Mississippi Code § 25-31-27

Antitrust suits to require consent of Attorney General
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
No district attorney of this state, without the consent in writing of the attorney general, shall institute or prosecute any civil suit for a violation of the antitrust statutes of this state; and no court shall take cognizance of any such suit without such written consent of the Attorney General. Codes, 1930, § 4370; 1942, § 3927; Laws, 1922, ch. 274.
No district attorney of this state, without the consent in writing of the attorney general, shall institute or prosecute any civil suit for a violation of the antitrust statutes of this state; and no court shall take cognizance of any such suit without such written consent of the Attorney General. Codes, 1930, § 4370; 1942, § 3927; Laws, 1922, ch. 274.
No district attorney of this state, without the consent in writing of the attorney general, shall institute or prosecute any civil suit for a violation of the antitrust statutes of this state; and no court shall take cognizance of any such suit without such written consent of the Attorney General. Codes, 1930, § 4370; 1942, § 3927; Laws, 1922, ch. 274.
No district attorney of this state, without the consent in writing of the attorney general, shall institute or prosecute any civil suit for a violation of the antitrust statutes of this state; and no court shall take cognizance of any such suit without such written consent of the Attorney General.
Codes, 1930, § 4370; 1942, § 3927; Laws, 1922, ch. 274.

‹ Prev All Mississippi sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.