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Injury Lawyer Hawaii - homepage
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Hawaii State Constitution
PREAMBLE
INDEX TO THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
section titles
preamble
article I
article II
article III
article IV
article V
article VI
article VII
article VIII
article IX
article X
article XI
article XII
article XIII
article XIV
article XV
article XVI
article XVII
article XVIII
download text (zip, 41K)
index (pdf, 45K)
disclaimer
THE CONSTITUTION OF THE STATE OF HAWAII
As Amended and in Force January 1, 2000
PREAMBLE
We, the people of Hawaii, grateful for Divine Guidance, and
mindful of our Hawaiian heritage and uniqueness as an island
State, dedicate our efforts to fulfill the philosophy decreed by
the Hawaii State motto, "Ua mau ke ea o ka aina i ka pono."
We reserve the right to control our destiny, to nurture the
integrity of our people and culture, and to preserve the quality
of life that we desire.
We reaffirm our belief in a government of the people, by the
people and for the people, and with an understanding and
compassionate heart toward all the peoples of the earth, do
hereby ordain and establish this constitution for the State of
Hawaii. [Am Const Con 1978 and election Nov 7, 1978]
FEDERAL CONSTITUTION ADOPTED
The Constitution of the United States of America is adopted
on behalf of the people of the State of Hawaii.
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Injury Lawyer Hawaii
William Lawson, Esq.
Century Square
1188 Bishop St. Suite 2902
Honolulu, HI 96813
New client hotline:
(808) 524-5300
Main business phone:
(808) 528-2525
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Recent Personal Injury and Car Accident News
Savini v. University of Hawaii 113 Hawaii 459 (3/19/07), a recent decision of the Hawaii Supreme Court, has helped to clarify Hawaii law on auto accident claims against the State of Hawaii. That case addressed the conflict between (1) the general two year (from date of occurrence) deadline for filing claims against the State and (2) the general auto accident deadline of two years from the date of the accident or the date of the last payment of no fault (PIP) benefits, whichever is later. The Hawaii Supreme Court held that because auto claims against the State are typically not actionable until the threshold of $5,000.00 in medical expenses has been met, in the typical case an action can be filed against the State for two years after the date on which the threshold is met.
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