TITLES OF UNITED STATES CODE:
  1* General Provisions
  2   Congress
  3* President
  4* Flag Seal, Washington, DC, States
  5* Government Organization and Employees
  6   Surety Bonds, Domestic Security
  7   Agriculture8 Aliens and Nationality
  9* Arbitration
10* Armed Forces
11* Bankruptcy
12   Banks and Banking
13* Census
14* Coast Guard
15   Commerce and Trade
16   Conservation
17* Copyrights
18* Crimes and Criminal Procedure
19   Customs Duties
20   Education
21   Food and Drugs
22   Foreign Relations and Intercourse
23* Highways
24   Hospitals and Psychiatric hospitals
25   Indians
26# Internal Revenue Code
27   Intoxicating Liquors
28* Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
29   Labor
30   Mineral Lands and Mining
31* Money and Finance
32* National Guard
33   Navigable Waters
34   Navy
35* Patents
36* Patriotic Societies and Observances
37* Pay and Allowances of the Uniformed Services
38* Veterans' Benefits
39* Postal Service
40* Public Buildings, Properties, and Public Works
41   Public Contracts
42   Public Health and Social Welfare
43   Public Lands
44* Public Printing and Documents
45   Rail transport
46* Shipping
47   Telegraphy
48   Territories and Insular Possessions
49* Transportation
50   War and National Defense
* Title has been enacted into Positive Law
# Title 26: Internal Revenue Code of 1954 was enacted into positive law
   Title 26: Internal Revenue Code of 1986, apparently identical, is not positive law

Positive law (United States Code)
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Positive_law_(United_States_Code)

Positive law is a restricted category of codified federal statutes of the United States. Federal statutes are passed by the United States Congress. Some statutes are also 'codified' (separately organized and published by subject matter) while others are not. While both codified and uncodified statutes are, in the broad sense, 'positive law', the term 'positive law' also has a separate, more restricted meaning when used to refer to codified statutes.

Section 204 of title 1 of the United States Code provides (in part, emphasis added):

In all courts, tribunals, and public offices of the United States, at home or abroad, the matter set forth in the edition of the Code of Laws of the United States current at any time shall, together with the then current supplement, if any, establish prima facie the laws of the United States, general and permanent in their nature, in force on the day preceding the commencement of the session following the last session the legislation of which is included: Provided, however, That whenever titles of such Code shall have been enacted into positive law the text thereof shall be legal evidence of the laws therein contained, in all the courts of the United States, the several States, and the Territories and insular possessions of the United States.
See 1 U.S.C. § 204.

According to the Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the United States House of Representatives:

Certain titles of the [United States] Code have been enacted into positive law, and pursuant to section 204 of title 1 of the Code, the text of those titles is legal evidence of the law contained in those titles. The other titles of the Code are prima facie evidence of the laws contained in those titles. The following titles of the Code have been enacted into positive law: 1, 3, 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18, 23, 28, 31, 32, 35, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 44, 46, and 49. [1] In the case of titles that are positive law (in the restricted sense), the text of the title itself, as published in the United States Code by the United States Government Printing Office, is conclusive evidence of the exact wording and punctuation of the statute. In litigation over a provision of the United States Code, this means that to determine the actual wording of the statute the court generally will not look beyond the text as printed in the Code itself.

The titles of the United States Code that are not positive law in this restricted sense are sometimes referred to as "non-positive law" (i.e., not "negative law"). The status of a particular provision in a title that is "non-positive" law has no bearing on the "legality" of that provision except to the extent that (due to a typographical error or other variance) the text of the Code does not exactly match the Act of Congress as published in the United States Statutes at Large (also published by the United States Government Printing Office) that is the source of the provision. In the case of a variance, the text in the United States Statutes at Large is the controlling law.

To make matters somewhat more confusing, certain titles of the United States Code such as title 26 (the Internal Revenue Code), while denoted as "non-positive" law (in the restricted sense), actually represent the currently amended version of "positive" law (in the broader sense of a "duly enacted statute"). That is, title 26 of the United States Code, denominated as the "Internal Revenue Code of 1986," as amended, is apparently identical to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended. The Internal Revenue Code of 1954 was enacted as positive law (on August 16, 1954), and was also codified as "title 26" of the United States Code.

The designation of a particular title of the Code as "positive" or "non-positive" law usually has little practical significance, as there are very few substantive variances between the texts of statutes as published in the United States Code and the texts of the same statutes in the United States Statutes at Large.

[edit] Footnotes
1.^ Office of the Law Revision Counsel
[edit] External links
Positive Codification in the United States Code


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