to the extent the court
considers appropriate, reduce the share of the
proceeds of the action that the person would
otherwise receive under subsection (a), taking
into account the role of that person in advancing
the case to litigation and any relevant
circumstances pertaining to the violation. If the
person bringing the action is convicted of
criminal conduct arising from the person's role
in the violation of section 661-21 , that person
shall be dismissed from the civil action and
shall not receive any share of the proceeds of
the action. The dismissal shall not prejudice the
right of the State to continue the action.
(d) If the State
does not proceed with the action and the person
bringing the action conducts the action, the
court may award to the defendant its reasonable
attorneys' fees and expenses if the defendant
prevails in the action and the court finds that
the claim of the person bringing the action was
frivolous, vexatious, or brought primarily for
purposes of harassment.
(e) In no event
may a person bring an action under section 661-25
:
(1) Against a member of the state senate or state
house of representatives, a member of the
judiciary, or an elected official in the
executive branch of the State, if the action is
based on evidence or information known to the
State. For purposes of this section, evidence or
information known only to the person or persons
against whom an action is brought shall not be
considered to be known to the state;
(2) When the person is a present or former
employee of the State and the action is based
upon information discovered by the employee
during the course of the employee's employment,
unless the employee first, in good faith,
exhausted any existing internal procedures for
reporting and seeking recovery of the falsely
claimed sums through official channels and the
State failed to act on the information provided
within a reasonable period of time; or
(3) That is based upon allegations or
transactions that are the subject of a civil or
criminal investigation by the State, civil suit,
or an administrative civil money penalty
proceeding in which the State is already a party.
§661-28
Jurisdiction.
No court shall
have jurisdiction over an action under this part
based upon the public disclosure of allegations
or transactions in a criminal, civil, or
administrative hearing, in a legislative or
administrative report, hearing, audit, or
investigation, or from the news media,
unless the action is brought by the attorney
general or the person bringing the action is an
original source of the information. For purposes
of this section:
"Original source" means an individual
who has direct and independent knowledge of the
information on which the allegations are based
and has voluntarily provided the information to
the State before filing an action under this part
that is based on the information, and whose
information provided the basis or catalyst for
the investigation, hearing, audit, or report that
led to the public disclosure.
§661-29 Fees
and costs of litigation.
The State shall
not be liable for expenses or fees, including
attorney fees, that a person incurs in bringing
an action under this part and shall not elect to
pay those expenses or fees.
SECTION 2. The
provisions of this Act are not exclusive and are
in addition to any other applicable law or
remedy. This Act shall be liberally construed and
applied to promote the public interest.
SECTION 3. This
Act shall take effect upon its approval.
Added by Act
126, 5/26/00.
Chapter 46,
Hawaii Revised Statutes
PART X. QUI
TAM ACTIONS OR RECOVERY OF FALSE CLAIMS TO THE
COUNTIES
§46-171
Actions for false claims to the counties; qui tam
actions.
(a) Any person
who:
1. Knowingly
presents, or causes to be presented, to an
officer or employee of a county a false or
fraudulent claim for payment or approval;
2. Knowingly
makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a
false record or statement to get a false or
fraudulent claim paid or approved by a county;
3. Conspires to
defraud a county by getting a false or fraudulent
claim allowed or paid;
4. Has
possession, custody, or control of property or
money used, or to be used, by a county and,
intending to defraud a county or wilfully to
conceal the property, delivers, or causes to be
delivered, less property than the amount for
which the person receives a certificate or
receipt;
5. Is authorized
to make or deliver a document certifying receipt
of property used, or to be used by a county and,
intending to defraud a county, makes or delivers
the receipt without completely knowing that the
information on the receipt is true;
6. Buys, or
receives as a pledge of an obligation or debt,
public property from any officer or employee of a
county that the person knows may not lawfully
sell or pledge the property;
7. Knowingly
makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a
false record or statement to conceal, avoid, or
decrease an obligation to pay or transmit money
or property to a county; or
8. Is a
beneficiary of an inadvertent submission of a
false claim to a county, who subsequently
discovers the falsity of the claim, and fails to
disclose the false claim to the county within a
reasonable time after discovery of the false
claim;
shall be liable
to the county for a civil penalty of not less
than $ 5,000 and not more than $ 10,000, plus
three times the amount of damages that the county
sustains due to the act of that person.
(b) If the court
finds that a person who has violated subsection
(a):
1. Furnished
officials of the county responsible for
investigating false claims violations with all
information known to the person about the
violation within thirty days after the date on
which the defendant first obtained the
information;
2. Fully
cooperated with any county investigation of the
violation; and
3. At the time
the person furnished the county with the
information about the violation, no criminal
prosecution, civil action, or administrative
action had commenced under this title with
respect to the violation, and the person did not
have actual knowledge of the existence of an
investigation into the violation;
the court may
assess not less than two times the amount of
damages that the county sustains because of the
act of the person. A person violating subsection
(a), shall also be liable to the county for the
costs and attorneys' fees of a civil action
brought to recover the penalty or damages.
(c) Liability
under this section shall be joint and several for
any act committed by two or more persons.
(d) This section
shall not apply to any controversy involving an
amount of less than $ 500 in value. For purposes
of this subsection, "controversy" means
the aggregate of any one or more false claims
submitted by the same person in violation of this
part. Proof of specific intent to defraud is not
required.
(e) For purposes
of this section:
"Claim"
includes any request or demand, whether under a
contract or otherwise, for money or property that
is made to a contractor,
grantee, or other recipient if the county
provides any portion of the money or property
that is requested or demanded, or if the
government will reimburse the contractor,
grantee, or other recipient for any portion of
the money or property that is requested or
demanded.
"Knowing"
and "knowingly" means that a person,
with respect to information:
1. Has actual
knowledge of the information;
2. Acts in
deliberate ignorance of the truth or falsity of
the information; or
3. Acts in
reckless disregard of the truth or falsity of the
information;
and no proof of
specific intent to defraud is required.
§46-172
Civil actions for false claims.
The county
corporation counsel or county attorney shall
investigate any violation under §46-171.
If the
corporation counsel or county attorney finds that
a person has violated or is violating §46-171,
the corporation counsel or county attorney may
bring a civil action under this section.
§46-173
Evidentiary determination; burden of proof.
A determination
that a person has violated this part shall be
based on a preponderance of the evidence.
§46-174
Statute of limitations.
An action for
false claims to a county pursuant to this part
shall be brought within six years after the false
claim is discovered or by exercise of reasonable
diligence should have been discovered and, in any
event, no more than ten years after the date on
which the violation of §46-171 is committed.
§46-175
Action by private persons.
(a) A person may
bring a civil action for a violation of §46-171
for the person and for a county.
The action shall
be brought in the name of the county.
The action may be dismissed only with the written
consent of the court, taking into account the
best interests of the parties involved and the
public purposes behind this part.
(b) A copy of
the complaint and written disclosure of
substantially all material evidence and
information the person possesses shall be served
on the county in accordance with the Hawaii rules
of civil procedure. The complaint:
(1) Shall be
filed in camera;
(2) Shall remain
under seal for at least sixty days; and
(3) Shall not be
served on the defendant until the court so
orders.
The county may
elect to intervene and proceed with the action
within sixty days after it receives both the
complaint and the material evidence and
information.
(c) The county,
for good cause shown, may move the court for
extensions of the time during which the complaint
remains under seal under subsection (b). Any such
motions may be supported by affidavits or other
submissions in camera. The defendant shall not be
required to respond to any complaint filed under
this section until twenty days after the
complaint is unsealed and served upon the
defendant in accordance with the Hawaii rules of
civil procedure.
(d) Before the
expiration of the sixty-day period or any
extension obtained, the county shall:
1. Proceed with
the action, in which case the action shall be
conducted by the county and the seal shall be
lifted; or
2. Notify the
court that it declines to take over the action,
in which case the person bringing the action
shall have the right to conduct the action and
the seal shall be lifted.
(e) When a
person brings an action under this section, no
person other than the county may intervene or
bring a related action based on the facts
underlying the pending action.
§46-176
Rights of parties to qui tam actions.
(a) If a county
proceeds with an action under §46-175, the
county shall have the primary responsibility for
prosecuting the action and shall not be bound by
an act of the person bringing the action. The
person shall have the right to continue as a
party to the action, subject to the following
limitations:
1. The county
may dismiss the action notwithstanding the
objections of the person initiating the action if
the court determines, after a hearing on the
motion, that dismissal should be allowed;
2. The county
may settle the action with the defendant
notwithstanding the objections of the person
initiating the action if the court determines,
after a hearing, that the proposed settlement is
fair, adequate, and reasonable. Upon a showing of
good cause, the hearing may be held in camera;
3. The court,
upon a showing by the county that unrestricted
participation during the course of the litigation
by the person initiating the action would
interfere with or unduly delay the county's
prosecution of the case, or would be repetitious,
irrelevant, or for purposes of harassment, may,
in its discretion, impose limitations on the
person's participation by:
A. Limiting the
number of witnesses the person may call;
Limiting the length of the testimony of the
witnesses;
B. Limiting the
person's cross-examination of witnesses; or
C. Otherwise
limiting the participation by the person in the
litigation.
(b) The
defendant, by motion upon the court, may show
that unrestricted participation during the course
of the litigation by the person initiating the
action would be for purposes of harassment or
would cause the defendant undue burden or
unnecessary expense. At the court's discretion,
the court may limit the participation by the
person in the litigation.
(c) If the
county elects not to proceed with the action, the
person who initiated that action shall have the
right to conduct the action. If the county so
requests, it shall be served with copies of all
pleadings filed in the action and shall be
supplied with copies of all deposition
transcripts at the county's expense. When a
person proceeds with the action, the court,
without limiting the status and rights of the
person initiating the action, may nevertheless
permit the county to intervene at a later date
upon showing of good cause.
(d) Regardless
of whether the county proceeds with the action,
upon motion and a showing by the county that
certain actions of discovery by the person
initiating the action would interfere with the
county's investigation or prosecution of a
criminal or civil matter arising out of the same
facts, the court may stay the discovery for a
period of not more than sixty days. The court may
extend the sixty-day period upon a motion and
showing by the county that the county has pursued
the investigation or prosecution of the criminal
or civil matter with reasonable diligence and the
proposed discovery would interfere with the
ongoing investigation or prosecution of the
criminal or civil matter.
(e)
Notwithstanding §46-175, the county may elect to
pursue its claim through any alternate remedy
available to the county, including any
administrative proceedings to determine civil
monetary penalties. If any alternate remedy is
pursued in another proceeding, the person
initiating the action shall have the same rights
in the proceedings as the person would have had
if the action had continued under this section.
Any finding of fact or conclusion of law made in
the other proceeding that becomes final shall be
conclusive on all parties to an action under this
section.
(f) Regardless
of whether the county elects to proceed with the
action, the parties to the action shall receive
court approval of any settlements reached.
§46-177
Awards to qui tam plaintiffs.
(a) If a county
proceeds with an action brought by a person under
§46-175, the person shall receive at least
fifteen per cent but not more than twenty-five
per cent of the proceeds of the action or
settlement of the claim, depending upon the
extent to which the person substantially
contributed to the prosecution of the action.
Where the action is one that the court finds to
be based primarily on disclosures of specific
information, other than information provided by
the person bringing the action, relating to
allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil,
or administrative hearing, in a legislative or
administrative report, hearing, audit, or
investigation, or from the news media, the court
may award sums as it considers appropriate, but
in no case more than ten per cent of the
proceeds, taking into account the significance of
the information and the role of the person
bringing the action in advancing the case to
litigation. Any payment to a person under this
subsection shall be made from the proceeds. The
person shall also receive an amount for
reasonable expenses that the court finds to have
been necessarily incurred, plus reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. All expenses, fees,
and costs shall be awarded against the defendant.
(b) If the
county does not proceed with an action under this
section, the person bringing the action or
settling the claim shall receive an amount that
the court decides is reasonable for collecting
the civil penalty and damages. The amount shall
be not less than twenty-five per cent and not
more than thirty per cent of the proceeds of the
action or settlement and shall be paid out of the
proceeds. The person shall also receive an amount
for reasonable expenses that the court finds to
have been necessarily incurred, plus reasonable
attorneys' fees and costs. All expenses, fees,
and costs shall be awarded against the defendant.
(c) Regardless
of whether the county proceeds with the action,
if the court finds that the action was brought by
a person who planned and initiated the violation
of §46-171 upon which the action was brought,
then the court, to the extent the court considers
appropriate, may reduce the share of the proceeds
of the action that the person would otherwise
receive under subsection (a), taking into account
the role of that person in advancing the case to
litigation and any relevant circumstances
pertaining to the violation. If the person
bringing the action is convicted of criminal
conduct arising from the person's role in the
violation of §46-171, that person shall be
dismissed from the civil action and shall not
receive any share of the proceeds of the action.
The dismissal shall not prejudice the right of
the county to continue the action.
(d) If the
county does not proceed with the action and the
person bringing the action conducts the action,
the court may award to the defendant its
reasonable attorneys' fees and expenses if the
defendant prevails in the action and the court
finds that the claim of the person bringing the
action was frivolous, vexatious, or brought
primarily for purposes of harassment.
(e) In no event
may a person bring an action under §46-175:
(1) Against any
elected official of the county, if the action is
based on evidence or information known to the
county. For purposes of this section, evidence or
information known only to the person or persons
against whom an action is brought shall not be
considered to be known to the county;
(2) When the
person is a present or former employee of the
county and the action is based upon information
discovered by the employee during the course of
the employee's employment, unless the employee
first, in good faith, exhausted any existing
internal procedures for reporting and seeking
recovery of the falsely claimed sums through
official channels and the county failed to act on
the information provided within a reasonable
period of time; or
(3) That is
based upon allegations or transactions that are
the subject of a civil or criminal investigation
by the county, civil suit, or an administrative
civil money penalty proceeding in which the
county is already a party.
§46-178
Jurisdiction.
(a) No court
shall have jurisdiction over an action under this
part based upon the public disclosure of
allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil,
or administrative hearing, in a legislative or
administrative report, hearing, audit, or
investigation, or from the news media,
unless the action is brought by a county
corporation counsel or county attorney or the
person bringing the action is an original source
of the information.
(b) For purposes
of this section:
"Original
source" means an individual who has direct
and independent knowledge of the information on
which the allegations are based and has
voluntarily provided the information to the
county before filing an action under this part
that is based on the information, and whose
information provided the basis or catalyst for
the investigation, hearing, audit, or report that
led to the public disclosure.
§46-179 Fees
and costs of litigation.
A county shall
not be liable for expenses or fees, including
attorney fees, that a person incurs in bringing
an action under this part and shall not elect to
pay those expenses or fees."
SECTION 2. The
provisions of this Act are not exclusive and are
in addition to any other applicable law or
remedy. This Act shall be liberally construed and
applied to promote the public interest.
SECTION 3. In
codifying the new sections added by section 1 of
this Act, the revisor of statutes shall
substitute appropriate section numbers for the
letters used in designating the new sections in
this Act.
SECTION 4. This
Act shall take effect upon its approval.
HISTORY:
Approved by the Governor June 13, 2001.
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