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HomeGovernment CodeDiv. 3.6Pt. 5Ch. 1§ 965 State Claim Payment Process

§ 965 State Claim Payment Process

Government Code·California
AI Summary·Official Text·Key Terms·Related Statutes·References
AI SummaryVerified

§ 965 State Claim Payment Process

Key Takeaways

  • •If the state owes someone money (like after a car crash caused by a state worker), they check if there's enough money set aside to pay it. If yes, they pay it. If no, they tell the lawmakers to approve more money.
  • •For some cases, like if the Attorney General is involved, they have to ask the lawmakers directly for the money if there isn't enough already.
  • •If the problem involves a court or a judge, the court's boss (Judicial Council) checks if there's money. If not, they ask the lawmakers for more money, but they have to wait 90 days to see if anyone objects.

Example

A state worker driving a government car crashes into your fence. You ask the state to pay for the damage.

The state checks if they have enough money set aside for accidents like this. If they do, they pay you. If not, they have to ask the lawmakers to give them more money to fix your fence.

AI-generated — May contain errors. Not legal advice. Always verify source.

Official Source
View on CA.gov

§ 965 State Claim Payment Process

(a) Upon the allowance by the Department of General Services of all or part of a claim for which the Director of Finance certifies that a sufficient appropriation for the payment of the claim exists, and the execution and presentation of documents the department may require that discharge the state of all liability under the claim, the department shall designate the fund from which the claim is to be paid, and the state agency concerned shall pay the claim from that fund. If there is no sufficient appropriation for the payment available, the department shall report to the Legislature in accordance with Section 912.8. Claims arising out of the activities of the State Department of Transportation may be paid if either the Director of Transportation or the Director of Finance certifies that a sufficient appropriation for the payment of the claim exists. (b) Notwithstanding subdivision (a), if there is no sufficient appropriation for the payment of claims, settlements, or judgments against the state arising from an action in which the state is represented by the Attorney General, the Attorney General shall report the claims, settlements, and judgments to the chairperson of either the Senate Committee on Appropriations or the Assembly Committee on Appropriations, who shall cause to be introduced legislation appropriating funds for the payment of the claims, settlements, or judgments. (c) Notwithstanding subdivision (a) or (b), claims, settlements, or judgments arising out of the activities of a judicial branch entity, as defined by Sections 900.3 and 940.3, or a judge thereof may be paid if the Judicial Council authorizes payment and the Administrative Director of the Courts certifies that sufficient funds for that payment exist from funds allocated to settlement, adjustment, and compromise of actions and claims. If sufficient funds for payment of settlements or judgments do not exist, the Administrative Director of the Courts shall report the settlements and judgments to the chairperson of either the Senate Committee on Appropriations or the Assembly Committee on Appropriations, who shall cause to be introduced legislation appropriating funds for the payment of the settlements or judgments. If sufficient funds for payment of claims do not exist, the Administrative Director of the Courts shall report the claims to the Department of General Services, which shall have 90 days to object to payment. The Administrative Director of the Courts shall confer with the Director of General Services regarding any objection received during the 90-day period. If the Department of General Services withdraws the objection, or if no objection was received, the Administrative Director of the Courts shall report the claims to the chairperson of either the Senate Committee on Appropriations or the Assembly Committee on Appropriations, who shall cause to be introduced legislation appropriating funds for the payment of the claims. The Judicial Council may authorize any committee of the Judicial Council or any employee of the Administrative Office of the Courts to perform the functions of the Judicial Council under this section. The Administrative Director of the Courts may designate an executive staff member of the Administrative Office of the Courts to perform the functions of the Administrative Director of the Courts under this section. (Amended by Stats. 2016, Ch. 31, Sec. 53. (SB 836) Effective June 27, 2016.)

Last verified: January 22, 2026

Key Terms

allowanceliabilityattorney generalappropriationportlegislaturefinedirector

Related Statutes

  • § 11019.81 Tribal Consultation Requirements
  • § 11096 State Publication Distribution Rules
  • § 11148.5 Small Business Liaison Requirements
  • § 12080.2 Governor'S Reorganization Plans
  • § 404 California World'S Fair Endorsement

References

  • Official text at leginfo.legislature.ca.gov
  • California Legislature. Government Code. Section 965.
View Official Source