Section 9605 Of Chapter 6. Operation Of Statutes And Resolutions From California Government Code >> Division 2. >> Title 2. >> Part 1. >> Chapter 6.
9605
. Where a section or part of a statute is amended, it is not to
be considered as having been repealed and reenacted in the amended
form. The portions which are not altered are to be considered as
having been the law from the time when they were enacted; the new
provisions are to be considered as having been enacted at the time of
the amendment; and the omitted portions are to be considered as
having been repealed at the time of the amendment. When the same
section or part of a statute is amended by two or more acts enacted
at the same session, any portion of an earlier one of such successive
acts which is omitted from a subsequent act shall be deemed to have
been omitted deliberately and any portion of a statute omitted by an
earlier act which is restored in a subsequent act shall be deemed to
have been restored deliberately.
In the absence of any express provision to the contrary in the
statute which is enacted last, it shall be conclusively presumed that
the statute which is enacted last is intended to prevail over
statutes which are enacted earlier at the same session and, in the
absence of any express provision to the contrary in the statute which
has a higher chapter number, it shall be presumed that a statute
which has a higher chapter number was intended by the Legislature to
prevail over a statute which is enacted at the same session but has a
lower chapter number.
For the purposes of this section, every statute of an
even-numbered year of a two-year regular session of the Legislature
is deemed to bear a higher chapter number than any statute enacted in
the odd-numbered year of that session.